By Amaani Lyle
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Dec. 10, 2014 – The air campaign against the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant is working as part of the ongoing joint
effort to disrupt, degrade and destroy the terrorist organization, Air Force
Secretary Deborah Lee James said here last night.
Speaking at a conference sponsored by the Center for
Strategic and International Studies, James said the Air Force has executed more
than 60 percent of all airstrike missions to date against ISIL in Iraq and
Syria, in addition to more than 90 percent of the mobility, humanitarian,
tanker and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance missions in the
region.
“We have been huge in this fight,” James said. “With all due
respect for … the important debate about ‘the boots on ground,’ I’m grateful
that we have so many fine boots in the air, and an awful lot of those boots are
United States Air Force.”
Air Campaign Part of Comprehensive Approach
But the air campaign alone is but one tool in a
comprehensive approach to stabilize the region and thwart terrorist networks,
the Air Force secretary said. The fight will take time, she added, and any
“boots on the ground” ideally will be the Iraqi army and the Syrian elements
that U.S. forces and their allies will help to train. The Iraqi government also
has an important role, James said.
“This is not just a military thing,” the secretary said.
“This has got to be a political solution, and ultimately, there needs to be
various accommodations, particularly in Iraq.”
Iraq’s new prime minister gives her hope in the nation’s
political and military evolution, James said, noting relatively swift “disrupt”
and “degrade” successes against ISIL. The “destroy” aspect of the conflict
calls for the most patience, she added.
“We’ve been hitting hard those oil refineries; we’ve been
attacking their sources of income … and training,” she said. “But we’ve got to
all get our heads around the fact that we’re in this for the long ballgame.
This is not a short ballgame.”
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