US evacuates consulate staff from Erbil in Iraq
Washington: The United States evacuated some staff members from the Iraqi Kurdish city of Erbil, the State Department said on Sunday, out of "an abundance of caution" amid an offensive by Islamist militants.
The notice announcing "the departure of some staff from the consulate general in Erbil," came in the form of a State Department travel warning for Iraq, just two days after a previous one.
Meanwhile State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf confirmed in a statement that the move was made "in light of the security situation in Iraq" and that the US had "temporarily relocated a limited number of staff from Consulate Erbil to our consulate in Basra (southern Iraq) and to the Iraq support unit in Amman, Jordan.”
"While security concerns remain extremely high in Iraq, this limited move today is out of an abundance of caution rather than any one specific threat," she said.
"Overall, a majority of our personnel in Erbil remain in place, and our consulate is fully equipped to carry out its national security mission," Harf said.
"The US consulate in Erbil remains open and will continue to engage daily with Iraqis and their elected leaders supporting them as they strengthen Iraq's constitutional processes and defend themselves from imminent threats," she added.
The United States on Friday began a campaign of air strikes aimed at halting the advance of Sunni militants from the so-called Islamic State, which in recent days had come within striking distance of Erbil, the Kurdish capital.
US President Barack Obama had justified the strikes in part to protect US personnel stationed in Erbil.