Departing US army chief says partition may be Iraq's 'only solution'
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WASHINGTONAug 13, 2015 - 12:00 am GMT+3
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Aug 13, 2015 12:00 am
The U.S. Army's departing chief of staff General Raymond Odierno warned on Wednesday that Iraq may be heading for an inevitable 'partition' as reconciliation between Shiites and Sunnis in the country is becoming much harder.
General Raymond Odierno, who once served as the top US commander in Iraq and retires Friday after nearly 40 years in uniform, said the U.S. focus for now should be on defeating ISIS who has seized large portions of the country.
But in a valedictory news conference he took a pessimistic view about the underlying conflict between Shiites and Sunnis that brought the two communities to brink of civil war in 2006.
Asked if he saw any possibility of reconciliation between the two, Odierno said "It's becoming more difficult by the day" and pointed to a future in which "Iraq might not look like it did in the past."
Asked about partition, he said: "I think that is for the region and politicians to figure out, diplomats to figure out how to work this, but that is something that could happen.
"It might be the only solution but I'm not ready to say that yet."
In the meantime, he said, "We have to deal with ISIS first and decide what it will look like afterwards."
The U.S. military, which withdrew from Iraq in 2011, has resumed training Iraqi forces and select Syrian rebels as part of a renewed effort to contain and eventually roll back ISIS. US warplanes also are conducting air strikes against ISIS targets in Iraq and Syria.
Odierno said ISIS "has been blunted somewhat" by the airstrikes and Kurdish and to a less extent Iraqi forces on the ground.
"I think right now we are kind of at a stalemate and continue to make some progress," he said, adding it was important to continue rebuilding the Iraqi military.
Odierno served as the top U.S. commander in Iraq from 2008 to 2010. He had urged that a residual U.S. force be left in country, but the U.S. and Iraqi governments were unable to reach an agreement that would have allowed them to stay.
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