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		Exclusive: Overruling diplomats, U.S. to 
		drop Iraq, Myanmar from child soldiers' list 
		
		 
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		 [June 24, 2017] 
		By Jason Szep and Matt Spetalnick 
		 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In a highly unusual 
		intervention, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson plans to remove Iraq and 
		Myanmar from a U.S. list of the world's worst offenders in the use of 
		child soldiers, disregarding the recommendations of State Department 
		experts and senior U.S. diplomats, U.S. officials said. 
		 
		The decision, confirmed by three U.S. officials, would break with 
		longstanding protocol at the State Department over how to identify 
		offending countries and could prompt accusations the Trump 
		administration is prioritizing security and diplomatic interests ahead 
		of human rights. 
		 
		Tillerson overruled his own staff’s assessments on the use of child 
		soldiers in both countries and rejected the recommendation of senior 
		diplomats in Asia and the Middle East who wanted to keep Iraq and 
		Myanmar on the list, said the officials, who have knowledge of the 
		internal deliberations. 
		 
		Tillerson also rejected an internal State Department proposal to add 
		Afghanistan to the list, the three U.S. officials said. 
		
		
		  
		
		One official said the decisions appeared to have been made following 
		pressure from the Pentagon to avoid complicating assistance to the Iraqi 
		and Afghan militaries, close U.S. allies in the fight against Islamist 
		militants. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity. 
		 
		Foreign militaries on the list can face sanctions including a 
		prohibition on receiving U.S. military aid, training and U.S.-made 
		weapons unless the White House issues a waiver. 
		 
		Human rights officials expressed surprise at the delisting, which was 
		expected to be announced on Tuesday, the officials said, as part of the 
		State Department's annual Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report. 
		 
		A State Department official said the TIP report's contents were being 
		kept under wraps until its release and the department "does not discuss 
		details of internal deliberations." 
		 
		The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 
		 
		Under the Child Soldiers Prevention Act of 2008, the U.S. government 
		must be satisfied that "no children are recruited, conscripted or 
		otherwise compelled to serve as child soldiers" in order for a country 
		to be removed from the list and U.S. military assistance to resume. 
		 
		In the lead-up to Tuesday's report, the State Department's Bureau of 
		Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, which researches the issue and helps 
		shape U.S. policy on it, along with its legal office and diplomatic 
		bureaus in Asia and the Middle East concluded that the evidence merited 
		keeping both countries on the list, the officials said. 
		 
		Officials said that although the report had been finalized there was 
		always the possibility of last-minute changes. 
		
		
		  
		
		BETRAYING CHILDREN 
		 
		Human Rights Watch said removing Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, from 
		the list would be a "completely premature and disastrous action that 
		will effectively betray more children to continued servitude and rights 
		abuses." 
		 
		The decision also would put the Trump administration at odds with the 
		United Nations, which continues to list the Myanmar military, along with 
		seven ethnic armed groups, on its list of entities using and recruiting 
		child soldiers. 
		 
		
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			U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson speaks during a press 
			conference after talks with Chinese diplomatic and defense chiefs at 
			the State Department in Washington, U.S. June 21, 2017. 
			REUTERS/Kevin  
            
			  
			"What's particularly astonishing is this move ignores that the U.N. 
			in Burma says that it is still receiving new cases of children being 
			recruited" by the Myanmar military, said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia 
			director at Human Rights Watch. 
			 
			Rights groups have long accused Myanmar of using child soldiers. 
			Bordering both China and India, Myanmar is also of growing strategic 
			importance to the United States at a time of increasing encroachment 
			in the region by China, which has sought closer relations with its 
			neighbor. 
			 
			Iraq, which has received more than $2 billion in U.S. arms and 
			training over the last three years, was added to the State 
			Department’s "Child Soldier Prevention Act List" in 2016. However, 
			the flow of U.S. assistance has continued. 
			 
			Former President Barack Obama handed out full or partial waivers 
			regularly, including last year to Iraq, Myanmar, Nigeria, South 
			Sudan and others out of 10 countries on the list. 
			 
			Last year's State Department report said some militias of Iraq's 
			Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), an umbrella group of mostly 
			Shi'ite Muslim factions with ties to the Iraqi government and backed 
			by Iran, "recruited and used child soldiers." 
			 
			The report said that despite the PMF being funded by the government, 
			Baghdad struggled to control all of its factions. 
			 
			"The government did not hold anyone accountable for child 
			recruitment and use by the PMF and PMF-affiliated militias." 
			
			
			  
			
			Human Rights Watch said in January that it had learned that militias 
			had been recruiting child soldiers from one Iraqi refugee camp since 
			last spring. 
			 
			The broader TIP report, the first of Trump's presidency, is sure to 
			be closely scrutinized for further signs that under his "America 
			First" approach there will be little pressure brought to bear on 
			friendly governments, especially strategically important ones, for 
			human rights violations at home. 
			 
			The Obama administration, while more vocal about political 
			repression around the world, also faced criticism from human rights 
			groups and some U.S. lawmakers that decisions on annual human 
			trafficking rankings had become increasingly politicized. 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Antoni Slodkowski in Yangon and Phil 
			Stewart in Washington; Editing by Grant McCool and Leslie Adler) 
			
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