Committed to PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO KNOW
Vol. 5 Num 145 Sun. October 17, 2004  
   
International


US asks Britain to deploy troops in more volatile parts of Iraq


The United States has asked Britain for their thoughts on sending troops on a "particular operation", but this is a fairly frequent occurrence, a British military spokesman said yesterday.

The comments came after Britain's Channel Four television reported that Washington wants London to deploy soldiers in more volatile parts of Iraq, as a new offensive on insurgent-held Fallujah looms.

"It is correct that the Americans have asked what are our thoughts are for doing a particular operation," Major Charles Mayo, spokesman for the British-led Multi-National Division South East, told AFP by telephone from the southern Iraqi city of Basra.

"There is a constant discussion involving a range of activities," he said, playing down the significance of the request.

British planners reviewed the activities of the country's 8,000-strong military contingent in Iraq every day, Mayo added.

"In this environment you get requests all the time from MNF-I (the US-led Multi-National Forces in Iraq)," said the spokesman.

On Friday, Channel Four cited sources at the Ministry of Defence saying the US military had lodged a formal request for British troops to cover forces which are to be re-deployed for a renewed offensive against insurgents in the rebel city of Fallujah.

"It's understood that the commanding officer of the reserve betallion of the Black Watch is looking at a request for some 650 personnel to provide cover for the Americans," it said on its website, www.channel4.com.

Picture
An Iraqi man prays with his beads as others gather outside a destroyed church following an explosion in Baghdad yesterday. Bombs exploded near five churches around Baghdad last morning followed by a mortar attack near a sixth church, causing damage but no casualties. Iraq's tiny Christian community has been heavily targeted in the unrest that has swept the country following last year's US-led invasion. PHOTO: AFP