Despite the insistence of President Obama and his senior
advisors that the Islamic State and the violent jihadist movement
worldwide is losing ground, the former head of U.S. Central
Commander says the exact opposite is true.
"The U.S. has lost ground in the fight against Islamic
extremism, the former commander of U.S. forces in the Middle East said in a
recent interview," according to an article in The
Hill, a Washington based newspaper that covers Congressional affairs.
- "Unfortunately,
we have lost ground over time," said retired Gen. John P. Abizaid,
former commander of U.S. Central Command in an interview published in
this month's West Point's Combating Terrorism Center's magazine.
- "The
scope of the ideological movement, the geographic dispersion of Islamic
extremism, the number of terror attacks, the number of people swearing
allegiance, and the ground they hold have all increased," said
Abizaid.
- "Groups
like the Islamic State have now taken on state-like forms and features
that are unlike anything we’ve seen in the past. So on balance we are in
a worse position strategically with regard to the growth of
international terrorism, Islamic terrorism in particular, than we were
after September 2001," he said.
- The dire
assessment highlights the difficulty the Obama administration faces as
it tries to accelerate the campaign against ISIS in its remaining 10
months in office....
- The
administration says the primary focus will remain on Iraq and Syria, but
that it will also strike ISIS in other places, such as Afghanistan and
Libya, if an opportunity arises.
- However, with
only 10 months remaining in the administration, there is little time for
doing significantly more, and the administration has sidestepped
questions into whether there will be a more robust effort to go after
ISIS in Libya.
- "I'm not
going to look ahead into the future. We're going to continue to respond
to the ISIL threat as it develops. We are carrying out a significant
campaign against ISIL in Iraq and Syria, and we are prepared — as we
have demonstrated in the last 24 hours — to strike ISIL in other parts
of the world, as they pose a threat," Pentagon press secretary
Peter Cook said Friday, using another acronym for ISIS.
- Abizaid also
said the U.S. was making a mistake by not acknowledging that modern-day
borders of the Middle East are falling apart.
- The U.S. is
aiming for political solutions in Iraq and Syria that would keep the
countries together, instead of broken up along sectarian lines.
- "I do not
think you solve the problem by trying to reinforce the status quo that
existed before September 11, 2001," he said.
- "I think
the international community and the leaders in the region have got to
decide how best to reshape the Middle East and redraw the boundaries to
establish stability and a more peaceful structure," he said.
- "Nations
that are trying to put the status quo back on the map are only going to
prolong the conflict and stoke greater violence," he added. "I
do not believe we are capable of putting this all back together again.
That strategy is bound to fail."
- One thing the
U.S. can do, he recommended, is to put more effort into organizing and
leading the international community to do more to take on ISIS.
- "I’m
talking about a raiding strategy where we destroy capability over time
in a joint force, which is an integrated international air, ground, and
naval effort," he said.
- "Without
American leadership, we’re not going to move in a direction that’s going
to produce effective results," he said.
- "That
doesn’t mean we only employ American assets, but it does mean there has
to be American commitment to lead the effort and guarantee our partners
that there will be some long lasting measures that take place," he
said.
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