U.S. Leaves 700 Combat Troops in Jordan After Exercise

Reuters25.06.2013 Jordan
U.S. Leaves 700 Combat Troops in Jordan After Exercise

U.S. Leaves 700 Combat Troops in Jordan After Exercise

Facebook icon
Twitter icon
LinkedIn icon
Google icon
e-mail icon

The United States, keeping a wary eye on Syria's civil war, has left about 700 combat-equipped troops in Jordan after a training exercise, President Barack Obama said on Friday, after previously deciding to leave Patriot missiles and warplanes there.


Obama said the deployment was done at the request of the Jordanian government, which fears a spillover of the war into its territory and where an estimated half-million Syrian refugees have fled.

In a letter to House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner, Obama said about 700 of the troops deployed to Jordan as part of a training exercise that ended last Thursday would remain behind.

They will stay until the security situation becomes such that they are no longer needed, Obama said.

“This detachment that participated in the exercise and remained in Jordan includes Patriot missile systems, fighter aircraft, and related support, command, control, and communications personnel and systems,” Obama said.

When the Pentagon first said last week it would leave Patriot missiles and F-16 fighters in Jordan, Russia, an ally of Damascus, said any attempt to use them to impose a “no-fly” zone over Syria would be illegal.

Obama has not ruled out participating in a no-fly zone that would prohibit the Syrian military from flying its aircraft, but he was skeptical about such a move in a recent television interview.

The decision to leave 700 troops in Jordan was an important show of force and a statement of U.S. backing of Jordan's King Abdullah, a close U.S. ally whom Obama visited in March.

The Patriot missiles could be used to protect Jordan against any possible missile attack as the Syrian war threatens to widen into a more regional, sectarian conflict.

 

Source: Reuters

 



 
 

Latest events

Latest Issues

 

THE WORLD DEFENSE ALMANAC 2024