Paris attacks may prompt Obama to step up military action
The Paris terrorist attacks seem likely to compel President Barack Obama to consider military escalation against ISIS
The Paris terrorist attacks seem likely to compel President Barack Obama to consider military escalation against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. But that probably will not mean dramatic moves like launching a U.S. or international ground offensive or accelerating aerial bombing in hopes of eliminating the global threat of violent extremism.
“You aren’t going to bomb ISIS back to the Stone Age,” Anthony Cordesman, a longtime Middle East analyst, said Saturday.
Cordesman and other American defense analysts said Obama may deepen U.S. involvement incrementally by, for example, embedding U.S. military advisers closer to the front lines of battle with Iraqi forces and with anti-IS fighters in Syria. But that and similar moves to intensify U.S. support for local forces is unlikely to produce quick results.
As Cordesman sees it, years of tragic terrorist attacks like Paris are almost inevitable, and there are no near-term solutions.
Stephen Biddle, a George Washington University professor of international affairs, said the Paris attack may create a political imperative to do more militarily against IS, but he thinks it would be a mistake to launch a U.S. ground war.
“To defeat ISIL decisively would require hundreds of thousands of Western ground troops, but nobody thinks the ISIL threat warrants that scale of commitment, and in fact it doesn’t,” Biddle said.
At the core of the U.S. strategy in Iraq is a belief that unless local forces are empowered to retake and secure their own territory, any military gains the U.S. could make by leading the charge would be short-lived. In Syria, Obama had been unwilling to get more involved in a civil war, although he recently agreed to send a few dozen special operations forces.
One new wrinkle since Friday’s attacks in Paris is the prospect of France asking its NATO allies to come to its aid, invoking the 28 members’ treaty obligation to consider an armed attack on one member as an attack against them all. That has happened only once in NATO’s 66-year history: in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks against the U.S.
James Stavridis, the retired Navy admiral who served as NATO’s top commander in Europe from 2009 to 2013, said NATO should play a military role now.
“NATO’s actions need to be deliberate, meaningful and at a significant scale,” Stavridis said by email, adding that consultations among the allies should begin shortly.
Stavridis, who is dean of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, said NATO special forces could be called on in Iraq and Syria as aircraft spotters and as trainers of anti-ISIS fighters. They also could gather intelligence and conduct raids, he said. The alliance should welcome nonmember participants, including Russia, he said.
“Soft power and playing the long game matter in the Middle East, but there is a time for the ruthless application of hard power,” Stavridis said. “This is that time, and NATO should respond militarily against the ISIS with vigor.
Obama began U.S. bombing in Iraq and Syria, along with the deployment of military advisers to Iraq, more than a year ago. And although thousands of ISIS fighters have been killed, the U.S.-led coalition campaign has had only limited successes.
Overall the militants remain in control of about a third of Iraq and Syria. ISIS continues to impose its unforgiving brand of radical Islam and carrying out atrocities against minority groups, including sexual enslavement of women.
Richard Fontaine, president of the Center for a New American Security, a Washington think tank, said the Obama administration almost certainly will consider new ways to accelerate its military campaign.
Fontaine, a former foreign policy adviser to Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said Obama might opt for at least two changes in Iraq that he has resisted thus far: embedding U.S. military advisers in Iraqi army units closer to the front lines, and deploying forward air controllers on the battlefield to improve the effectiveness of U.S. airstrikes.
He saw little chance, however, of the U.S. undertaking a ground invasion of Syria.
“I wouldn’t put that in the realistic category,” he said.
Biddle, the George Washington University professor, said he expects a limited escalation from the U.S. and its allies, but he sees no options that would make a decisive military difference.
“Elected officials feel obligated to do something when bad news emerges from ISIL,” he said. “So they escalate a bit. Because the escalation falls far short of what’s needed to defeat ISIL, the escalation doesn’t solve the problem, and so there’s more bad news of some kind a few months later and the cycle repeats. This could go on a long time. My guess is that the Paris attacks will also follow this pattern.”
-
Clinton: We are not at war with Islam, but with extremists
Clinton made an impassioned plea for global unity against radical Islam, a day after terror attacks killed at least 129 in Paris World News -
Britain to hold emergency response meeting after Paris attacks
Britain will hold a government crisis meeting on Sunday to assess the response after attacks in Paris killed at least 129 people World News -
Paris hunts down connections to ISIS attacker
Police took into custody the father and brother of a French gunman linked to a string of Paris attacks and were searching their homes Middle East -
‘Feels like the Middle East’: Arab tourists in Paris face uncertainty
An elderly Saudi tourist said that Friday night’s deadly events seemed all too familiar Travel and Tourism -
Death toll surges to 129 in Paris gunfire and blasts
France has decided to close its borders, declare a nation-wide state of emergency, and deploy its army in and around Paris World News -
Arab states condemn ‘terrorist’ Paris attacks
Across the Arab world, leaders have responded with shock and pledges of solidarity after Paris attacks Middle East -
Europe beefs up security after deadly Paris attacks
Security measures were stepped up outside French official buildings, and the Eiffel tower was closed indefinitely World News -
ISIS claims Paris attacks and releases video threat
Militant in video says 'France will not live in peace as long as bombing continues' Middle East -
Hollande: ‘Paris attacks act of war, plotted with help inside France’
French President Francois Hollande said attacks across Paris that killed 127 people were committed by ISIS, describing them as an act of war World News