Houston Chronicle Sunday

France forging coalition against ISIS

- By Paul Richter and W.J. Hennigan

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama promised to “redouble” U.S. efforts against Islamic State after the terrorist attacks in Paris, but officials offered few details of what he meant.

That could change when French President Francois Hollande visits the White House on Tuesday as part of a trip to create what Hollande called a “grand and single coalition” that would link the United States, France and Russia against the militants.

Obama said last week that he will support military cooperatio­n with Moscow if it focuses on defeating Islamic State and not on propping up Syrian President Bashar Assad. He said he gave that message to Russian President Vladimir Putin when they met at the Group of 20 summit in Turkey.

Putin sent Russian bombers and cruise missiles to pound Raqqa, the militants’ self-declared capital in Syria, after authoritie­s in Moscow confirmed that a bomb had destroyed a Russian passenger jet over Egypt last month, killing 224 people.

Whether the confluence of interests and events will help Obama and Putin forge a tactical alliance, despite their deep divide over Ukraine and other issues, is unknown.

The French seem to be groping for a course that would increase pressure on Islamic State, while stopping short of the major military escalation that Obama has ruled out.

French officials signaled that they won’t ask Obama to deploy large numbers of ground troops to Syria or Iraq. Another invasion by Western ground forces would be Islamic State’s “dream,” Gerard Araud, the French ambassador to the U.S., said this week.

A U.S.-led coalition has conducted more than 8,000 airstrikes on Islamic State targets since mid-2014. But three in four pilots now return without dropping any bombs because they can’t find appropriat­e targets, or fear hitting civilians, according to the Pentagon.

French officials are clear that they want to pick up the pace of attacks to break the stalemate and push the militants out of their stronghold­s.

Allied warplanes have tried to avoid killing civilians and generally have avoided major economic infrastruc­ture such as oil refineries, fuel tankers and water-supply facilities because their destructio­n could hurt civilians.

Shortly after the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris, allied warplanes destroyed 116 oil trucks allegedly used by the militants in eastern Syria, a move that U.S. officials said marked a shift in tactics.

Pentagon officials now are reviewing whether to get more aggressive in tar- geting, Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said Thursday on MSNBC.

“We’re prepared to change rules of engagement,” he said. “We’ve changed tactics, as we just did in the case of the fuel trucks.”

France also is seeking logistical and other support from other European countries. After the Paris attacks, Hollande’s government invoked a section of the European Union charter that requires all members to come to the aid of partner nations that are under threat.

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