I/II.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/25/opinion/a-necessary-response-to-isis.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=c-column-top-span-region&region=c-column-top-span-region&WT.nav=c-column-top-span-region

A Necessary Response to ISIS
(NYTimes editorial)

The United States cannot go it alone in the fight against the Islamic State
in Iraq and Syria, the extremist group known as ISIS whose ruthlessness and
killing has dumbfounded and horrified the civilized world.

American airstrikes and other assistance from the United States have
brought some measure of relief to religious minorities and others that ISIS
has threatened. But defeating, or even substantially degrading, ISIS will
require an organized, longer-term response involving a broad coalition of
nations, including other Muslim countries, and addressing not only the
military threat but political and religious issues.

The recent persecution of Christians and Yazidis and the murder of James
Foley, an American journalist, has brought ISIS's savagery into full view.
On Thursday, Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, said ISIS posed an "immediate threat" to the West, in addition to
Iraq, because thousands of Europeans and other foreigners who have joined
the group and have the passports to travel freely could carry the fight
back to their home countries -- including the United States.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel was equally emphatic. ISIS, he warned, is
"beyond anything that we've seen" because it is extremely well-financed and
has demonstrated sophistication and tactical skill in its campaign to
impose an Islamic caliphate by brute force. Other analysts have gone so far
as to describe ISIS as one of the most successful extremist groups in
history because of its ability to seize and hold large sections of two
countries -- Iraq and Syria -- with what seems like blinding speed.

While the group poses a risk to the United States and the West, those
paying the biggest price are Muslims. That's why President Obama
<http://takingnote.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/08/20/president-obama-on-james-foley-and-muslim-victims/>
was correct to argue that "from governments and peoples across the Middle
East, there has to be a common effort to extract this cancer so that it
does not spread." Making this happen will take American leadership, but, so
far, neither he nor America's allies have laid out a coherent vision of
exactly what this fight might entail or how to achieve success.

The response to the immediate crisis has been prudent. The United States
has insisted that Iraq's government and army set aside longstanding
rivalries and work with the pesh merga militia of Kurdistan to back up
American airstrikes by fighting ISIS on the ground. Germany, Italy, Britain
and France have promised weapons.

The politics of Iraq, however, remain dangerously unsettled. The United
States successfully pressed for a change from Nuri Kamal al-Maliki as prime
minister in Iraq because only a more inclusive leader would have any chance
of unifying the country against the ISIS threat. And, in a rare convergence
of interests, Iran also withdrew its support from Mr. Maliki, resulting in
the appointment of a new leader, Haider al-Abadi. But Parliament has yet to
give final approval to the new government, thus prolonging political
uncertainties that undermine the fight against ISIS.

The prospects of defeating ISIS would be greatly improved if other Muslim
nations could see ISIS for the threat it is. But, like Iraq, they are mired
in petty competitions and Sunni-Shiite religious divisions and many have
their own relations with extremists of one kind or another. ISIS has
received financing from donors in Kuwait and Qatar. Saudi Arabia funneled
weapons to Syrian rebels and didn't care if they went to ISIS. Turkey
allowed ISIS fighters and weapons to flow across porous borders. All of
that has to stop.

Creating a regional military force may be required, including assistance
from the Gulf Cooperation Council countries and Turkey. It certainly will
require money, intelligence-sharing, diplomatic cooperation and a
determined plan to cut off financing to ISIS and the flow of ISIS fighters
between states. France's suggestion
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/08/20/us-iraq-security-france-idUSKBN0GK0Q820140820>
for an international conference deserves consideration.

No matter how many American airstrikes are carried out -- Mr. Obama is also
considering strikes against ISIS in Syria
<http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/23/world/middleeast/obama-adviser-says-military-action-possible-against-isis.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&version=LedeSum&module=first-column-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news>
-- such extremists will never be defeated if Muslims themselves don't make
it a priority. To their credit, some leaders are speaking out. Among them
is Saudi Arabia's highest religious authority, the grand mufti
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/08/19/us-iraq-security-saudi-mufti-idUSKBN0GJ11S20140819>,
who called ISIS and Al Qaeda the "enemy No. 1 of Islam."

But they must go further and begin a serious discussion about the dangers
of radical Islam and how ISIS's perversion of one of the world's great
religions can be reversed.

II.

DefenseOne.com
 August 22, 20145


*Obama Insiders Frustrated Over Reluctance to Attack Syria and Iraq *
Gayle Tzemach Lemmon


Kurdish Peshmerga fighters react during airstrikes target Islamic State
militants near the Khazer
checkpoint outside of Erbil, Iraq.

*President Barack Obama recently dismissed his critics* who argue that
arming the Syrian moderate opposition long ago would have made a difference
in the fight against Bashar al-Assad. But louder than ever those critics -
some from within his own administration - are saying, "We told you so."

That notion, the president said, "has always been a fantasy. This idea that
we could provide some light arms or even more sophisticated arms to what
was essentially an opposition made up of former doctors, farmers,
pharmacists and so forth, and that they were going to be able to battle not
only a well-armed state but also a well-armed state backed by Russia,
backed by Iran, a battle-hardened Hezbollah, that was never in the cards."

As the Islamic State grows and gains territory in not only Syria but Iraq
as well, some within the administration say they feel "extreme frustration"
that their long-standing warnings have come true--warnings about the likely
gain of extremist groups on the ground in the face of American inaction in
Syria. They also reject the hardening narrative that the rise of the
Islamic State was inevitable.

"Two years ago we told them if we did not train the moderates it would be
the regime versus al-Qaeda and you would have transnational terrorist
networks in Syria," says one administration official. "The real fear they
always had was: arming the opposition means empowering the extremists. And
now they say, 'See? We told you,' and we say, 'No, you didn't arm the
moderates and you ended up with the extremists.'"

The back-and-forth within the administration on Syria has played out in
public and in private since 2011. Both former Defense Secretary Robert
Gates and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton write in their books
about the policy debate on whether and how to arm the moderate opposition
in Syria as the Assad regime's crackdown grew increasingly brutal,
eventually with backing from Russia and Iran.

Clinton said that she did believe that "the failure to help build up a
credible fighting force of the people who were the originators of the
protests against Assad--there were Islamists, there were secularists, there
was everything in the middle--the failure to do that left a big vacuum,
which the jihadists have now filled. They were often armed in an
indiscriminate way by other forces and we had no skin in the game that
really enabled us to prevent this indiscriminate arming."

In June, the president said, "The question has always been, is there the
capacity of moderate opposition on the ground to absorb and counteract
extremists that might have been pouring in, as well as an Assad regime
supported by Iran and Russia that outmanned them and was ruthless. And so
we have consistently provided that opposition with support. Oftentimes, the
challenge is if you have former farmers or teachers or pharmacists who now
are taking up opposition against a battle-hardened regime, with support
from external actors that have a lot at stake, how quickly can you get them
trained; how effective are you able to mobilize them. And that continues to
be a challenge."

But those who supported and continue to back arming of moderate rebel
opposition forces say that it is not entirely accurate to label these
forces farmers and pharmacists as the president did again in his recent
interview. They note that many of the moderates, especially in 2011, were
former regime fighters, and that all Syrians are conscripted to do military
service.

And they say that the Islamic State extremists they are now up against were
hardly more qualified when they entered the fight.

"Where were these ISIS guys three years ago? They were not part of Jihadi
West Point cadres," said former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq James Jeffrey.
"They very quickly have been trained."

Others who agree say that there were no guarantees that the plan to arm the
moderates would have worked. But as Congress faces the president's June 26
request to provide $500 million to train and arm Syrian moderate rebels,
they take issue with the idea that the plan to provide arms two years ago
would have made no difference.

"What we do know and what we did know was that the longer we delayed this,
the less likely it was going to work," said the administration official.
 "Maybe it would have failed, but it had a much higher chance of succeeding
then than now."

Now some inside the administration are arguing for arming the moderate
rebels quickly--as well as for striking the Islamic State group within
Syria, where they hold territory and have their headquarters. The biggest
fear is that the Syrian town of Aleppo will fall, striking a psychological
blow and sparking a massive humanitarian catastrophe. The group is said to
be closing in on the city, taking a series of surrounding villages in the
last week.

 "If you think thousands of Yazidis stuck on a mountain is terrible, wait
until Aleppo falls," said the official.

Jeffrey and others who support arming the rebels say that time is of the
essence when it comes to fighting the Islamic State, including in Syria.
"You don't want to wait, you have to use judgment, you don't want to wait
until it is incontrovertible that you are facing a huge threat," Jeffrey
said. "We should be arming and providing air support for and air cover for
local people."

Indeed, Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey said on Thursday that the
Islamic State could not be defeated by airstrikes in Iraq without also
striking them on the Syrian side of the border.

Others who served in the administration say that criticism surrounding its
reluctance to act stems from its "very linear perspective, on or off, all
or nothing perception of what military action does."

"It is hard to prove you prevented something bad from happening; it is
always hard to prove that," said Janine Davidson, senior fellow for defense
policy at the Council on Foreign Relations who served until 2012 as the
Pentagon's deputy assistant secretary of defense for plans.

"To have influenced the course of events in Syria would have required a
steady, strategic effort focused on identifying a certain group of people
in Syria and actively helping that group grow," Davidson said, noting that
nothing would have been resolved either easily or quickly and that both
risks and costs were significant.

 "People just want quicker fixes than that and there was no guarantee."

*Gayle Tzemach Lemmon *is a regular contributor to Defense One. Lemmon is
also a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and the author of *The
Dressmaker of Khair Khana. *


-- 
Peace Is Doable

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