US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter pleaded Wednesday for greater Gulf financial and political involvement in Iraq, which is battling both Islamic State jihadists and an economic crisis. Carter made the comments after meeting in Riyadh with his counterparts from the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council. "I encourage our GCC partners to do more, not only militarily as the Saudis, as the UAE have been doing - and I really appreciate that - but also politically and economically," Carter told reporters after the talks.
He said Sunni support for "multisectarian governance and reconstruction" will be critical to ensuring the defeat of IS, the Sunni extremist group which has seized large parts of Shia-majority Iraq, and Syria. Shia paramilitary forces dominated by Iran-backed militias have helped push back the jihadists. Iraqi Kurds, mostly Sunnis who have an autonomous region in the country's north, have received training to fight IS from a US-led coalition whose warplanes are bombing the jihadists in Iraq and Syria.
Saudi Arabia and other Gulf nations are part of that coalition but Carter called on them to exert diplomatic support as well, by re-opening embassies in Baghdad. Saudi Arabia's ambassador to Iraq presented his credentials in January, re-establishing relations a quarter-century after they were cut following ex-president Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait. The United States would like the oil-rich Gulf monarchies - although they themselves are facing falling revenues from collapsed crude prices - to help in Iraq's reconstruction.
This could be through contributions to the United Nations or even non-profit organisations, he said. The question of support for Iraq is expected to be on the agenda Thursday when Carter joins President Barack Obama at a GCC summit in Riyadh. They will gather in an atmosphere of tension with Gulf leaders offended by Obama's perceived reluctance to get involved in the region's problems, and in particular his tilt towards Iran, their Shia-dominated regional rival.