This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/16/world/middleeast/embassy.html
The article has changed 5 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
U.S. to Evacuate Many Staff Members From Baghdad Embassy | U.S. to Evacuate Many Staff Members From Baghdad Embassy |
(35 minutes later) | |
ERBIL, Iraq — The American Embassy in Baghdad plans to temporarily evacuate a substantial number of its personnel this week and to increase security at the embassy in the face of a militant advance that rapidly swept from the north toward the capital, the State Department announced on Sunday. | |
The embassy, a beige fortress on the banks of the Tigris River within the heavily-secured Green Zone, where Iraqi government buildings are also located, has the largest staff of any United States Embassy. | |
The exact number of people being evacuated was not clear Sunday. The embassy would remain open, according to a statement from the department’s spokeswoman, Jen Psaki,and many of its approximately 5,500 staff members would stay in Baghdad. | |
Many staff members who are leaving — the statement called it “relocating” — will be flown to Amman, Jordan, where they will continue their work at the embassy there, the statement said. Others will be shifted from Baghdad to consulates here in Erbil, in the northern Kurdish region, and in Basra, in the south, which are not now under threat by the militants. | |
Other Americans in Iraq, particularly contractors working for companies that had been training the Iraqi military on weapons systems purchased from the United States, have already been evacuated from the country. | Other Americans in Iraq, particularly contractors working for companies that had been training the Iraqi military on weapons systems purchased from the United States, have already been evacuated from the country. |
“Some additional U.S. government security personnel will be added to the staff in Baghdad,” the statement said. | |
Last week, in quick fashion, militants seized control of Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, and then moved south and took other towns, vowing to march on to Baghdad. But over the weekend, the militant advance seemed to slow, while in Baghdad volunteers flocked to join newly reconstituted militias to defend the capital. | Last week, in quick fashion, militants seized control of Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, and then moved south and took other towns, vowing to march on to Baghdad. But over the weekend, the militant advance seemed to slow, while in Baghdad volunteers flocked to join newly reconstituted militias to defend the capital. |
In response to the crisis, President Obama has said he is weighing a range of actions to help the Iraqi government turn back the insurgents, including airstrikes or other military aid. Earlier this year, when insurgents captured Falluja and other parts of western Anbar Province, the American government rushed guns, ammunition and Hellfire missiles to aid the Iraqis, but has done little to dislodge the militants. | In response to the crisis, President Obama has said he is weighing a range of actions to help the Iraqi government turn back the insurgents, including airstrikes or other military aid. Earlier this year, when insurgents captured Falluja and other parts of western Anbar Province, the American government rushed guns, ammunition and Hellfire missiles to aid the Iraqis, but has done little to dislodge the militants. |
As American forces left Iraq at the end of 2011, the United States planned to significantly increase its diplomatic presence in the country by establishing several fortified outposts defended by a small army of private security guards. The Obama administration, however, soon reconsidered those ambitions, chiefly because of their cost and feasibility. Outposts were built in Basra and Erbil. Another, in Kirkuk, was phased out, and a proposed outpost in Mosul was never opened. Briefly, the embassy had about 16,000 personnel, but almost immediately after the troops left, the American government, confronted with objections from the Iraqi government, began reducing the number of embassy personnel until only a few thousand remained, to guard the embassy and oversee a weapons sales program. | |
In trying to push forward with an ambitious diplomatic presence to replace the departing military, the government drew up plans, at great cost, for programs that the Iraqi government ultimately did want. Some referred to the diplomatic ambitions as the greatest American aid effort since the Marshall Plan. This included an expensive police training program, which cost hundreds of millions of dollars. |