By Jim Garamone
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Sept. 16, 2014 – Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel
explained the military portion of President Barack Obama’s strategy to degrade
and ultimately destroy ISIL to the Senate Armed Services Committee this
morning.
Hagel told the panel that military and civilian leaders
agree that action must be taken to combat the Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant and that the strategy is sound.
Hagel had a caution for the panel. “American military power
alone cannot eradicate the threats posed by ISIL to the United States, our
allies, and our friends and partners in the region,” he said. Iraq’s continued
political progress toward a more inclusive and representative government is
critical to the strategy. The coalition will need to use all its instruments of
power -- military, law enforcement, economic, diplomatic, and intelligence --
in coordination with countries in the region.
ISIL threat
The terrorist group poses a real threat to all countries in
the Middle East, America’s European allies and to the United States, the
secretary said. “ISIL has gained strength by exploiting the civil war in Syria
and sectarian strife in Iraq,” he said. “As it has seized territory across both
countries and acquired significant resources and advanced weapons, ISIL has
employed a violent combination of terrorist, insurgent and conventional
military tactics.”
Meanwhile, the world is uniting behind American leadership
to take on ISIL, the secretary said.
“More than 40 nations have already expressed their
willingness to participate in this effort, and more than 30 nations have
indicated their readiness to offer military support,” Hagel said.
Four pillars
Hagel talked about the four pillars of the president’s
strategy and gave a few more details.
First, he said, there will be a broader air campaign against
ISIL in Iraq and extending into Syria.
The have been more than 160 airstrikes against ISIL. These
have “killed ISIL fighters, destroyed weapons and equipment and enabled Iraqi
security forces and Kurdish forces to get back on the offensive and secure key
territory and critical infrastructure -- including the Mosul and Haditha
dDams,” Hagel said.
The new, broader air campaign, he added, will include
strikes against all ISIL targets and enable the Iraqi and Kurdish forces to
stay on the offensive and recapture territory from ISIL.
No safe haven for terrorists
“Because ISIL operates freely across the Iraqi-Syrian
border, and maintains a safe haven in Syria, our actions will not be restrained
by a border in name only,” Hagel said. “As the president said last week, ‘If
you threaten America, you will find no safe haven.’”
The second element is to increase support for Iraqi security
forces and the moderate Syrian opposition, Hagel said.
“To support Iraqi and Kurdish forces, the president
announced last week that we would deploy an additional 475 American troops to Iraq,”
Hagel said. “Part of that number includes approximately 150 advisors and
support personnel to supplement forces already in Iraq conducting assessments
of the Iraqi security forces.
“This assessment mission is now transitioning to an
advise-and-assist mission,” he continued, “with more than 15 teams embedding
with Iraqi security forces at the headquarters level to provide strategic and
operational advice and assistance.”
And, the president has asked Congress for $500 million to
train and equip moderate opposition forces to confront terrorists operating in
Syria. “We have now secured support from Saudi Arabia to host the training
program for this mission, and Saudi Arabia has offered financial support as
well,” Hagel said.
The package of assistance, he said, would consist of small
arms, vehicles, and basic equipment like communications, as well as tactical
and strategic training. “As these forces prove their effectiveness on the
battlefield, we would be prepared to provide increasingly sophisticated types
of assistance to the most trusted commanders and capable forces,” the secretary
said.
This would require a vigorous vetting system, he added.
Preventing attacks
Preventing ISIL attacks on the United States and its allies
is the third prong of the strategy, Hagel said. “In concert with our
international partners, the United States will draw on intelligence, law
enforcement, diplomatic and economic tools to cut off ISIL’s funding, improve
our intelligence, strengthen homeland defense, and stem the flow of foreign
fighters into and out of the region,” he said.
The United States also will continue to provide humanitarian
assistance to Iraqis and Syrians driven from their homes by ISIL, the secretary
said.
The campaign against ISIL is a complex effort that will take
time, he said.
“This will not be an easy or brief effort,” Hagel said. “We
are at war with ISIL, as we are with al-Qaida. But destroying ISIL will require
more than military efforts alone: It will require political progress in the
region, and effective partners on the ground in Iraq and Syria.”
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