Story highlights
- U.S. deputy secretary of state says coalition has "made real gains" against ISIS
- Iraq's Prime Minister calls for international community to give more support to Iraqi forces
- French Foreign Minister: "This fight is a long-term fight -- there have been advances but there can also be reversals"
(CNN)Iraq's international partners vowed Tuesday to remain united in the fight against ISIS in Iraq and Syria, as Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi called for more support for his nation's forces.
Members of the U.S.-led international coalition against ISIS met for the conference in Paris against a backdrop of recent gains for ISIS in Anbar province, where the militant group seized the key city of Ramadi last month.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry took part from Boston, where he is receiving treatment after a cycling accident, but was represented in Paris by U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Tony Blinken.
Blinken, speaking alongside al-Abadi and French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, argued that Iraq and its partners were making progress against ISIS and that the current strategy was working "militarily and politically."
"We have made real gains in the nine months since this coalition came together," he said. "Daesh controls 25% less territory than it did when this first came together and it has lost significant numbers of men and material and we have proof of concept that what we're doing works, around al-Asad, where we're present, and in the north with the Kurdish forces."
Hundreds of U.S. service members are based at Ayn al-Asad airbase in Anbar province, where they are helping to train Iraqi pilots in the fight against ISIS.
Daesh is another name for ISIS that is widely used by European and Arab allies and is despised by the terrorist group.
Kerry: ISIS 'no more a state than a helicopter'
Speaking via telephone to the summit, Kerry forcefully pushed back against any notion that ISIS is a state, despite the group's broad territorial gains.
He also spoke about the need to "maintain momentum in the battle of ideas," according to excerpts from the call provided by the State Department.
"One way is to expose at every opportunity the false nature of Daesh's claim to be 'the' Islamic State. In reality, Daesh is no more a state than I am a helicopter," Kerry said.
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said the talks had enabled the partners to reaffirm their "unity and common determination" to beat back ISIS.
"This fight is a long-term fight -- there have been advances, but there can also be reversals," he said.
Iraqi PM urges more support
Al-Abadi, who presented a plan for the recapture of Ramadi, called for the international community to take practical action to support Iraqi forces, saying: "We have to face Daesh not only from Iraq, but from all different regions of the world."
Many countries have promised Iraq support but it has received very little, he said, while Iraqis are "shedding their blood" to fight back.
Abadi also argued that the predominantly Shiite paramilitary forces, the Popular Mobilization Units, who have been deployed alongside Iraqi forces to try to push back against ISIS in Anbar province, a Sunni heartland, are not militias but are under the control of security leaders.
Of the 60-plus nations who joined the international coalition against ISIS nine months ago, 24 were represented in Paris on Tuesday.
In a joint declaration, they pledged their continued military support, through the provision of equipment, training and airstrikes, as well as stressing the importance of reforms and reconciliation by Iraq's government to tackle sectarian division.
They also highlighted the need for an urgent political solution to the situation in war-torn Syria, which has enabled ISIS' expansion into neighboring Iraq.
Besides taking on ISIS militarily, the international community must act to disrupt the flows of money, weapons and foreign fighters fueling ISIS' rise, the declaration said.
In a sign of the continuing divisions within Iraq, the Kurdistan regional government issued a statement criticizing the Iraqi government for its refusal to include a Kurdish representative in its delegation at the Paris talks, despite the efforts of Kurdish fighters -- known as the Peshmerga -- on the frontline.