The rules of engagement governing US-led strikes against the Islamic State group have not been changed under President Donald Trump's administration, a commander said today.
After taking office in January, Trump ordered the development of a "new plan" to defeat IS, and called for recommendations on changing rules of engagement and "policy restrictions" that go beyond the requirements of international law.
"We still have the same rules of engagement; those authorities were delegated before any change in administration," Brigadier General Rick Uribe, a senior commander in the US-led coalition against IS, told journalists in Baghdad.
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"We have not changed our procedures due to a change in... administration," said Uribe, who emphasised that the coalition carefully reviews potential targets in order to avoid civilian casualties.
Despite Trump's vows to increase the pace of action against IS and his assertion that he supports killing the families of militants, current efforts against the jihadists largely mirror those in place under his predecessor Barack Obama.
Coalition strikes have come in for criticism in recent weeks after Iraqi officials said that scores of civilians were killed in west Mosul.
The coalition is now investigating a March 17 strike it said it carried out in an area where civilian casualties were reported, and Belgium -- a member of the coalition -- is also probing whether its warplanes were involved in civilian deaths.
IS overran large areas north and west of Baghdad in 2014, but Iraqi forces backed by US-led strikes and other support have since regained much of the territory they lost.
Iraqi forces launched a major operation to recapture Mosul -- the last IS-held city in the country -- in October, retaking its eastern side before setting their sights on its smaller but more densely populated west.
Today, Uribe emphasised that even after the recapture of Mosul, the war against IS -- which also holds territory in Kirkuk province and in western Iraq -- will not be over.
"Just because we're done in Mosul doesn't mean Daesh is done in Iraq", although "it'll be a severe blow", Uribe said, using an Arabic acronym for IS.
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