International troops suit up for Jordan war games
Thousands of soldiers from 18 countries took part Tuesday in military drills in Jordan jointly overseen by the U.S. army
Thousands of soldiers from 18 countries took part Tuesday in military drills in Jordan jointly overseen by the U.S. army, officials said.
Around 10,000 troops are participating in Jordan’s fifth “Eager Lion” annual war games, which will last for two weeks.
The aerial, ground and naval exercises come as a U.S.-led coalition battles the Islamic State pof Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group in neighboring Iraq and Syria.
Several other Arab states have joined a Saudi-led coalition carrying out air strikes on rebels in Yemen.
Even so, “Eager Lion has nothing to do with what is currently happening in the region,” U.S. major general Rick Mattson told reporters in Amman.
“The more we work together the stronger we are.”
As well as troops from the U.S. and Jordan, military contingents from several nearby Arab states and troops from France, Italy and Pakistan will take part in drills in the Jordanian desert.
The exercises will focus on challenges such as “combating terrorism” and border security, said Jordanian Brigadier General Fhad al-Damin.
Jordan has intensified its air raids against ISIS since the militants burned alive one of its pilots who crashed in Syria earlier this year, but there are fears its participation in U.S.-led strikes could drag the kingdom into nearby conflicts.
-
Iraq sends troops to key refinery amid heavy clashes with ISIS
Interior Ministry denies that ISIS fighters have taken over major parts of the Beiji refinery which they have been trying to capture for months. Middle East -
U.N. envoy invites Syria opposition fighters to Geneva talks
He also said the rise of ISIS had changed the facts on the ground since the signing of the Geneva Communiqué Middle East -
Propaganda wars: ISIS vs. the Shiite popular mobilization forces
When ISIS captured Iraq’s second city Mosul, the event brought to the fore the power of the extremist group’s propaganda machine Middle East -
IMF may agree on $800 mln loan to war-torn Iraq
Iraqi finances have been hit hard by the plunge of oil prices since last year as well as by the ISIS insurgency Economy