The Borneo Post

Pentagon plans to ‘annihilate’ IS fighters

- May 21, 2017

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump has instructed the Pentagon to ‘annihilate’ the Islamic State group in Syria in a bid to prevent escaped foreign fighters from returning home, Defence Secretary Jim Mattis said Friday.

The move to encircle then kill as many jihadists in place as possible – rather than letting them exit a city and targeting them as they flee – reflects an increased urgency to stop battle-hardened jihadists bringing their military expertise and ideology back to European capitals and other areas.

“The president has directed a tactical shift from shoving ISIS out of safe locations in an attrition fight to surroundin­g the enemy in their stronghold­s so we can annihilate ISIS,” Mattis said, using an acronym for IS.

“The intent is to prevent the return home of escaped foreign fighters.”

Trump, who campaigned on a pledge to quickly defeat IS, signed an executive order soon after taking office giving his generals 30 days to come up with a revised plan to wipe the jihadists out.

The review resulted in the new ‘annihilati­on campaign’ and saw commanders gain greater autonomy to make battlefiel­d decisions.

Critics of Barack Obama’s administra­tion frequently complained of White House micromanag­ement and a lengthy approval process causing delays on the ground. Mattis called foreign fighters a ‘strategic threat’ should they return home and said the annihilati­on effort would prevent the problem from being transplant­ed from one location to another.

The US-led coalition has been battling IS since late summer 2014, supporting local fighters on the ground with a combinatio­n of considerab­le air support, training and weaponry.

Trump this month authorised the United States to arm the Kurdish faction of an alliance fighting IS in northern Syria, much to the consternat­ion of Turkey, which views them as terrorists.

Though the jihadists have lost 55 percent of the territory they once held in Iraq and Syria and over four million people have been liberated, IS still controls the Syrian stronghold Raqa, swaths of the Euphrates River valley and other areas including a small part of Mosul in Iraq.

Operations in Syria are further complicate­d by the country’s tangled knot of groups fighting in the civil war. Russia joined that conflict in late 2015 to prop up President Bashar al-Assad, bringing a new dimension of complexity and risk. — AFP

The president has directed a tactical shift from shoving ISIS out of safe locations in an attrition fight to surroundin­g the enemy in their stronghold­s so we can annihilate ISIS. — James Mattis, US Defence Secretary

 ??  ?? Mattis gestures during a press briefing on the campaign to defeat ISIS at the Pentagon in Washington, US. — Reuters photo
Mattis gestures during a press briefing on the campaign to defeat ISIS at the Pentagon in Washington, US. — Reuters photo

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