Posted on 11/17/2015 6:08:13 AM PST by Kaslin
Among the presidential candidates of the Republican Party and their foreign policy leaders on Capitol Hill the cry is almost universal:
Barack Obama has no strategy for winning the war on ISIS.
This criticism, however, sounds strange coming from a party that controls Congress but has yet to devise its own strategy, or even to authorize the use of U.S. military force in Syria.
Congress has punted. And compared to the cacophony from Republican ranks, Barack Obama sounds like Prince Bismarck.
The President's strategy is to contain, degrade and defeat ISIS. While no one has provided the troops to defeat ISIS, the U.S. is using Kurdish and Yazidi forces, backed by U.S. air power, to degrade it.
And recent months have seen measured success.
The Kurds have run ISIS out of Kobani, captured much of the Turkish-Syrian border, and moved to within 30 miles of Raqqa, the ISIS capital. Yazidis and Kurds last week recaptured Sinjar in Iraq and cut the highway between Mosul and Raqqa.
The terrorist attacks in Paris, the downing of the Russian airliner in Sinai, the ISIS bomb that exploded in the Shiite sector of Beirut, are ISIS's payback. But they could also be signs that the ISIS caliphate, imperiled in its base, is growing desperate and lashing out.
Yet consider the Republican strategies being advanced.
In Sunday's Washington Post, Mitt Romney writes:
"We must wage the war to defeat the enemy. ... [Obama] must call in the best military minds from the United States and NATO ... and finally construct a comprehensive strategy that integrates our effort with the Kurds, Turks, Saudis, Egyptians and Jordanians."
The Kurds excepted, Gov. Romney ignored all the forces that are actually fighting ISIS: Russians, Hezbollah, Iran, Bashar Assad, the Syrian army.
Mitt urges instead an alliance of countries that have done next to nothing to defeat ISIS.
The Turks are instead hitting the Kurds in Turkey, Syria and Iraq. The Saudis are bombing the Houthis in Yemen, not ISIS in Raqqa. The Egyptians are preoccupied with their own homegrown terrorists.
"Now is the time, not merely to contain the Islamic State," says Mitt, "but to eradicate it once and for all." But why did he not mention Russia, Iran, Assad and Hezbollah, all of which also wish to eradicate ISIS?
We partnered with Stalin in WWII. Is Vladimir Putin an untouchable?
Sens. John McCain and Lindsey Graham want U.S. ground troops sent into Syria and Iraq. But as Turkey has an army of 500,000 next door and Assad's army would happily help wipe out ISIS, why not let Arab and Turkish boys do the fighting this time?
"America must lead," is Jeb Bush's mantra, and he wants U.S. boots on the ground and a no-fly zone over Syria.
"We should declare war," says Bush.
Why then does Bush not call up Speaker Paul Ryan and Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and dictate the war resolution he wants passed?
And whom does Jeb propose to fight? Why declare a no-fly zone when ISIS has no air force? Does Bush plan to shoot down Syrian planes flying over Syria and Russian planes flying in support of Assad?
Has Jeb, like his brother, not thought this through?
If we declare a no-fly zone over Syria, or establish a "safe zone," we risk war not only with Syria, but Russia, Iran and Hezbollah.
None of these allies of Assad will meekly stand aside while we take military action to deny the Syrian regime and army the right to defend itself and survive in its war against ISIS, al-Nusra and other assorted jihadists and rebels.
Having invested blood and treasure in Assad's survival, and securing their own interests in Syria, they are not likely to submit to U.S. dictation. Are we prepared for a war against both sides in Syria?
Who would fight Russia, Iran, Hezbollah and Syria alongside us?
Yet New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is ready to rumble.
"Well, the first thing you do is you set up a no-fly zone in Syria, and you call Putin, and you say to him, 'Listen, we're enforcing a no-fly zone, and that means we're enforcing it against everyone, and that includes you. So, don't test me.'"
And if Russia violated his no-fly zone? "Then you take him down," said Christie, meaning we shoot down Russian jets.
But what vital interest of ours has ever been so engaged in Syria as to justify a major war in the Middle East and a military clash with a Russia with a nuclear arsenal as large as our own?
In any war it is usually wise to enlarge the roster of one's allies and reduce the roster of enemies. If ISIS is the implacable enemy and must be annihilated, we should welcome all volunteers.
As for those who decline to fight, but claim a veto over whom we may ally with, we should tell them to pound sand.
If Putin wants to enlist in the war against ISIS, sign him up.
NO.
About as much as Stalin was against the Nazis.
So yeah.....this is really going to suck in the end.
American needs in the Middle East are not the same as Putin’s goals nor are they the same as Hussein Obama’s goals.
Putin is serving Putin’s interests in Syria and to a lesser extent Russia’s interests. That is a whole lot closer to serving American interests than anything we will see from Obama, whose goal is to destroy the West.
So, no, Putin is not our ally in Syria. Still, he is the best we have and a potential counterweight to Obama’s evil.
NO, but he is helping to kill ISIS.
Premise is wrong. “We” are not “us” for a starter.
This administration and its lickspittle ObamaCon loyalists need to be distinguished from the majority of Americans, and those who are ardent to extinguish the ISIS arson and indeed all the results of the ‘Arab Spring’.
More than Obama.
Very well said
No because we are on ISIS’s side as long as Obama is leading us!
Russia is enemies with the terrorists, we support the terrorists.
“So, no, Putin is not our ally in Syria. Still, he is the best we have and a potential counterweight to Obamaâs evil.”
Actually, Putin is our ally in Syria. He isn’t Obama’s ally. Russia is protecting their sphere of influence, since Syria is two countries away from Russia. From my perspective (and a big tin foil hat alert) If Assad fell to ISIS, the only country preventing ISIS from crossing the Black Sea into Russia is Turkey and they are already in the ISIS camp as well as a NATO member. And as we have seen prior to Friday night, NATO wasn’t doing much about ISIS.
When you look at the bigger picture there, the biggest target and jump off point for ISIS into Russia would come through Ukraine. Probably just an odd coincidence that Russia would fight in Ukraine.
Well said Pat.
The enemy of my enemy is my temporary friend.
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