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News ID: 68042
Publish Date : 13 July 2019 - 21:35

Pompeo Considers ‘Permanent’ Baghdad Embassy Pullout

BAGHDAD (Dispatches) – U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompe is not willing to send back the diplomats to the country’s embassy in Iraq after they were evacuated earlier this year in May, according to several State Department officials.
The evacuation came after tensions between Iran and U.S. Persian escalated in the Gulf, as a result of which Washington claimed its forces, diplomats, and citizens were "under threat” of being targeted by Iran or Iranian-backed militias in Iraq.
According to several officials who spoke to Foreign Policy, the staffing levels at the Baghdad embassy reached after the evacuation in May are being treated as a de facto permanent cap on State Department personnel in Iraq.
"They’ve already quietly made the policy decision that they’re not sending these people back,” a senior State Department official familiar with internal deliberations told Foreign Policy. "But they’re not actually calling it a drawdown, they’re just saying they’re reviewing the ordered departure.”
Another State Department official, who has been impacted by the decision, said it felt like the State Department was "abandoning Iraq”, Foreign Policy reported.
The State Department officials say many of the personnel forced to evacuate are now effectively in limbo, some sitting in hotels or Airbnbs in Washington area.
Some officials who were nearing the end of their duty in Iraq when the order to evacuate came, now have their next assignments.
Others, either those who just started their office duty in Iraq or were about to go, are in limbo and are "effectively unemployed employees at this point,” as one State Department official put it.

This picture shows U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad's Green Zone, Iraq, on May 20, 2019.