President
Barack Obama plans to submit an updated request for fiscal year 2015 overseas
contingency operations funds as the effort to defeat terrorists from the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant moves into its next phase, White
House officials announced November 7, 2014.
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In a statement, the administration announced plans to request $5.6 billion
for activities to degrade and ultimately defeat ISIL. The amended request
includes resources for operations and activities that were not anticipated
when the White House submitted the initial OCO budget request in June,
the statement said.
“ISIL poses an immediate threat to Iraq, Syria and American allies
and partners throughout the region, as it seeks to overthrow governments,
control territory, terrorize local populations, and implement an oppressive
and intolerant interpretation of sharia law,” the White House statement
said.
The request includes $5 billion for the Defense Department to conduct
a range of military operations against ISIL in the Middle East. That amount
includes $1.6 billion for an Iraqi train-and-equip fund, the Pentagon
press secretary said today.
Iraq’s government and coalition nations also are expected to contribute
funding to this effort, which aims to train a total of 12 brigades --
nine Iraqi army brigades and three brigades of Kurdish Peshmerga forces,
Navy Rear Adm. John Kirby said.
The train-and-equip fund also may be used toward training Sunni tribes
that are operating under the auspices of the Iraqi Defense Ministry, Kirby
said. “Ultimately, we expect that we'll be able to conduct some
of that training at the same locations where we will train Iraqi army
and peshmerga brigades,” he added.
The amended request must be approved by Congress before the 1,500 additional
U.S. troops authorized by the president today can deploy, the admiral
said.
The request is in addition to the $58.6 billion the White House originally
requested to cover the costs of operations in Afghanistan, a forward presence
in the broader Middle East region and other critical Defense Department
missions, according to the statement.
“The costs of military operations against ISIL in the Middle East
region were not included in the June 2014 request, and DoD requires additional
funding in order to avoid diverting funding from other key priorities
within its budget,” the statement said.
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