Foreign ministers and senior officials from 68 nations and international organizations are invited for the two-day gathering starting March 22. The official was not authorized to discuss planning for the meeting, first reported by The Washington Post, ahead of a formal announcement later today and spoke on condition of anonymity.
The meeting signals the Trump administration's intent to sustain US leadership of the coalition, initiated in 2014 under the Obama administration. The Islamic State group is under growing military pressure in Iraq and Syria. US-backed forces are preparing to battle for the group's self-declared headquarters in Raqqa.
President Donald Trump has vowed to defeat IS but has been strongly critical of the Obama administration's approach. Pentagon leaders sent a new plan to defeat the militant group to the White House late last month. It outlined a strategy that would likely increase the number of US troops in Syria in order to better advise and enable the US-backed Syrian fighters.
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