Australian special forces troops will be
deployed inIraq to assist in the fight against Islamic
State militants, Prime Minister Tony Abbott said on Friday, and its aircraft
will also join U.S.-led coalition strikes.
Abbott
said in a nationally televised news conference the Australian troops would be
engaged in an "advise and assist" capacity to support the Iraqi army
in their battle against the militant Islamist group.
The United States has
been bombing Islamic State and other groups in Syria for almost two weeks with the help of
Arab allies, and hitting targets in neighboring Iraq since August.
European countries
have joined the campaign in Iraq but not inSyria.
Last month, Abbott
sent aircraft and 600 personnel to the United Arab Emirates in preparation for
joining the coalition. He has since said it was likely Australian aircraft
would join the strikes to combat Islamic State, which he described as a
"murderous death cult".
While the involvement
of Australian aircraft had been flagged, the use of Australian troops on the
ground in Iraq was not as widely anticipated.
"Today, cabinet
has authorized Australian air strikes in Iraq at the request of the Iraqi
Government and in support of the Iraqi government," Abbott said.
"Also, subject
to final legal documentation, cabinet has authorized the deployment of
Australian special forces into Iraq to advise and assist Iraqi forces."
So far Australian
aircraft have been limited to humanitarian aid and delivering arms to Iraqi
government-backed forces.
Australia is on high
alert for attacks by radicalized Muslims or by home-grown militants returning
from fighting in the Middle East, having raised its threat level to high and
undertaken a series of high-profile raids in major cities.
Officials believe up
to 160 Australians have been either involved in fighting in the Middle East or
actively supporting groups fighting there. At least 20 are believed to have
returned to Australia and have been said to pose a security risk.
One man was charged
on Tuesday with funding a terrorist organization, while another was arrested
last month after police said they had thwarted a plot to behead a randomly
selected member of the public.
Prominent Australian
Muslims say their community is being unfairly targeted by law enforcement and
threatened by right-wing groups, and there are concerns that policies aimed at
combating radical Islamists could create a backlash.
Abbott said Islamic
State poses a grave threat to both Australia and the wider world and that
Canberra could not afford to shirk its responsibility to contribute militarily
to "degrading" the group's capabilities.
"The Americans
certainly have quite a substantial special forces component on the ground
already," he said.
"My
understanding is that there are U.K. and Canadian special forces already inside
Iraq, so we'll be operating on a much smaller scale but in an entirely
comparable way to the United States special forces."
The Australian
contingent in the UAE is made up of eight Super Hornet fighter jets, an early
warning and control aircraft, an aerial refueling aircraft, along with 400 air
force personnel and 200 special force soldiers.
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