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U.S. Army General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, speaks with soldiers in Iraq November 15, 2014. The top U.S. military officer, General Dempsey, arrived on Saturday in Baghdad on an unannounced visit to meet U.S. commanders preparing to increase American assistance to Iraqi and Kurdish forces battling Sunni Islamic State (IS) militants. Image Credit: Reuters

Baghdad: The top US military officer, General Martin Dempsey, arrived on Saturday in Baghdad on an unannounced visit to meet US commanders preparing to increase American assistance to Iraqi and Kurdish forces battling Daesh. It was Dempsey’s first trip to Iraq since President Barack Obama, alarmed by Daesh advances, ordered non-combatant American forces back into the country this summer, less than three years after withdrawing US troops from Iraq. US air strikes began in August.

“I want to get a sense from our side about how our contribution is going,” Dempsey, chairman of the US military’s Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Reuters shortly before landing in Baghdad.

“I want to hear from those actually doing the lifting that they’ve the resources they need and the proper guidance to use those resources.” Last week, Obama authorised sending up to 1,500 more forces to Iraq, roughly doubling the planned US troop presence as the United States expands its advisory mission and starts training Iraqi and Kurdish forces.

Dempsey was due to meet US officials overseeing the effort, including Kuwait-based task force commander Lieutenant General James Terry, as well as Iraqi officials.

“This will work best if we’re enabling (Iraq’s) plan,” Dempsey, who last visited Iraq in 2012, said.

Dempsey’s visit comes in the wake of Iraqi battlefield advances highlighted by US officials, including retaking areas around the country’s biggest refinery near the city of Beiji.

Still, Daesh remains defiant.

It has claimed responsibility for suicide bombings, including attacks in Baghdad.

On Saturday, a car bomb killed five Iraqi soldiers on a road just north of Baghdad as they inspected the damage caused by an earlier blast, police sources said.

An audio message purported to be from the group’s leader this week urged supporters in Saudi Arabia to take the fight to the rulers of the kingdom, which has joined the US-led coalition in mounting air strikes against Daesh in Syria.

About 1,400 US troops are now on the ground, just below a previous limit of 1,600 troops. The new authorisation from Obama gives the US military the ability to deploy up to 3,100 troops.