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Carter seeks more help in campaign against Islamic State Pentagon chief predicting ‘tangible gains’ in Iraq, Syria
(about 3 hours later)
BRUSSELS — U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said Thursday he expects a gathering of more than two dozen countries contributing to the war against the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq to endorse a U.S. plan for accelerating the campaign. BRUSSELS — U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter predicted on Thursday that recent U.S.-led efforts to accelerate the fight against the Islamic State group would produce “tangible gains” in Iraq and Syria by March, even as he urged coalition partners to expand and deepen their military contributions.
“That will be new, for there to be a plan that everyone sees, which is a concrete military campaign plan and an opportunity to do what the United States has been doing for some months now, which is accelerating its own contributions,” Carter told reporters in advance of convening an anti-IS meeting of some two dozen defense ministers. Carter expected that defense ministers from more than two dozen countries would endorse a new U.S. plan for taking on IS. The ministers planned a joint statement after their meeting at NATO headquarters.
Speaking at NATO headquarters, Carter said he would lay out details of the campaign plan in an afternoon meeting with allies and non-NATO partners such as Saudi Arabia and Iraq. In doing so, he will ask the others to find ways to increase or broaden their contributions either militarily or in other ways such as financial contributions. In public remarks at the start of the session, Carter cast the talks as an historic effort to hasten the demise of IS, which has proved resilient in Iraq and Syria and is spreading to Afghanistan, Libya and elsewhere in the greater Middle East.
Carter said the U.S. is determined to accelerate the war campaign and recapture as soon as possible the Islamic State’s main strongholds in Syria and Iraq. “This ministerial marks the beginning of a new stage in the coalition campaign to defeat ISIL,” Carter said, using a common acronym for the militants. He suggested that countries not answering his call to do more may regret their choice when the struggle is over.
Later at a separate news conference, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said the alliance agreed Thursday to deploy NATO airborne command and control aircraft in order to free up similar U.S. aircraft for the air campaign in Syria and Iraq. He said details were to be worked out later. “We will all look back after victory and remember who participated in the fight,” he said.
“We are looking into how we can step up our effort” beyond that, Stoltenberg said, suggesting that no additional NATO military contributions to the counter-IS campaign are imminent. In Munich, Germany, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was trying on Thursday to find a way to halt what amounts to a parallel war in Syria. Five years of civil war have pitted President Bashar Assad’s government, backed by Russia and Iran, against an array of weakened opposition groups, some supported by the United States.
A few coalition countries have made promises of increased support in recent days. The Netherlands, which has been carrying out airstrikes in Iraq, said on Jan. 29 that it would expand its efforts to Syria. Saudi Arabia indicated last week it could send ground troops into Syria, although it was not clear whether the offer was conditioned on U.S. ground forces participating. Carter said he would lay out details of the U.S. plan and ask coalition partners to increase or broaden their assistance, either militarily or in other ways such as financial contributions. He said the U.S. military, acting on instructions by President Barack Obama last October, is accelerating military efforts, which have shown positive results with the recent recapture of the Iraqi city of Ramadi in Anbar province.
Canada announced on Monday that it will quit conducting airstrikes in Syria and Iraq by Feb. 22 but will expand its contributions to training Kurdish and other local forces and provide more humanitarian and developmental aid. Canada also will keep two surveillance planes in the region and conduct aerial refueling missions. Carter said coalition military chiefs, including U.S. Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Joseph Dunford, would meet soon to discuss and evaluate the campaign, and that in mid-March the U.S. Central Command headquarters in Florida would convene a military conference to assess progress.
Carter said some countries whose defense ministers may say during the Brussels meeting that they intend to contribute more will be unable to make formal, specific commitments because their governments require parliamentary approval of such military moves. “By then, at the latest, we should begin to see tangible gains from those additional capabilities, from the ones the coalition is already bringing to bear,” Carter said.
“We will array all of the capabilities that will be required to carry out this plan,” Carter said. In doing so, he said, he will be pointing to combat, training and other contributions that allied countries “may not yet have realized that they could make and that are going to be necessary” to succeed. Carter said the U.S. is determined to accelerate the war campaign and recapture as soon as possible the Islamic State group’s main strongholds Raqqa in Syria and Mosul in Iraq.
On the sidelines of Thursday’s meeting, Carter was scheduled to hold a one-on-one meeting with Saudi Arabia’s defense minister, Mohammed bin Sultan. Aides indicated that Carter hoped to learn more details about the Saudi proposal to deploy ground troops to Syria, an offer that the Obama administration has welcomed. At a separate news conference, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said the alliance agreed Thursday to deploy NATO airborne command and control aircraft in order to free up similar U.S. aircraft for the campaign in Syria and Iraq. Details were to be worked out.
Over the course of a decade and a half of coalition warfare in Iraq and Afghanistan, U.S. officials have frequently found themselves pleading and cajoling with the Europeans to contribute more, and they generally have responded with pledges to do just a little bit more. The pattern may be repeated in Brussels. Inevitably it falls to the U.S. military, with greater resources and a longer reach, to carry the biggest burden in countering terrorism. “We are looking into how we can step up our effort” beyond that, Stoltenberg said, suggesting that no additional NATO military contributions are imminent.
The air campaign in Syria and Iraq, for example, is advertised as a 13-nation undertaking. But of the 10,060 strikes conducted over the past year and a half 6,723 in Iraq and 3,337 in Syria, as of Feb. 1 U.S. warplanes have conducted all but 2,124 of the Iraq hits and all but 208 in Syria. At their low point last August, the allies conducted only two strikes in Syria while the U.S. conducted 210, according to figures provided by the Pentagon. More recently, non-U.S. airstrikes have increased as a share of total strikes. In a further sign of the complications caused by Russia’s entry into the war, U.S. Gen. Philip Breedlove, the top NATO commander in Europe, said Turkey stopped flying missions over Syria out of concern of prompting a confrontation with Russia. Moscow was angered by Turkey’s shooting down last fall of a Russian fighter jet that Turkey said entered Turkish airspace near Syria.
“The tensions are still very high, and there is no sense in provoking at this time,” Breedlove told reporters.
He said Russia has informed the U.S. that it has linked its formidable air defenses in Syria with those of the Syrian government, creating a stiff threat to outside air forces.
The West claims the majority of Russia’s airstrikes are targeting moderate groups that are opposed to Assad and IS; Russia says it is supporting Assad’s government as part of a counterterrorism campaign.
The air campaign in Syria and Iraq is advertised as a 13-nation undertaking, but U.S. warplanes have conducted most of the hits.
A few coalition countries have promised increased support:
—The Netherlands has carried out airstrikes in Iraq, and said on Jan. 29 it would expand its efforts to Syria.
—Saudi Arabia indicated last week it could send ground troops into Syria. It was not clear whether the offer was conditioned on U.S. ground forces participating. Carter was meeting his Saudi counterpart on Thursday.
—Canada announced on Monday that it will quit conducting airstrikes in Syria and Iraq by Feb. 22. But it will expand its contributions to training Kurdish and other local forces and provide more humanitarian and developmental aid. Canada will keep two surveillance planes in the region and conduct aerial refueling missions.
“We will array all of the capabilities that will be required to carry out this plan,” Carter said. He cited combat, training and other contributions that allied countries “may not yet have realized that they could make and that are going to be necessary” to succeed.
Over the course of a decade and a half of coalition warfare in Iraq and Afghanistan, U.S. officials frequently have found themselves pleading and cajoling with the Europeans to contribute more. European countries generally have responded with pledges to do just a little bit more.
The pattern may be repeated in Brussels. Inevitably it has fallen to the U.S. military, with greater resources and a longer reach, to carry the biggest burden in countering terrorism.
___
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Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.