Obama Repeating Past Mistakes In Iraq
By: Rachel Marsden
Despite its military supremacy, the U.S. under the command of President Barack Obama is at risk of having an upstart group of Islamic terrorists take over Iraq -- all because politically straitjacketed American military might has struggled against unrestrained guerrilla warfare, and the president has failed to absorb the lessons from America's past mistakes..
Obama's first mistake was to repeat the error that led to the creation of
al-Qaeda in the first place: training and funding locals, then abandoning them.
This was exactly what happened 30 years ago with America's support of the
Mujahedeen in Afghanistan -- from which Osama Bin Laden rose to prominence.
Today, it's happening with the so-called "rebels" in Syria, some of whom have
now regrouped into this virulent ideological cancer now destroying everything in
Iraq that isn't Islamic.
That brings us to Obama's second mistake: waiting over a month to act on the
problem beyond putting in a $500 million funding request to further arm and
train locals to fight these Islamists themselves. You know, just in case there
were any other Syrian opposition rebel groups who hadn't yet benefitted from the
terrorist group venture capital startup program being run by the U.S.
government.
It's not that the U.S. couldn't theoretically wipe out the Islamic State. But
that would require actual boots on the ground, favorable public opinion and
substantial international backing as typically exemplified by a U.N. Security
Council resolution. At this point, Obama has none of the above.
It's not a good sign that even Jordan -- an American ally that has hosted covert
CIA training for the Syrian opposition -- rejects American boots on the ground,
fearing a Syrian backlash, U.S. officials have told Reuters.
"It's up to Iraqis to lead this fight," said French Foreign Affairs Minister
Laurent Fabius. He added that France and other European nations would explore
the idea of providing arms to Iraq and Kurdistan. And it's in that little detail
-- the funding of nation-states rather than unaccountable rogues -- where a
crucial difference lies.
Compare Obama's interventions with France's current and incredibly successful
anti-jihadist Operation Serval in Mali.
When France fights in Africa, it co-opts a proxy army of a nation-state --
typically Chad's. It doesn't just dump cash and weapons onto some random locals,
as Obama has been doing, and hope for the best.
France ticked all the boxes with Serval: public support both at home and in
Mali, a request from the Malian interim government, and U.N. Security Council
authorization.
Because Obama has none of these elements, the result is lip service and
half-measures. Even Obama himself admits it, saying that there is "no American
military solution" Lt. Gen. William Mayville Jr., director of operations with
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said that the recent airstrikes "are unlikely to
affect [the Islamic State's] capabilities or its operations in other areas of
Iraq and Syria."
So, what's the solution? It's essentially the same one that Obama nearly ignored
when it was staring him in the face roughly a year ago at the height of the
Syrian crisis. He needs to find a reliable, accountable nation-state partner
with a vested interest in resolving this conflict.
Obama had been seriously contemplating military action in Syria to curtail civil
unrest. Many Americans were contacting their congressional representatives in a
panic over the possibility of U.S. troops being sent into battle to resolve a
crisis that seemed to come out of nowhere. Then Obama did something right. He
called on the assistance of a nation-state (Russia) with much greater proximity
and economic ties to Syria to take the lead in resolving the conflict.
Obama needs to repeat the same strategy with Iraq and let go of what will
otherwise be inevitable failure -- again. China has the bulk of Iraqi oil
contracts. Russia has a vested interest in wiping out Chechen Islamists who have
joined the Islamic State in their quest to participate in the nearest available
jihadipalooza. Saudi Arabia, a supposed U.S. ally, should be offering to prove
its value by snuffing out a regional pest it is largely responsible for having
funded (Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait funneled money
to the Syrian opposition from which the Islamic State evolved.)
There are plenty of other nations capable of doing the heavy lifting in wiping
out the Islamic State. Obama needs to start putting America's allies to the
test, calling on them to step up and giving them a chance to prove their
reliability. How about starting with Saudi Arabia? Let's kick the tires on that
special relationship. The Saudis just gave Lebanon $1 billion in aid to beat
back the Islamic State domestically. It's a start -- but why isn't Obama
insisting on more?
COPYRIGHT 2014 RACHEL MARSDEN