The Columbus Dispatch

Bolstered troops are closing in on Islamic State

- DOYLE MCMANUS

While Washington has been absorbed in battles over health care and incipient scandals, a real war is escalating sharply in Syria and Iraq: the one against Islamic State.

Without much public notice, thousands of U.S. combat troops are back on the ground in the Middle East: roughly 7,000 in Iraq, almost 1,000 in Syria, and 2,500 in Kuwait.

Those troops aren’t only special operations forces; they include artillery teams fighting in Iraq and a helicopter unit that has flown behind Islamic State lines in Syria.

U.S. airstrikes have intensifie­d, too, and civilian casualties have spiked since the beginning of the year. As many as 200 civilians might have been killed in Mosul last week; the Pentagon says it’s investigat­ing.

The death toll is a tragedy. But it’s also a grim sign that the long offensive against Islamic State, begun by President Barack Obama in 2014, is moving rapidly toward success — and for that, President Donald Trump deserves some credit.

Under Obama, who waged a “light footprint” strategy with minimal U.S. troops, Islamic State lost most of the territory it once held in Iraq and almost a third of what it held in Syria.

But taking the extremist group’s most important stronghold­s, Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria, was taking longer.

Enter Trump. The new president, after claiming he had a secret plan to win the war, told his generals to give him one in 30 days. They responded with an outline — a “skeleton plan,” in the words of Defense Secretary James Mattis — that could be described as Obama Plus: more bombing, more troops, fewer restrictio­ns on commanders.

“The Obama strategy wasn’t failing, but it was slow,” James Jeffrey, a former ambassador (and former Army officer) who’s advising the administra­tion, told me. “It’s a change of maybe 20 percent, but it’s an important 20 percent.”

Paradoxica­lly, the success of those changes comes with its own danger: the peril of “catastroph­ic success,” a phrase military officials use to describe the 2003 invasion of Iraq. So Trump administra­tion officials are quietly planning for an openended commitment of U.S. troops to both Iraq and Syria for “stabilizat­ion operations” after Islamic State is defeated. And that might well require more American troops, not fewer.

In Iraq, stabilizat­ion means persuading the government in Baghdad, which told U.S. forces to leave in 2010, to let them stay longer.

In Syria, where the U.S. doesn’t want to cooperate with the government of President Bashar Assad, it means setting up an interim administra­tion of local leaders under the protection of U.S. and allied troops.

A State Department official said stabilizat­ion means “making sure people can come back to their homes, there’s a security apparatus in place that’s locally based, there’s a local government in place.”

It all sounds expensive, ambitious and not quite in keeping with Trump’s campaign promise to take the U.S. “out of the nationbuil­ding business.”

That may be one reason officials take pains to say their goals are limited.

“Stabilizat­ion … is very distinct from long-term reconstruc­tion, long-term nation-building,” a State Department official said.

Eventually, officials say, they hope the oil-rich countries of the Persian Gulf will pay to rebuild Syria and Iraq.

Good luck with that. Other countries are unlikely to pony up — and the effort is unlikely to succeed — unless the United States is involved, too.

One more dilemma: To make stabilizat­ion work, Trump is going to have to spend money on the State Department and foreign aid agencies whose budget he wants to cut. It all sounds a lot more complicate­d than the strategy Trump suggested in his campaign.

“I would bomb the … out of them,” he said then, using profanity. “I’d blow up every single inch. There would be nothing left. And you know what? You’ll get Exxon to come in there, and in two months … they’ll rebuild it brand new.”

“And I’ll take the oil,” he added.

It won’t be anywhere near that simple — or that rewarding — but if Trump listens to Mattis he might just achieve a goal that eluded his predecesso­r: pacifying Iraq and Syria.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States