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Gerry Brownlee secretly visits troops in Iraq

Author
Audrey Young of the NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Wed, 22 Mar 2017, 12:10pm
New Zealand Defence Force troops board a C-130 Hercules at Taji Military Base, Iraq, this morning (Audrey Young)
New Zealand Defence Force troops board a C-130 Hercules at Taji Military Base, Iraq, this morning (Audrey Young)

Gerry Brownlee secretly visits troops in Iraq

Author
Audrey Young of the NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Wed, 22 Mar 2017, 12:10pm

Defence Minister Gerry Brownlee has just emerged from a secret visit to Iraq to hold high-level defence meetings in Baghdad and to meet New Zealand trainers at Camp Taji north of the capital.

While he was there, he hinted there was a role for New Zealand in the reconstruction of Iraq.

And he suggested there could be a move to extend the mandate of the Kiwis at Taji to work on intelligence beyond just any immediate threats to Taji.

With the Iraqis close to recapturing Mosul, the last big base of ISIS in Iraq, the focus by Iraq and the Coalition of 23 countries assisting it is turning to what happens next.

Brownlee was on his third trip to Iraq as Defence Minister and was accompanied by the Chief of Defence Force Lieutenant General Tim Keating.

The Herald was there too. The mission was kept secret for security reasons.

Brownlee travelled travelled by helicopter from Baghdad airport to the secure international zone where he met the president of Iraq, Fuad Masum, the head of the Iraqi Defence Force, General Othman Alghanimi. and two senior United States generals, General Stephen Townsend and General Joe Martin.

At a press conference with the Iraqi general, Brownlee congratulated Iraq for taking the fight to ISIS.

"What we are seeing unfold, I think, is an Iraqi solution to what have could have been a very big international problem.

"When we see displaced people on our television screens at night, then we do know that there is a reconstruction need here that clearly the coalition will need to address," he said.

Brownlee also said that the international effort in reconstruction "needs to be as strong as it has been in supporting Iraq in this particular battle."

"We've agreed that ridding not only this country but the world of that particular terrorist evil means that there can be no vacuum for anyone else to fill beyond the military success."

Asked what he wanted the Coalition countries to do after the liberation of Mosul, General Othman said through an interpreter there was a five-year plan for re-organising and restructuring the Iraqi Army as well as improving border protection with new technology.

"And of course this phase will require a lot of training, a lot of equipping of armaments and supplies....definitely all of these topics have been discussed and negotiated with the coalition of other countries and they are standing side by side to provide good support."

New Zealand has about 100 people at Camp Taji with a non-combat mandate to take part in training and force protection within the perimetres of the camp - which about 6km by 6km.

They are allowed to participate in intelligence work only it affects the immediate area outside the camp.

Brownlee hinted that intelligence work, while still conducted at Taji, could extend to a wider area.

"What we are going to need to know is, as cities like Mosul fall, as pressure on some of the smaller towns that may harbour the last of the ISIL fighters grows then they will run somewhere," Brownlee said.

"We need to be in the loop in an intelligence sense, knowing where they are going because we don't want them coming our way."

"That may mean we have to look at some of the constraint that we have on the behind-the-wire activity that is mandated here at Taji."

"I wouldn't speculate yet on what that might mean but it doesn't mean combat.

It does mean that we get good information flows to protect our society at home."

He said in order for that to happen he would have to take that through cabinet.

The Taji Task Group is jointly run by 300 Australians and 100 New Zealanders.

Originally a two-year mission for the Kiwis, it was due to finish in May this year but has been extended to November 2018.

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