WASHINGTON, Aug 28: The top US Marine officer has said he could reduce his 25,000-strong force in the former Al Qaeda stronghold of Iraq’s Anbar province to reinforce military operations against a growing Taliban threat in Afghanistan.

Marine Corps Commandant Gen. James Conway told reporters the once-restive province west of Baghdad could be turned over to Iraqi security control within days, thanks to the sharp decline in violence that occurred when Sunni tribal leaders switched allegiance from al Qaeda to the US military.

The Marine Corps Times said on its website that Anbar security would revert to Iraq next week. Marine officials declined to confirm a specific date due to security concerns.

“The requirement right now in Iraq is much more about nation-building than it is fighting,” Conway said at a Pentagon briefing.

“It’s our view that if there’s a stiffer fight going on someplace else ... then that’s where we need to be.”

US and Nato forces in Afghanistan face an intensifying insurgency marked by escalating attacks and military casualty rates that have helped make Afghanistan a deadlier place than Iraq for US troops in recent months.

Conway said air power would continue to play a primary role despite the risk of civilian casualties that have angered Afghans and made US and Nato forces more unpopular.

He said it was unclear how many civilians died in an Aug 21 air strike in western Afghanistan, despite a UN finding of evidence that about 90 were killed, most of them children. But the general accused the Taliban of operating among civilians to reap a propaganda advantage from military attacks.

“This is a dirty game being played,” Conway said.

“Air power is the premier asymmetric advantage that we hold over ... the Taliban. They have no like capability,” he said.

“We’ll continue to drop bombs. We will also continue at every effort to preserve civilian lives who unfortunately are a part of the battlefield.”

—Reuters

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