Army Gen. Lloyd J. Austin III, commander of U.S. Central Command, updates reporters at the Pentagon about the military campaign against Islamic State militants in Iraq, Friday, Oct. 17, 2014. The top U.S. commander for the Middle East says fighting over the Syrian border town of Kobani has allowed the U.S.- led coalition to take out large numbers of Islamic State group fighters that have been pouring in. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
WASHINGTON (AP) — Ten weeks into its war against Islamic State extremists, the Pentagon is settling in for the long haul, short on big early successes but still banking on enlisting Syrians and Iraqis to fight the ground war so that U.S. troops won't have to.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Ten weeks into its war against Islamic State extremists, the Pentagon is settling in for the long haul, short on big early successes but still banking on enlisting Syrians and Iraqis to fight the ground war so that U.S. troops won't have to.
The U.S.
general overseeing the campaign on Friday predicted that the jihadists
will be "much degraded" by airstrikes a year from now, in part because
he is focusing attacks on those resources that enable IS to sustain
itself and resupply its fighters.
On
Friday, for example, the U.S. military said one of its six airstrikes
overnight in Syria hit several IS petroleum storage tanks and a pumping
station — sites that are central to the militants' ability to resupply
their forces and generate revenue. Likewise, it said two coalition
airstrikes in Iraq damaged or destroyed IS military targets near the
contested town of Beiji, home of Iraq's largest oil refinery.
In
his first public overview of the campaign he leads from the Florida
headquarters of U.S. Central Command, Army Gen. Lloyd Austin cautioned
against expecting quick progress. He said he cannot predict how long it
will take to right a wobbly Iraqi army and build a viable opposition
ground force in Syria.
"The
campaign to destroy ISIL will take time, and there will be occasional
setbacks along the way," Austin told a Pentagon news conference,
"particularly in these early stages of the campaign as we coach and
mentor a force (in Iraq) that is actively working to regenerate
capability after years of neglect and poor leadership."
While
hammering the jihadists daily from the air, the U.S. military is
talking of a years-long effort — one that will require more than aerial
bombardment, will show results only gradually and may eventually call
for a more aggressive use of U.S. military advisers in Iraq.
"This
isn't going to get solved through 18 airstrikes around a particular
town in a particular place in Syria. It's going to take a long time,"
the Pentagon press secretary, Rear Adm. John Kirby, said Thursday,
referring to a recent concentration of American airstrikes on the Syrian
city of Kobani, near the Turkish border.
That
is one reason why the Pentagon is preparing to set up a more formally
organized command structure, known in military parlance as a joint task
force, to lead and coordinate the campaign from a forward headquarters,
perhaps in Kuwait. On Wednesday it formally named the campaign
"Operation Inherent Resolve."
As of Thursday the U.S. had launched
nearly 300 airstrikes in Iraq and nearly 200 in Syria, and allies had
tallied fewer than 100, according to Central Command. Those figures
don't capture the full scope of the effort because many airstrikes
launch multiple bombs on multiple targets. Central Command said that as
of Wednesday, U.S. and partner-nation air forces had dropped nearly
1,400 munitions.
Officials
say the strikes have squeezed IS and slowed its battlefield momentum.
More specifically, they claim they have destroyed an array of Islamic
State military targets: command posts, sniper positions, artillery guns,
armed trucks, tanks, mortar positions, buildings, mobile oil refineries
and more. The Pentagon has shied from providing a body count, but Kirby
said several hundred IS fighters have been killed in Kobani alone in
recent days.
Yet the
militants are making gains in some parts of Iraq, particular in
Sunni-dominated Anbar province, even as they stall or retrench in other
areas. At times they have appeared within reach of taking control of
Syria's Kobani. Baghdad is not believed to be in imminent danger of
falling but it is "certainly in their sights," Kirby said.
Some
U.S. analysts call Obama's approach overly cautious, given the
comparatively small number of airstrikes launched thus far and the
president's refusal to involve U.S. soldiers more directly in the ground
war.
Calling it an
"unserious air war," analysts Mark Gunzinger and John Stillion of the
Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments wrote this week on the
center's website, "In the end, no matter the reason, the timorous use of
air power against Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria is unlikely
to reduce the territory under their control, curb the brutal murder of
innocent civilians or prevent the creation of a sanctuary for an enemy
that has sworn to continue its fight on a more global scale."
Others take a more approving view.
"The
air war is really degrading their infrastructure," said Sen. Angus
King, I-Maine, who just returned from a trip that included a briefing at
the U.S. air operation center at al-Udeid air base in Qatar.
"At
some point in the next several months, they are not going to have
tanks, they are not going have (U.S.-made mine-resistant vehicles), they
are not going have the stuff that they stole from the Iraqis. They are
going to have AK-47s," he said, and at that point Iraqi and U.S.-trained
Syrian opposition fighters can make inroads.
___
AP Intelligence Writer Ken Dilanian contributed to this report.
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