While arming continuing to arm ISIS's "moderate" allies in Syria, no doubt!
---SMR
---SMR
The truth behind the "sudden" and geopolitically convenient discovery of ISIS' threat in Iraq and Syria: two goals:
1. To get US forces back into Iraq--even if without the Status of Forces Agreement, which Maliki refused to sign back in 2010; now Maliki is out with the help of the Kurdish faction in the Parliament who voted just among themselves for the new Iraqi president, who quickly nominated a new prime minister.
2. To allow for over US intervention in Syria.
In a briefing with reporters Wednesday, State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf would not rule out a U.S. campaign against ISIS in Syria. And Kerry said in his statement that the U.S. would "confront ISIL wherever it tries to spread its despicable hatred."
See http://syria360.wordpress.com/2014/08/21/us-operating-on-both-sides-of-syrian-iraqi-border/
And, US own admission:
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/obamas-mission-against-isis-just-131607976.html
1. To get US forces back into Iraq--even if without the Status of Forces Agreement, which Maliki refused to sign back in 2010; now Maliki is out with the help of the Kurdish faction in the Parliament who voted just among themselves for the new Iraqi president, who quickly nominated a new prime minister.
2. To allow for over US intervention in Syria.
In a briefing with reporters Wednesday, State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf would not rule out a U.S. campaign against ISIS in Syria. And Kerry said in his statement that the U.S. would "confront ISIL wherever it tries to spread its despicable hatred."
See http://syria360.wordpress.com/2014/08/21/us-operating-on-both-sides-of-syrian-iraqi-border/
And, US own admission:
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/obamas-mission-against-isis-just-131607976.html
---Vladimir Suchan
U.S.
General Says Raiding Syria Is Key to Halting ISIS
WASHINGTON
— The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria cannot be defeated unless the
United States or its partners take on the Sunni militants in Syria,
the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said Thursday
By MICHAEL
R. GORDON and HELENE
COOPER
21
August, 2014
“This
is an organization that has an apocalyptic end-of-days strategic
vision that will eventually have to be defeated,” said the
chairman, Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, in his most expansive public
remarks on the crisis since American airstrikes began in Iraq. “Can
they be defeated without addressing that part of the organization
that resides in Syria? The answer is no.”
But
General Dempsey and Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, who both spoke at
a Pentagon news conference, gave no indication that President Obama
was about to approve airstrikes in Syria.
General
Dempsey also was circumspect in describing the sort of broad effort
that would be required to roll back ISIS in Syria and Iraq.
“It
requires a variety of instruments, only one small part of which is
airstrikes,” he said. “I’m not predicting those will occur in
Syria, at least not by the United States of America. But it requires
the application of all of the tools of national power — diplomatic,
economic, information, military.”
Even
so, General Dempsey’s comments were notable because he is the
president’s top military adviser and had been among the most
outspoken in describing the risks of ordering airstrikes in Syria
when the civil war there began.
In
the current battle with ISIS inside Iraq, Mr. Obama’s military
strategy has been aimed at containing the militant organization
rather than defeating it, according to Defense Department officials
and military experts. Pressed on whether the United States would
conduct airstrikes on ISIS targets in Syria, Mr. Hagel said that
“we’re looking at all options.”
Any
use of air power involves risk, including the possibility that
innocent civilians may be hurt or killed, or that a piloted aircraft
might be shot down. Airstrikes in Syria would also draw the White
House more deeply into a conflict from which it has sought to
maintain some distance. But there is also risk in not acting, because
it is very difficult to defeat a militant group that is allowed to
maintain a sanctuary.
In
planning its campaign against ISIS, American military officers have
been contending with a highly mobile force that can move across the
Iraq-Syria border with impunity.
To
the consternation of American officials, ISIS has been using captured
American equipment, including Humvees and at least one heavily
armored troop transport vehicle. American intelligence officials have
reported that the group has seized 20 Russian T-55 tanks in Syria,
armor that ISIS could try to employ in western Iraq.
According
to one American intelligence estimate, ISIS could not be easily
defeated by killing its top leadership. Given its decentralized
command and control, experienced militants could easily replenish its
upper ranks.
“If
there is anything ISIL has learned from its previous iterations as Al
Qaeda in Iraq, it is that they need succession plans because losing
leaders to counterterrorism operations is to be expected,” said one
intelligence official, using an alternative name for the group.
“Their command and control is quite flexible as a result.”
American
officials caution that intelligence experts are still assessing
ISIS’s current strength and that pinning down the precise number of
its fighters is difficult, in part because it is not easy to identify
who is a core member of the group and who might be sympathizers
fighting alongside them.
Estimates
of the number of fighters that might be affiliated with ISIS vary
from more than 10,000 to as many as 17,000. That includes an initial
vanguard of about 3,000 who swept into Mosul from Syria in early June
and ISIS reinforcements from Syria since that time, as well as
thousands of new foreign recruits and thousands of Iraqi Sunnis, like
Baathists, who at least for now are allied with ISIS.
So
far, the military strategy that the Obama administration has employed
to confront ISIS has been limited in scope. Since Aug. 8, the United
States has carried out 90 airstrikes to halt the militant group’s
advance to Erbil, to help Kurdish and Iraqi government forces retake
the Mosul Dam and to protect Yazidi civilians trying to escape from
Mount Sinjar.
While
American air power appears to have been relatively successful in
those limited missions, some military officials say that the only way
to deal a major setback to such a mobile adversary is to attack ISIS
fighters throughout the battlefield.
John
R. Allen, the retired Marine Corps general who led American and
allied forces in Afghanistan, said the United States needed to build
up the capacity of indigenous forces in the region to take on ISIS,
but he stressed that there was also an important role for American
air power.
“For
now, attacking ISIS command and control sites, support areas and
critical pathways can do a great deal to begin the process of
dismantling the organization,” he said.
Those
that have been on the receiving end of ISIS’s attacks believe more
action is needed.
“ISIS
needs to be fought in all areas, in both Iraq and Syria,” said
Atheel al-Nujaifi, the governor of Iraq’s Nineveh Province, which
is now mostly held by ISIS. “The problem is finding a partner on
the ground that can work with them because the jets can’t finish
the battle from the sky.”
Those
within Syria who have fought ISIS also have expressed hopes for
intervention. When ISIS fighters tried to take land from the Shueitat
tribe in eastern Syria, its men took up arms and fought back — a
show of defiance that the extremist group did not forget.
This
month, ISIS retaliated, capturing and killing hundreds of tribe
members, some of them slaughtered with knives in the street. Wounded
and chased from his village, one survivor reached by phone on
Thursday said he could not understand why the United States was
bombing ISIS in Iraq but not in Syria, where the group has for more
than a year built its base and amassed weapons and fighters.
“I
wish we could ask the Americans to hit their bases wherever they
exist,” said the man, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear
of retribution.
When
the United States began airstrikes in Iraq this month, senior Obama
administration officials went out of their way to underscore the
limited nature of the action.
“This
was not an authorization of a broad-based counterterrorism campaign,”
a senior Obama administration official told reporters at the time.
"To
the consternation of American officials, ISIS has been using captured
American equipment, including Humvees and at least one heavily...
But
the beheading of an American journalist and the possibility that more
American citizens being held by the group might be slain has prompted
outrage at the highest levels of the United States government.
Mr.
Obama has harshly condemned the slaying, and on Wednesday Secretary
of State John Kerry issued a statement declaring that the group
should be confronted “wherever it tries to spread its despicable
hatred” and “must be destroyed.”
Such
strong statements have widened the gap between the harsh
denunciations of ISIS and the strategy that the White House has so
far employed to confront the group.
And
Mr. Hagel said Thursday that while American airstrikes had made a
difference thus far in slowing the ISIS advance in Iraq, he expected
that the militants would regroup and stage another offensive.
The
Obama administration has ruled out sending ground troops into combat
in Iraq. Administration officials have also continued to insist that
much of the strategy is political: the establishment of a more
diverse Iraqi government that would give a prominent role to Sunnis
in the hope that it would make Sunni communities less hospitable
hosts for ISIS militants.
But
other options are being considered, including increasing the scope
and frequency of airstrikes.
“You
can hit ISIS on one side of a border that essentially no longer
exists, and it will scurry across, as it may have already,” said
Brian Katulis, a national security expert with the Center for
American Progress, a Washington research organization with close ties
to the White House.
As
proven during the initial American military mission to rout Al Qaeda
and the Taliban from Afghanistan after the terror attacks of Sept.
11, 2001, American airstrikes would be more effective if small teams
of Special Operations forces were deployed to identify ISIS targets
and call in attacks.
Deploying
such teams is believed to be one option the Pentagon is considering.
Another step that some experts say will be needed to challenge the
militant groups is a stepped-up program to train, advise and equip
the moderate opposition in Syria as well as Kurdish and government
forces in Iraq.
During
his news conference, Mr. Hagel insisted that the United States was
pursuing a long-term strategy against ISIS because it clearly posed
“a long-term threat,” and at one point invoked the Sept. 11
attacks.
But
both Pentagon leaders reflected the prevailing view within the Obama
administration — that the United States should not move
aggressively to counter ISIS without participation from allies in the
region
From
the Guardian
Pentagon: Isis is 'beyond anything we've seen' and must be contained
Defence
chiefs describe militants as ‘apocalyptic’ group that will need
to be defeated but maintain limited strikes are sufficient
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