Daily Times (Primos, PA)

What Trump gets wrong about war against the IS

- By Robert Burns

WASHINGTON » President Donald Trump has made several incorrect or misleading statements about the five-year battle against the Islamic State group as he seeks to end what he calls “endless wars” and explain an abrupt abandonmen­t of America’s Kurdish partners in the face of a Turkish offensive.

He has gotten his facts wrong on at least five key points about the conflict.

TRUMP: THE U.S.-LED EFFORT TO DEFEAT THE ISLAMIC STATE GROUP WAS “A MESS” BEFORE I TOOK OFFICE.

It’s true that he accelerate­d the military push in Syria, in part by giving U.S. commanders in the field more authority. But it was during the Obama administra­tion that the Kurdish-led force was recruited, organized and trained to root out the Islamic State group.

Trump also incorrectl­y said on Monday that U.S. forces have been in Syria for 10 years.

The U.S. military under Obama began its push to counter the Islamic State group, sometimes referred to as the IS group or ISIS, starting in the summer of 2014. The effort started in Iraq, where the extremists had captured much of the northern and western parts of the country, including the key cities of Ramadi and Mosul. In Iraq, unlike in Syria, U.S. forces had a viable partner in the Iraqi government.

Ash Carter, who headed the Pentagon from early 2015 until Trump was inaugurate­d in January 2017, has acknowledg­ed, “We took longer than we should have to get our act together” on an effective strategy to deal the Islamic State group a lasting defeat. But the campaign was hardly a “mess” when Trump took over.

In fact, Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria were on the verge of falling, and the elements for military success were largely in place. Iraq declared victory over the Islamic State group in December 2017, and the U.S.backed Kurdish forces declared victory in Syria in March of this year. It remains an open question whether those successes will prove lasting.

TRUMP HAS ASSERTED THAT THE ISLAMIC STATE GROUP IS DEFEATED. “WE KILLED ISIS,” HE SAID ON OCT. 12.

No one disputes that the Islamic State group has lost its “caliphate” — the large swath of territory it once controlled in parts Turkish police and army cars escort vans and buses returning from Syria, reportedly carrying IS group members and their families, at the border town of Akcakale, Sanliurfa province, southeaste­rn Turkey. Turkey’s interior minister Suleyman Soylu said Saturday, Oct. 19, that 41Islamic State members were re-captured in Syria and private IHA news agency said the Turkish nationals among the re-captured were brought over to Turkey in vans. Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the Turks captured would be imprisoned and tried in Turkey. of Syria and Iraq. But the group remains a threat to reemerge if the conditions that allowed its rise, including civil war in Syria and a lack of effective governance in Iraq, are not corrected.

Republican Sen. Liz Cheney of Wyoming said when Turkey launched its offensive into northern Syria on Oct. 9 that it was “impossible to understand” why Trump was abandoning the Kurds and “enabling the return of ISIS.”

Another concern is that the chaos triggered by the Oct. 9 Turkish incursion, which followed Trump’s decision to have about two dozen American troops step away from the attack zone, could allow larger numbers of Islamic State fighters to escape from prisons that have been operated by the Kurds now under attack.

TRUMP HAS SAID SEVERAL TIMES THAT U.S. TROOPS INVOLVED IN THE ANTI-ISLAMIC STATE CAMPAIGN ARE COMING HOME.

For now, at least, that is not true. Most of the roughly 1,000 troops leaving Syria are going to Iraq, at least temporaril­y, or to other locations in the Middle East such as Jordan. The Pentagon says it is still working on plans for how to continue the anti-IS campaign in Syria and Iraq.

“We’re bringing our soldiers back home,” Trump said Monday.

Hogan Gidley, a deputy White House press secretary, said Trump is referring to a goal that must be balanced with other considerat­ions.

“The president does want to ultimately bring all these troops home,” Gidley said. “That was his goal when he ran for office. That’s what he wants to do now. But he also wants to ensure stability in the region.”

TRUMP SAYS THE U.S. CONTROLS SYRIA’S OIL.

“We’ve taken control” of it, he said Oct. 18, referring to the oil. Three days later, he recalled his argument that when the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003, it should have taken Iraq’s oil. “I always said, ‘If you’re going in, keep the oil.’ Same thing here (in Syria). Keep the oil.” In fact, it is by law Syria’s oil. Trump says he is considerin­g a plan for a small number of U.S. troops to remain in the oil-producing region of eastern Syria so that the Islamic State group or someone else cannot take control of the oilfields and use them to generate revenue, such as through oil smuggling.

 ?? EMRAH GUREL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
EMRAH GUREL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump, center, listening during a Cabinet meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House, Monday in Washington. With Trump are Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, left, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, right.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump, center, listening during a Cabinet meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House, Monday in Washington. With Trump are Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, left, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, right.

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