WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama will review military
strategy against the Islamic State group, press nations to admit more refugees
and review progress around the world, despite new challenges, when he makes his
final appearance at the U.N. General Assembly session in New York next week,
the White House said Friday.
On the sidelines of the session, Obama has scheduled meetings
with the leaders of Iraq, Nigeria and Colombia and plans to promote trade between the
U.S. and Africa.
Obama
heads to New York on Sunday for the General Assembly session that opens Monday,
his eighth and final as president.
He plans
to sit down Monday with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi to discuss
progress the country has made countering the Islamic State group, a coming
Iraqi military operation to take back the city of Mosul from IS militants, and
a brewing humanitarian crisis inside Iraq, said Ben Rhodes, Obama's deputy
national security adviser.
Deputy
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said this week while visiting Baghdad that
Iraqi forces aided by the U.S.-led coalition against IS had retaken half the
territory that militants once held in the country. He also announced more than
$181 million in aid to address a humanitarian crisis that has festered in Iraq
as a result of the insurgency.
Despite a
series of major defeats in recent months, IS has maintained its grip on Mosul,
Iraq's second largest city. Iraq hopes to launch an operation this year to
retake Mosul.
Obama delivers
his final address to the yearly gathering of world leaders on Tuesday, and will
use the opportunity to "step back" and review some of the progress
over the past eight years along with "some of the trends that have been
shaping our international order," said Rhodes, previewing the trip for
reporters.
The Syrian
conflict continues to confound world leaders, although a recent cease-fire
agreement appears to be holding, but Syria has not yet allowed humanitarian aid
to flow to the city of Aleppo and other affected areas. Meanwhile, North Korea
continues to defy the international community with its recent nuclear and
ballistic missile tests.
Obama also
plans to meet Tuesday with Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, who has held
office for just over a year, to talk about continued U.S. support for security
and economic changes in the country, as well the government's efforts to
counter the Islamic extremist group Boko Haram.
At a
summit on refugees that the president is hosting, Obama is expected to press more
nations to open their borders and help double the number of refugees who are
resettled around the world. Mexico, Sweden, Canada, Germany, Jordan and
Ethiopia are co-hosting the summit along with U.N. Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon.
Europe has
shouldered a large portion of the Syrian refugee crisis. Canada welcomed 25,000
Syrian refugees, and the U.S. recently met its goal of resettling 10,000 Syrian
refugees this year.
Obama will
devote a portion of Wednesday, the final day of the General Assembly session,
to promoting trade between the U.S. and Africa. He was attending a summit with
some 200 American and African CEOs, and African heads of state.
The
president also plans to meet with Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos,
mainly to discuss a historic peace agreement recently struck between Santos'
government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia rebel group to end 52
years of hostilities, the Western Hemisphere's longest-running war.
The U.S.
supported the peace effort, and the people of Colombia will vote on it a
nationwide referendum in early October.
On Sunday
evening in New York, Obama was headlining a Democratic Party fundraiser.

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