Since the emergence of ISIS last year and its rapid seizure of Syrian and Iraqi territory, to include the stunning takeover of Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, the Islamic State now has expanded its reach beyond its central geographic base.
In the past few days ISIS has expanded outside its geographic area and instituted a terror attack in Jalalabad and Afghanistan, as this is still yet to be confirmed, but Afghan President Ashraf Ghani claimed this emanated from the Islamic State.
If this development wasn’t ominous enough, ISIS operatives executed two separate groups of Ethiopian Christians inside Libya. Since President Obama sent Congress his war authorization back in February, the president has been pre-occupied with securing a nuclear accord with Iran, and has left this aspect to others to deal with.
The president and his administration now have very complex challenges to deal with, first, how to confront ISIS; and the other, an expansionist Iran throughout the Middle East.
On Monday, the Defense Department dispatched a U.S. aircraft carrier to join other American naval forces in an attempt to prevent Iranian shipments of weapons to Houthi rebels in Yemen.
It has been confirmed by the Navy, that the USS Theodore Roosevelt, and other escort ships to include the USS Normandy, a guided-missile cruiser, have been diverted from the Persian Gulf and are now steaming toward the Arabian Sea to assist in the embargo.
Now the president has the added challenge of how he plans on confronting the Islamic State. This, all in the backdrop of his war authorization which he sent back in February to Congress is being hamstrung, with Democrats not wanting to re-involve itself in another Middle Eastern conflict. Republicans are unsure of the president’s strategy, especially of not wanting to hamstring military commanders, but both sides agree that the administration is lacking a coherent military strategy.
Stephen Preston, the Pentagon’s top lawyer, as reported in the Dailey Beast, that the president wants “to tailor the authorities granted by the
The critical problem for the U.S. is that the president still hasn’t articulated a coherent political strategy for how he plans on dealing with ISIS.
Just last week Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff downplayed ISIS’ advance and the strong possibility that Islamic forces will take the Iraqi city of Ramadi in Anbar Province. “I would much rather that Ramadi not fall, but it won’t be the end of a campaign should it fall.” This is in the backdrop, all the while highlighting the significance of the oil rich city of Baiji in the north.
“Baiji is part of the Iraqi oil infrastructure,” Dempsey said Thursday. “Once the Iraqis have full control of Baiji, they will control all of their oil infrastructure, both north and south, and deny ISIS the ability to generate revenue through oil. So Baiji is a more strategic target. And that is why the focus right now is in fact on Baiji.”
This contradicts the statements of Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al Abadi, who while visiting the United States called the operations in Anbar a priority. During his visit, al Abadi chastised Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states for failing to give more support to his embattled country in its fight against ISIS.
Last week al Abadi was in Washington seeking additional aid to fight the Islamic State for assistance, to help Iraq cope with the severe drop in oil prices, and to help in addressing his nation’s budget shortfalls.
President Obama has pledged $200 million in humanitarian aid, which doubles what Washington has given in the past.
Christopher Harmer, a military analyst at the Institute for the Study of War, a nonpartisan public policy group in Washington, said that the aid package could help Abadi’s fragile government.
“There are not a lot of people inside Iraq that see the government as being legitimate,” Harmer said. “Whether it is U.S. airstrikes, or Iranian ground forces, the Iraqi government has been completely emasculated because the forces making a difference against [Islamic State] are not led by Iraqis.”
The problem is that many of the Sunni Arab countries see the Iraqi leader as a surrogate of Iran, and view the threat from Tehran as the more pressing issue than anything emanating from ISIS.
The president is going to have to address both challenges simultaneously, but our allies in the region do not have confidence in the president, especially in light of the Iranian nuclear negotiations, and how Obama has handled the crisis in the Middle East since taking office in 2009.
The president has two vexing decisions to make, and each has strategic political consequences for the U.S. and this troubled region.
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