RNA - In an exclusive interview, Hadi al-Ameri, who heads Iraq’s Badr Organization, said the popular forces would call on the parliament to draw up legislation to demand the US pull out all its troops from the Arab country.
“We will adopt a parliamentary decision to pull out all American troops”, who were allegedly fighting the ISIL terrorists in the conflict-stricken Arab country, he said.
Ameri said the popular forces won’t allow even “one US soldier” to remain in Iraq now that the terrorists have lost their major bastions in the Arab state in the face of successful Iraqi army operations.
Iraqi armed forces, backed by volunteer fighters, launched a vast operation on October 17 to retake Mosul, the last stronghold of ISIL in Iraq.
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi had earlier said that US military forces would not stay on in the Arab country once Iraqi forces retake ISIL-held areas.
The Iraqi commander further urged the international community, the US and Europe in particular, to stop the influx of terrorists into Iraq.
“As for the role of international intelligence we are only asking that they stop the influx of foreign terrorists at the time when we are exerting intelligence efforts. We would like all international and Arab countries to be serious in halting the influx of terrorists into Iraq and Syria,” he said.
On November 17, Iraqi armed forces liberated the town of Rawa near the border with Syria, which was the last remaining town under ISIL's control, and raised the Iraqi flag over its buildings.
Two days later, Syrian army soldiers, backed by pro-government forces from popular defense groups, fully liberated Bukamal, ISIL's last stronghold in Syria, which is a strategic city in the country’s Eastern province of Deir Ezzur on the border with Iraq.
The recapture of the two towns marked an end to ISIL's reign of terror, which started in 2014 with the group making vast territorial gains in a lightning offensive and establishing its self-proclaimed “caliphate” in Iraq’s Mosul and Syria’s Raqqah.
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