As Islamic militants push towards Baghdad, Mosul's Governor Atheel al Nujaifi tells Sky News he would welcome American support.
The fall of Iraq's second largest city Mosul to Islamist militants earlier this week proved to be the trigger for this rapidly-shifting crisis. Forces from here in the Kurdish-controlled region of Iraq have now established checkpoints on the roads leading to the areas taken by ISIS fighters. Sky's Stuart Ramsay traveled to the outskirts of Mosul and sent this report
The governor of Mosul has
told Sky News he would welcome US support in ousting Islamist militants
from Iraq, but does not wants troops on the ground.
Speaking from Irbil in the Kurdish north after the city was taken by
the militants, Atheel al Nujaifi said the insurgents' attack on several
Iraqi cities came as a complete surprise to Iraqi authorities.He said Sunni Arabs fed up with the government of Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki had joined fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS).
With ISIS fighters thought to be fewer than 50 miles (80km) from the capital Baghdad, Mr Nujaifi conceded that Iraqi authorities need support.
"We need to have weapons. We need to have political support," he told Sky News.
"(But) we don't like the American army to come into Iraq and to occupy Iraq another time and turn back to the same problem that happened before."
President Barack Obama has ruled out putting American troops on the ground in Iraq, but says the White House is considering all other options for support.
He said he would make a decision "in the days ahead" on the options, amid reports the Pentagon is drafting plans for possible air strikes against the Islamist rebels.
"The United States will do our part, but ultimately it's up to the Iraqis as a sovereign nation to solve their problems," Mr Obama said.
"We can't do it for them," he added.
On Saturday morning Iran's President Hassan Rouhani offered to assist Iraq, telling a televised interview the country would "strongly defend" its territory if terrorist groups presented a danger.
Iran has already sent a Revolutionary Guard Major General to Baghdad to meet leaders. The country, which is predominately Shia, does not want to see a Sunni caliphate established on its borders.
Foreign Secretary William Hague has also ruled out sending UK troops, but said Britain may offer other support, such as counter-terrorism expertise, which could see the involvement of the SAS as it did in Libya.
"Work is under way on that now and we will continue to liaise closely with our United States allies in particular on that," he said.
Mr Maliki claims that Iraqi forces have begun to clear cities of the "terrorists", after he travelled to the embattled city of Samarra on Friday for a security meeting.
It comes as a representative of Iraq's most senior Shi'ite cleric urged people to take up arms and defend the nation from militants.
Sheikh Abdulmehdi al Karbalai, a representative for Grand Ayatollah Ali al Sistani, said: "People who are capable of carrying arms and fighting the terrorists in defence of their country ... should volunteer to join the security forces to achieve this sacred goal."
The ISIS militants took control of a huge swathe of predominantly Sunni Arab territory in northern and central Iraq after launching their offensive on Monday.
They have pressed as far south as the ethnically divided Diyala province.
Forces from the autonomous Kurdish region have also seized territory they have sought to rule for decades against the objections of successive governments in Baghdad.
Iraq: Mosul Governor Says US Support 'Welcome'
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June 14, 2014
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