By Nick Simeone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, June 18, 2014 – The Iraqi government has
requested U.S. airstrikes to help it put down a fast-moving rebellion by Sunni
insurgents, but the Defense Department’s top civilian and military leaders told
senators today that a clearer picture of the situation on the ground -- as well
as clear objectives -- are necessary for airstrikes or other military
intervention to be effective.
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and Army Gen. Martin E.
Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, answered questions at a hearing
of the Senate Appropriations Committee’s defense subcommittee.
Five days after President Barack Obama said he had asked his
national security team for a range of options for helping the Iraqi government
thwart the rapid Sunni insurgent sweep through much of the country’s north and
west, posing the threat of reprisals from Shiites, Dempsey said that while he
shares alarm over the situation, he could recommend military force only “once
I’m assured we can use it responsibility and effectively.”
Various indistinguishable forces are on the ground in
northern Iraq, he said, from the insurgents who threaten Baghdad -- known as the
Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, and also as the Islamic State of Iraq
and the Levant, or ISIL -- as well as former Baathists and other
disenfranchised groups.
“Until we can actually clarify this intelligence picture,
the options will continue to be built and developed and refined and the
intelligence picture made more accurate, and then the president can make a
decision,” Dempsey said. “It’s not as easy as looking at an iPhone video of a
convoy and then immediately striking.”
A number of lawmakers, as well as former military officials
have called for airstrikes against the Sunni insurgents, who have taken over
Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, and other towns on their rapid push
southward toward Baghdad. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki called on his
Shiite supporters to rise to the country’s defense, threatening a return of the
full-blown sectarian conflict experienced in 2006 to 2008.
Hagel told lawmakers the Pentagon is providing the president
with different options, but that any U.S. military intervention in Iraq,
including airstrikes, would require clear objectives.
“There has to be a reason for those,” he said. “There has to
be an objective. Where do you go with those? What does it do to move the effort
down the road for a political solution?”
As long as Maliki continues to lead a Shiite-based sectarian
government to the exclusion of other groups, “the entire enterprise is at
risk,” Dempsey said. Obama has conditioned any U.S. military assistance to
Baghdad on a fresh effort to resolve differences among Shiites, Sunnis and
Kurds that he, along with Hagel and Dempsey, have said laid the foundation for
the current crisis.
Last week, two divisions of the Iraqi army and one national
police organization collapsed as the Syria-based insurgents quickly routed
towns along the route to the Iraqi capital.
“They did that because they had simply lost faith that the
central government in Iraq was dealing with the entire population in a fair,
equitable way that provided hope for all of them,” said Dempsey, who led the
U.S effort to train Iraqi security forces from 2005 to 2007.
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