Neither Iran nor Syria, which together share most of Iraq's borders, was invited to the international conference today in Paris, which opened as a pair of French reconnaissance jets took off over Iraqi skies.
With memories of the 2003 US invasion of Iraq still fresh, the US has so far been alone in carrying out airstrikes and no country has offered ground troops. An American official said several Arab countries had offered to conduct airstrikes, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive issue.
The killing of David Haines, a British aid worker held hostage by the militants, added urgency to the calls for a coherent strategy against the brutal and well-organized Sunni group, which is a magnet for Muslim extremists from all over the world and rakes in more than USD 3 million a day from oil smuggling, human trafficking, theft and extortion, according to US intelligence officials and private experts.
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"There can be no sanctuary," Massoum said. "We have to dry up their sources of financing."
Muslim-majority countries are considered vital to any operation to prevent the militants from gaining more territory in Iraq and Syria. Western officials have made clear they consider Syrian President Bashar Assad part of the problem, and US officials opposed France's attempt to invite Iran, a Shiite nation, to the conference in Paris.
Iranian Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, speaking on Iranian state television, said his government privately refused American requests for cooperation against the Islamic State group, warning that another US incursion would result "in the same problems they faced in Iraq in the past 10 years."
Gulf states, particularly Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, have some of the region's best-equipped militaries, and they could theoretically provide air support to a broader international coalition. US officials say the Emirates and Egypt were behind airstrikes against Islamist-backed militants in Libya last month.