AhlulBayt News Agency - U.S. Defence Secretary Ash Carter met with his counterparts from 11 countries which are contributing to the military campaign against Daesh in Iraq and Syria.
The combat death of an American Navy SEAL in Iraq shows that despite recent gains against Daesh (also known as the ISIS) in Iraq, “this fight is far from over,” U.S. Defence Secretary Ash Carter said Wednesday.
Carter spoke at the outset of a closed-door meeting in Germany with his counterparts from 11 countries contributing to the military campaign against Daesh in Iraq and Syria. They convened at the headquarters of U.S. European Command, where Carter was presiding at a change-of-command ceremony Tuesday when news of the U.S. battlefield death reached him.
In a joint statement issued after the meeting, the group reaffirmed its support “to further accelerate and reinforce the success of our partners on the ground and for the deployment of additional enabling capabilities in the near term.”
The meeting was a follow-up to a similar session Carter led in Brussels in mid-February.
“While we have gathered momentum since our ministerial in Brussels, this fight is far from over,” Carter said in an opening statement. “That point was brought into stark relief by yesterday’s attack on Peshmerga forces in northern Iraq, which unfortunately claimed the life of an American service member.”
Adhering to a legal ban on officially identifying a military death until 24 hours after the family has been notified, Carter did not mention the name. But his family has confirmed that Charlie Keating IV, 31, was the SEAL who was killed.
Carter expressed condolences for the loss, which is the third U.S. combat death in Iraq.
Wednesday’s session in Stuttgart was the latest in a series with partners on strategies for increasing assistance to the Iraqis, including the Kurdish Peshmerga forces, as they seek to recapture the northern Daesh stronghold of Mosul.
Carter has placed a high priority on drawing coalition members more deeply into the counter-Daesh campaign, stressing the threat posed by allowing the extremists to spread their influence.
“We must do this,” Carter told the opening session. “It’s important for civilization that we do this. We can do this. We’re going to. With your help, it’ll go faster.”
The Stuttgart session was attended by senior defence officials from Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and Britain. Norway was also invited and was expected to attend.
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