This Article is From Sep 26, 2014

Islamic State Drags Obama Back into Mideast Quagmire

Islamic State Drags Obama Back into Mideast Quagmire

Barack Obama in the State Dining Room at the White House. (Reuters)

Beirut: American-led and Arab-backed air strikes carrying the fight against Islamic State from Iraq into Syria have dragged Washington into a new Middle East war - exactly the kind of conflict Barack Obama spent his presidency trying to avoid.

No one doubts this dramatic escalation presages a long conflict that could spill into neighbouring states and that US air power alone cannot win.

Analysts who have watched Islamic State take parts of Syria and seize territory in Iraq believe it may be possible to contain the group but it will hard to dislodge it.

Washington is clearly bracing for the long haul. The sudden blitz on Tuesday was only the start of a "campaign to degrade and ultimately destroy" Islamic State, said General William Mayville, the Pentagon operations director.

"America can no longer step back from the Syrian conflict", which Obama had avoided even after President Bashar al-Assad last year crossed the president's "red line" by using nerve gas against the rebels, said Fawaz Gerges, Middle East expert at the London School of Economics.

"America's deepening involvement will be with us for the next few years, even after the departure of Barack Obama from the White House," he said.

What America is joining in Syria is a war that has already cost 190,000 lives and forced 10 million from their homes.
Shi'ite Iran and Gulf Sunni states led by Saudi Arabia are backing their sectarian proxies and Syria is a magnet for foreign jihadi fighters, who overwhelmed mainstream Sunni rebels last year and declared an Islamic "caliphate" in June.

BUILDING LOCAL FORCES

Islamic State's ruthless methods - mass executions, massacring civilians and beheading captives - have caused alarm across the world and led to the US military action.

A senior US official said degrading Islamic State "is a necessary condition to getting to the political solution everybody wants to see in Syria".

As long as Islamic State is allowed to control "what is effectively a quasi-state the size of Jordan ... then the chances of political outcomes and de-escalating conflicts are increasingly minimal," the US official said.

He and other allied officials say parallel to the military campaign, the plan is to train and moderate rebel forces to fight Islamic State and deploy in territory that would be vacated by the militants.

While the Obama administration has secured congressional funding for training in Saudi Arabia - around 5,000 more fighters for the Free Syrian Army - diplomats said it would take time for the moderate rebels now fighting both the Assad government and the Islamic State to fill in the vacuum.

Obama delayed moving into Syria against Islamic State, ultra-violent Sunni jihadis spawned by al Qaeda who have hijacked revolts by Syria's Sunni majority against the minority Alawite Assad family rule and by the Sunni minority in Iraq.

Obama waited for Iraqi politicians and their sponsors in Iran to ditch Nuri al-Maliki, the Shi'ite prime minister whose sectarian policies alienated the Sunnis as well as self-governing Kurds in northern Iraq, and replace him with a more inclusive government under Haidar al-Abadi.

Then he assembled a coalition of Sunni Arab partners, including Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar.

US DILEMMA

Now that air strikes against Islamic State have begun, the focus is shifting to what will unfold on the ground, where Obama, mindful of America's experience in Iraq and Afghanistan, has pledged not to deploy troops.

Even with a force of 160,000 at the peak of the occupation of Iraq, the United States could not stabilise the country because there was no Iraqi consensus on sharing power and ending sectarian divisions.

In Afghanistan, which US-led NATO forces are due to leave at the end of the year, there is debate about whether air and drone strikes that often caused civilian casualties contained or boosted the Taliban.

Islamic State is clearly savouring the dilemma of its opponents. Its spokesman, Abu Mohammad al-Adnani, taunted America: "If you fight it (Islamic State), it becomes stronger and tougher. If you leave it alone, it grows and expands."

On the ground, Islamic State fighters are embedding themselves in towns they control in Iraq and Syria, such as Mosul and Raqqa, readying for a guerrilla war that will include forays into neighbouring states.

"They would restructure their forces in small groups, and they control major cities ... they have eight million Syrians and Iraqis (as) hostages", Gerges said. The group's attitude is: "You want to come after me, you're going to have to kill a lot of civilians", he said.

With limited capacity to mount spectacular, al Qaeda-style attacks abroad, experts believe Islamic State will attack the soft underbelly of the west and allies in Lebanon, Turkey, Jordan and the Gulf, including their nationals and diplomats.

© Thomson Reuters 2014
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