By Jim Garamone
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, July 7, 2015 – In the fight against the Islamic
State of Iraq and the Levant, there are risks if exercising patience, or in
taking action, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told the Senate Armed
Services Committee, and it is his job to assess those risks and provide the
best military advice to U.S. civilian leaders.
Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey and Defense Secretary Ash Carter
testified before the committee on the anti-ISIL strategy, and the question
arose as to whether the strategy of training Iraqi and Syrian forces to fight
the terrorist group isn’t risky.
Policy Requires Patience
Some critics of the policy want American forces to take on
the extremist group. Others want American observers and tactical air
controllers embedded into Iraqi units.
The strategy of training others to fight requires patience,
though, Dempsey said.
“I think patience probably does increase risk to the mission
somewhat because it extends the time when other things could happen, right?”
Dempsey said. “But I think were we to take more responsibility directly and
unilaterally, that would certainly increase risk in another way. It increases
risk to our force and increases risk to the other missions that we’re held
accountable to accomplish globally.”
The chairman said he gets paid to give advice to civilian
leaders on managing risk. And in Iraq, he said, patience wins.
Dempsey said managing risk globally requires a balance
between patience and action. “What you have to be assured of is that as we
manage risk, we look at those things which could threaten U.S. persons and
facilities around the globe and the homeland,” he said. “Where we see risk
accruing that could … threaten that national security interest, there’s no
hesitance for us to act unilaterally and decisively.”
In other words, were ISIL to threaten an attack on the
United States, U.S. installations or U.S. citizens overseas or vital American
interests, the U.S. military would act.
Local Forces Must Take Ownership
But the strategy in Iraq is to degrade and ultimately defeat
ISIL. The only way the extremist organization will be defeated is by local forces,
he said. They must put in place the forces, the government, the economic change
that will deny ISIL adherents, money and power.
“This campaign is built on the premise that it relies upon
other actors,” Dempsey said. “That necessarily requires a degree of patience
that we need to nurture, we need to reinforce and we need to understand in the
context of the other things we’re trying to accomplish not only in the Middle
East but globally.”
That the risk to the United States could increase because of
patience is a responsibility he accepts, the chairman said. “But I would also
suggest to you that we would contribute mightily to ISIL’s message as a
movement were we to confront them directly on the ground in Iraq and Syria,” he
said.
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