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U.S.
Pilots Confirm: Obama Admin Blocks 75 Percent of Islamic State
Strikes
‘We
can’t get clearance even when we have a clear target in front of
us’
This picture is of a RUSSIAN air strike
20
Novermber, 2015
U.S.
military pilots who have returned from the fight against the Islamic
State in Iraq are confirming that they were blocked from dropping 75
percent of their ordnance on terror targets because they could not
get clearance to launch a strike, according to a leading member of
Congress.
Strikes
against the Islamic State (also known as ISIS or ISIL) targets are
often blocked due to an Obama administration policy to prevent
civilian deaths and collateral damage, according to Rep. Ed Royce
(R., Calif.), chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
The
policy is being blamed for allowing Islamic State militants to gain
strength across Iraq and continue waging terrorist strikes throughout
the region and beyond, according to Royce and former military leaders
who spoke Wednesday about flaws in the U.S. campaign to combat the
Islamic State.
“You
went 12 full months while ISIS was on the march without the U.S.
using that air power and now as the pilots come back to talk to us
they say three-quarters of our ordnance we can’t drop, we can’t
get clearance even when we have a clear target in front of us,”
Royce said. “I don’t understand this strategy at all because this
is what has allowed ISIS the advantage and ability to recruit.”
When
asked to address Royce’s statement, a Pentagon official defended
the Obama administration’s policy and said that the military is
furiously working to prevent civilian casualties.
“The
bottom line is that we will not stoop to the level of our enemy and
put civilians more in harm’s way than absolutely necessary,” the
official told the Washington
Free Beacon,
explaining that the military often conducts flights “and don’t
strike anything.”
“The
fact that aircraft go on missions and don’t strike anything is not
out of the norm,” the official said. “Despite U.S. strikes being
the most precise in the history of warfare, conducting strike
operations in the heavily populated areas where ISIL hides certainly
presents challenges. We are fighting an enemy who goes out of their
way to put civilians at risk. However, our pilots understand the need
for the tactical patience in this environment. This fight against
ISIL is not the kind of fight from previous decades.”
Jack
Keane, a retired four-star U.S. general, agreed with Royce’s
assessment of the administration’s policy and blamed President
Barack Obama for issuing orders that severely constrain the U.S.
military from combatting terror forces.
“This
has been an absurdity from the beginning,” Keane said in response
to questions from Royce. “The president personally made a statement
that has driven air power from the inception.”
“When
we agreed we were going to do airpower and the military said, this is
how it would work, he [Obama] said, ‘No, I do not want any civilian
casualties,’” Keane explained. “And the response was, ‘But
there’s always some civilian casualties. We have the best
capability in the world to protect from civilians casualties.’”
However,
Obama’s response was, “No, you don’t understand. I want no
civilian casualties. Zero,’” Keane continued. “So that has
driven our so-called rules of engagement to a degree we have never
had in any previous air campaign from desert storm to the present.”
This
is likely the reason that U.S. pilots are being told to back down
when Islamic State targets are in site, Keane said, citing statistics
published earlier this year by U.S. Central Command showing that
pilots return from sorties in Iraq with about 75 percent of their
ordnance unexpended.
“Believe
me,” Keane added, “the French are in there not using the
restrictions we have imposed on our pilots.”
And
the same goes for Russians, he said, adding, “They don’t care at
all about civilians.”
The
French have been selecting their own targets since beginning to
launch strikes on the Islamic State earlier this week, according to a
second Pentagon source who spoke to the Free
Beacon earlier
this week about the strikes.
France dropped at
least 20 bombs on key Islamic State targets within two days after the
terror attacks in Paris that killed 129. French strikes have killed
at least 33 Islamic State militants in the past several days.
In
the case of the initial French strikes, the “targets were nominated
by the French whose strikes against them were supported by the
coalition” fighting the Islamic State, the official explained.
Any
coalition member can nominate a potential target.
“Once
a target is validated, great care is taken—from analysis of
available intelligence to selection of the appropriate weapon to meet
mission requirements—to minimize the risk of collateral damage,
particularly any potential harm to non-combatants,” the official
said.
Since
the beginning of the year, more than 22,000 munitions were dropped on
Islamic State targets during more than 8,000 sorties, according to
information provided to the Free
Beacon by
the Defense Department.
Some
experts questioned whether the administration is handing off portions
of the battle to other nations.
“The
French airstrikes have been billed as a significant uptick in the
battle against the Islamic State; preliminary data indicate that this
is not the case,” said Jonathan Schanzer, a former terrorism expert
at the U.S. Treasury Department. “It appears that the U.S. is
simply allowing France to strike many of the targets that would
usually be reserved for the U.S. and some of its coalition allies. In
other words, this appears to be a redistribution of daily targets in
the ongoing campaign, and not a significant change.”
These
strikes have forced the Islamic State to evacuate at least 20 to 25
percent of the territories it held one year ago in both Iraq and
Syria, according to the Pentagon.
Attacks
have focused on the Islamic State’s “staging areas, fighting
position, and key leaders,” as well as its “oil distribution
chain,” according to the Pentagon.
Meanwhile,
a poll released
Thursday found that at least 70 percent of American support an
expanded fight against the Islamic State, including sending U.S.
troops to the region.
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