Khaleej Times

US ‘limited’ troop surge in anti-Daesh fight criticised

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WASHINGTON — When the clock ticks down on Barack Obama’s presidency, five years will have passed since he officially pulled US combat forces from Iraq.

But little by little, American troops are returning — thanks to the Daesh group and their hold over parts of the region.

On Monday, Obama said another 250 special forces and support personnel would go to northern Syria, augmenting the 50 or so commandos already training local militias there.

Last week, Defence Secretary Ashton Carter said another 217 US forces would go to Iraq as advisors, pushing the official total count in that country to 4,087.

Critics say such “creeping incrementa­lism” in the counter-Daesh fight is too little, too late.

“The deployment of 250 additional US military forces to Syria is a welcome developmen­t, but one that is long overdue and ultimately insufficie­nt,” said Senator John McCain, a Republican critic of Obama’s war plans.

“Another reluctant step down the dangerous road of gradual escalation will not undo the damage in Syria to which this administra­tion has borne passive witness,” he added.

The Daesh group emerged in Iraq and Syria in 2014 amid political chaos across the region, fueled by the Syrian civil war, in which more than 270,000 people have been killed.

Obama — elected on a promise of pulling US troops from Iraq and Afghanista­n — does not want to plunge the United States into another ground war in the Muslim world.

While the troop presence in Iraq is tiny compared to the height of the Iraq War, when the United States had nearly 160,000 in-country troops during the “surge,” it tests Obama’s pledge.

The Syria plan is to train Kurdish and Syrian Arab forces to expel the Daesh group. In Iraq, US advisors are working with

The deployment of 250 additional US military forces to Syria is a welcome developmen­t, but one that is long overdue and ultimately insufficie­nt”

John McCain, a Republican critic

the Iraqi security forces. United States advisors are not in frontline combat roles, and the Obama administra­tion says it is not committing combat troops, even though United States forces have already engaged in limited combat and two American military personnel have been killed in Iraq.

“You are not going to see an American battalion going into battle, but you will see advisors in the middle of battles,” Patrick Skinner, a former CIA case officer now with The Soufan Group consultanc­y, told.

He predicted that even the relatively modest goal of training locals to fight the Daesh group in Syria will fail, given that country’s chaos. “It never works. Training and advising your way out of a civil war has never, ever worked,” he said.

“It didn’t work when we had unlimited resources and money in Iraq and Afghanista­n. Now we are going to try to do it in the middle of a raging civil war where we don’t even have an ally.”

Republican Congressma­n Mac Thornberry believes Obama is hindering the Pentagon as it fights the Daesh group.

“The descriptio­n of creeping incrementa­lism is exactly right,” Thornberry told defense reporters last week.

“When you do that, that gives a chance for the enemy to adjust, for their narrative to continue to expand, and it makes it harder to ultimately be successful, and it dispirits your allies.”

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