podesta-emails
Re: Here's where we are coming down on recommendations
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There is another legal basis for crossing border and conducting Syria air
strikes but focus on counter terrorism mission is smart. I fear even that
will be a headache for CAP.
On Jun 16, 2014 5:45 PM, "Vikram J. Singh" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Still rough - welcome any thoughts. It may not have pasted too well into
> gmail!
> May be pushing it on AUMF but have stepped back quite a bit.
>
> Best,
> V-
>
>
>
> In this complicated and quickly evolving situation, the United States
> needs to be clear about core U.S. objectives:
>
> - · Weaken ISIS to prevent it from controlling substantial
> territory from which it can become a threat to the region, our allies, or
> the U.S. homeland.
> - · Reduce threats of growing sectarian conflict sparking a
> wider regional war.
> - · Safeguard reliable and capable partners such as Jordan,
> Turkey, and Kurdistan Regional Government.
>
>
>
> To advance these objectives, the United States should take five steps,
> none of which require the reintroduction of U.S. combat troops.
>
> 1. Condition additional U.S. assistance to Iraq on government reform and
> action to incorporate and empower moderate Sunnis
>
> The United States has a major security and military cooperation package in
> place with Iraq's government to provide a pipeline of arms and hundreds of
> military advisors worth $13.225 billion in 2013 and 2014 alone.[viii]
> <#146a6a4b31ff0282__edn1> The United States has maintained a presence of
> more than 5,500 diplomats, intelligence professionals, military advisors,
> and defense contractors to support Iraq. In total, the United States and
> Iraq have plans in place for a major arming and equipping program that
> could top $25 billion total arms sales if fully implemented, including 140
> M1A1 tanks, 36 F-16 combat aircraft, the Integrated Air Defense System, and
> Apache attack helicopters.[ix] <#146a6a4b31ff0282__edn2>
>
>
>
> Prime Minister Maliki’s sectarian policies squandered the sacrifices of
> Americans by not producing an inclusive government; President Barack Obama
> has rightly called for assurance that the Iraqi government will take
> actions to unify the country and reduce sectarian tensions. All further
> aid like additional special forces advisors and equipment should be
> conditioned on a unified, cross-sectarian response by Baghdad and
> commitment to greater regional autonomy and inclusive governance. Only some
> actions directly aimed at degrading ISIS and humanitarian assistance should
> not be conditioned. Maliki wasted the opportunity to bring Sunnis who
> fought against Al Qaeda in Iraq into his government and security forces and
> refused to sign an agreement with the United States that would have helped
> maintain greater American support for a transition. Today, the United
> States should not get drawn into sectarian clashes that can only accelerate
> the fragmentation of the country.
>
>
>
> *2. Inoculate against a regional war and crack down on regional support
> for ISIS *
>
> The United States should engage in a regional full-court press involving
> top military, intelligence, and diplomatic officials to persuade relevant
> regional stakeholders—Turkey, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and even Iran—to step
> back from actions in Iraq and Syria that could lead to a wider regional
> war. The United States remains the dominant military force throughout the
> region, and it continues to provide overall stability in a region that
> remains the top oil producer for the world. Even after the United States
> redeployed its military forces from Iraq at the end of 2011, it maintained
> a strong military presence in the Gulf region, with more than 35,000 troops
> deployed to help maintain stability in the region.[x
> <#146a6a4b31ff0282__edn3>]
>
> Last month, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel gathered all of the members of
> the Gulf Cooperation Council, or GCC—including Saudi Arabia, Bahrain,
> Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Oman. He secured a general
> commitment to work together to enhance regional security, including overall
> measures to limit ISIS.[xi] <#146a6a4b31ff0282__edn4> One area in which
> these countries should take more action is cracking down on private
> financing that flows from some Gulf countries to terrorist groups such as
> ISIS—and the United States should increase its Treasury and Justice
> Department efforts to cut the financial links between the Gulf and
> extremist groups such as ISIS.
> 3. Mobilize regional stakeholders through diplomacy to push for a
> political solution
>
> The United States should lead an intensive diplomatic effort to develop a
> shared strategy and coordinated approach to pull Iraq back from the brink
> of civil war. Between 2006 and 2008, the United States participated in
> diplomatic discussions involving all of Iraq’s neighbors—including Iran—to
> help decrease the violence in Iraq.[xii] <#146a6a4b31ff0282__edn5> Now is
> the time for countries with influence over the Iraqi government, Iraq’s
> religious class, and the various ethnic and sectarian communities to push
> for a resolution to the crisis that moves Iraq beyond Prime Minister
> Maliki’s zero-sum sectarian politics. As part of the reported direct
> dialogue between the United States and Iran, the United States should
> emphasize that the sort of majoritarian politics Iran has encouraged in
> Iraq have directly contributed to the current security environment and will
> continue to pose a direct threat to Iran if they do not work to reign in
> Maliki’s excesses.[xi <#146a6a4b31ff0282__edn6>ii]
> 4. Reinforce reliable and capable partners in the region
>
> The United States should reinforce key regional partners such as Jordan,
> which is already coping with the challenges of the Syrian civil war and its
> attendant refugee outflow. Additional security and intelligence
> coordination and operations with Jordan, Turkey, and the Kurdistan Regional
> Government are essential, along with humanitarian assistance to help care
> for those displaced by the crisis. These partners have intelligence and
> capabilities that we should leverage to degrade the threat from ISIS. They
> should also be early beneficiaries of additional resources from the
> Counterterrorism Partnership Fund proposed by President Obama at West Point
> last month to bolster regional partner efforts to combat terrorism.[xiv]
> <#146a6a4b31ff0282__edn7> Any effort to degrade and defeat ISIS as a
> security threat and a political and ideological force will require a
> comprehensive counter-radicalization strategy to blunt the growing popular
> appeal of radical Islam, including the surge in Salafi jihadism throughout
> the region. The United States should focus assistance on regional partners
> that are willing to undertake reform efforts that can build more inclusive
> societies and that will undermine the ideology of extremists over time.
> 5. Prepare for limited counterterrorism operations against ISIS, including
> possible air strikes
>
> It is clear that ISIS poses an immediate threat to Iraq and a possible
> terrorist threat to the United States and its allies. In Iraq, the United
> States should prepare for limited use of U.S.—and if possible allied—air
> power on ISIS targets to degrade their ability to further destabilize the
> country and to protect U.S. interests, including the protection of
> thousands of American citizens working for the United States inside Iraq.
> Strikes need to be rooted in good intelligence on the ground and will
> require prepositioning of some additional military assets in the region,
> including armed drones and personnel to advise the Iraqi government. Their
> utility will be in helping to slow the advance of ISIS and providing some
> time and space for Iraqis to regroup, but they will not on their own turn
> the tide. This kind of support is similar to what the U.S. Air Force did
> with regional allies throughout the 1990s and into the 2000s conducting
> Operation Northern Watch to ensure the Kurds could operate free of
> advancing threats by Saddam Hussein’s forces.[xv]
> <#146a6a4b31ff0282__edn8>
>
> Action against ISIS in Iraq alone will likely push the problem back across
> the border into Syria, where ISIS controls large swaths of ungoverned
> territory. This possibility requires more robust efforts to train and
> equip the moderate Syrian opposition forces that have shown a willingness
> and ability to fight ISIS and Assad, something CAP has called for
> previously.[xvi] <#146a6a4b31ff0282__edn9> The administration and
> Congress should make this the first test of President Obama’s
> Counterterrorism Partnership Fund, using resources already dedicated to
> Overseas Contingency Operations. Details about vetting, the location for
> training, and the types of equipment necessary should be worked out
> rapidly.
>
> In the event that ISIS comes to pose a credible and direct threat to the
> United States, we should be prepared to undertake limited air strikes
> against ISIS targets inside Syria. This would be similar to the air
> strikes undertaken against Al Qaeda and its affiliates in ungoverned spaces
> elsewhere in the world. Any strikes against ISIS in Syria would need to be
> driven by clear, actionable intelligence against a target that poses such a
> credible and direct threat. Given that ISIS has been joined by several
> hundred European and even some U.S. passport holders, preparations to this
> end should be taken now. As always, the president retains the authority to
> respond in self-defense to an imminent threat to the United States. While
> the threat to the United States does not yet appear to be imminent, the
> evolution of ISIS in Iraq and Syria may well require the United States to
> update the legal framework developed after the September 11th attacks to
> ensure any president has the authority to combat terrorist groups that
> threaten America with proper oversight from congress and accountability to
> the American public.
>
> The Iraq War itself and its poor execution destabilized the region and
> facilitated greater Sunni-Shia conflict within Iraq. The United States
> should not undertake military action lightly and should be wary of
> unintended consequences. But not all military action is the same. Ground
> troops or invasions to control a country are very different from limited
> air strikes or targeted assistance to help push back terrorist extremists.
> Extremist terrorist groups controlling large swaths of territory in Iraq
> and Syria from which they could ultimately attack American interests or
> allies are worthy of a limited, effective response, including limited air
> strikes.
>
> ------------------------------
>
>
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