May. 22, 2012 - 01:45PM
| By JIM MICHAELS,
USA
TODAY
BAGHDAD — The United
States has agreed to sell unarmed surveillance drones to Iraq’s navy as part of
an effort to help protect that nation’s oil exports amid growing tensions in
the Persian Gulf and to strengthen U.S.-Iraqi ties.
“They understand the
importance of the mission to protect its oil platforms,” said Army Lt. Gen.
Robert Caslen, who heads the U.S. Office of Security Cooperation-Iraq.
The office, which
operates out of the U.S. Embassy and manages U.S.
military sales programs in Iraq ,
confirmed the sale of drones but declined to say the model or number of drones
that are part of the contract.
The drones will allow Iraq ’s military to keep a continuous watch over
its oil terminals within Iraqi territorial waters of the Persian Gulf, where a
significant portion of the world’s oil originates and which Iran has
occasionally threatened to blockade.
The sales of drones and
other U.S. military
equipment are viewed by the United States
as a way to maintain deep ties with Iraq after the departure of
American troops five months ago. The sales “help facilitate that strategic
relationship,” Caslen said.
“Iraq should
have the ability to protect itself against outside aggression,” said Ali
al-Moussawi, an adviser to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki.
The bulk of Iraq ’s exports move through a handful of
terminals on Iraq ’s narrow Persian Gulf coast, making its exports vulnerable to
attack from other countries or terrorists.
As a major oil producer,
Iraq could balance Western
worries about Iran ’s
threats to cut off oil shipments to some European countries that import Iranian
oil.
“Whether Iran has
concerns or not, we’re OK with that,” al-Moussawi said. “This is in our
interest.”
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