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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Iraqis order weapons from Chinese

Robin Wright and Ann Scott Tyson Washington Post

WASHINGTON – Iraq has ordered $100 million worth of light military equipment from China for its police force, contending that the United States was unable to provide the materiel and is too slow to deliver arms shipments, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani said Wednesday.

The China deal, not previously made public, has alarmed military analysts who note that Iraq’s security forces already are unable to account for more than 190,000 weapons supplied by the United States, many of which are believed to be in the hands of Shiite and Sunni militias, insurgents and other forces seeking to destabilize Iraq and target U.S. troops.

“The problem is that the Iraqi government doesn’t have – as yet – a clear plan for making sure that weapons are distributed, that they are properly monitored and repeatedly checked,” said Rachel Stohl of the Center for Defense Information, an independent think tank. “The end-use monitoring will be left in the hands of a government and military in Iraq that is not yet ready for it. And there’s not a way for the U.S. to mandate them to do it if they’re not U.S. weapons.”

News of Iraq’s arms deal came as Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno, the top U.S. commander for day-to-day operations in Iraq, told editors and reporters at the Washington Post Wednesday that he expects a U.S. troop presence will be required in the country for a minimum of “at least three to five more years” and will involve 25,000 to 50,000 troops, depending on security conditions.

Detailed planning is under way for the U.S. military to begin scaling back its primary mission from one of fighting a counterinsurgency to an advisory and training role, which will involve pulling U.S. troops out of Iraqi cities and closing some U.S. bases, Odierno said. Odierno and Talabani, who met separately with Post editors and reporters, said they expect their governments to finalize a long-term bilateral security pact in 2008.

The capabilities of Iraqi security forces are pivotal to the U.S. exit strategy in Iraq, with the creation of a viable police force critical to reconciliation. Talabani said only one in five Iraqi police officers is armed and called for faster weapons delivery from the United States to beef up Iraq’s fledgling army.

Iraq’s police force is noted for infiltration by militias and insurgents out to use national resources for their own ends, said William Hartung, director of the New America Foundation Arms and Security Initiative. “Besides, aside from possibly wanting newer models, there are piles of arms and weapons floating around in Iraq,” he said.

The Chinese arms deal sheds light on the larger dispute between the United States and Iraq over rebuilding Iraq’s armed forces and police. Iraqi officials have long complained about the supply of weapons and equipment for their personnel, noting that Iraqi security forces often patrol in pickup trucks without body armor along the same routes as U.S. troops wearing flak jackets and riding in armored vehicles.

Talabani on Wednesday expressed frustration with the delays. “The capacity of the factories here are not enough to provide us quickly with all that we need, even for the army. One of our demands is to accelerate the delivery of the arms to the Iraqi army.”

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said the United States is “working closely” to help Iraq obtain “appropriate and necessary” military equipment. But U.S. officials concede delivery problems.

“We haven’t converted toaster factories to produce carbines and we’re working hard just to supply our own troops,” said an administration official involved with Iraq policy.