Small Wars Journal

Attacks Likely to Force Tougher Stance by U.S.

Sat, 11/14/2015 - 11:08am

Attacks Likely to Force Tougher Stance by U.S. by Peter Baker and Eric Schmitt, New York Times

When the Islamic State stormed onto the scene in Syria and Iraq, it seemed focused on seizing territory in its own neighborhood. But in the last two weeks, the so-called soldiers of the caliphate appear to have demonstrated a chilling reach, with terrorist attacks against Russia, in Lebanon and now in Europe.

The seemingly synchronized assaults that turned Paris into a war zone on Friday came just days after a bombing targeted a Shiite district of Beirut controlled by Iran’s ally, Hezbollah, and a Russian passenger jet was downed over Egypt. The rapid succession of strikes, all claimed by the Islamic State, suggested that the regional war has turned into a global one.

For President Obama and American allies, the attacks are almost certain to force a reassessment of the threat and may require a more aggressive strategy against the Islamic State, also known as ISIS, ISIL or Daesh. Mr. Obama prepared to leave Saturday for a scheduled trip to Antalya, Turkey, where he was to consult with other world leaders in a Group of 20 summit meeting now sure to be dominated by the Paris attacks and questions of what to do next…

Read on.

Comments

Outlaw 09

Tue, 11/17/2015 - 12:09pm

In reply to by Outlaw 09

Notice the game Putin plays with Obama and the entire West---tons of reporting on massive military launch of missiles and ordering his military to work as allies with the French....then social media brings everything back to zero.....

Reality is totally different of course.
Only traceable KH-55 flew against rebel territory, supporting the Iranian/Iraqi front S-W of Aleppo.

Russian MoD releases video of strategic bombers used against Syria. But it looks like compilage of old footage.

NOT a single missile landed anywhere in and or near IS positions OR for that matter any FSA positions.

Outlaw 09

Tue, 11/17/2015 - 11:38am

Obama needs no further "tougher stance" as he has successfully retrenched the US foreign policy in both the ME especially Syria and eastern Europe--the core question will be for historians to answer---how badly has he damaged US foreign policy in the coming years....

Putin has been pushing for a "new Yalta"---seems he has gotten it and more.

The Ukraine now fully falls under Russian influence as well as the entire ME.

Meaning if you work with Russia in an cooperative fashion say in Syria---will Putin then bend in the Ukraine, Crimea and the other threats he has uttered towards eastern Europe---how can you then keep sanctions in place if Russian never implements Minsk 2 and Russia argues ...BUT we worked together in Syria does that not count towards easing sanctions and us being "friends" again....????

Yury Barmin ‏@yurybarmin
12 TU-22 bombers struck Raqqa & Deir Ez-Zor at 5AM and 4PM today. 5 TU-95 and 6 TU-160 launched 34 missiles at 9AM. All flew in from Mozdok

Yury Barmin ‏@yurybarmin
THIS: Moscow is massively expanding its operation in Syria, will add 25 strategic long-range bombers, launching strikes from bases in Russia

Yury Barmin ‏@yurybarmin
Just to make it clear, Moscow wouldn't have admitted Sinai crash was a terrorist act unless it was sure it can use it in its favor in Syria

Yury Barmin ‏@yurybarmin
Note a major shift in Moscow's rhetoric: From Assad's request to intervene in Syria to Russia's own right to self-defense.

Yury Barmin ‏@yurybarmin
Important: Putin has just ordered to intensify the Russian operation in Syria, says Russia to exercise its UN right for self-defense.

SYRIA: Russia claims to have destroyed 140 facilities belonging to 'terrorists' today. - Interfax.

BREAKING: #Putin orders Def Min to co-operate with French naval group in #Syria as allies - @RT_com

BREAKING: French President Hollande to meet Obama Nov. 24 in Washington, Putin in Moscow Nov. 26 - AP

What is amazing is the hypocrisy of some of the current Western leaders--ie Hollande--he keeps telling the Ukrainians over and over to "negotiate" with the Russian over eastern Ukrainains --not words like Russia invaded and took eastern Ukraine and took Crimea etc----BUT when faced by IS he does not follow his own statements to the Ukrainians of--"negotiate".

Nothing like good ole fashion double standards.

Outlaw 09

Tue, 11/17/2015 - 10:23am

Starvation is a key weapon being used by Assad AND now Russia going on 4.5 years---and yet our Administration does not seem to realize it and insist Assad an stay around awhile.

We have seen the same exact Russia actions being taken in eastern Ukraine

Aleppo 120.000 without bread after Russia airstrikes hit bread factory in Atarib

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dmk4SZ1FJbE

RuAF and Russian MoD claimed it was an IS IED factory.....

We see 132 civilians killed by IS in Paris--but that number and more are being killed daily by Russian and Assad bombings, starvation, and barrel bombs and hundreds driven into refugee flows and we did exactly what again.....?

Right now we have a double standard world and this Administration is contributing greatly to the confusion.

Outlaw 09

Tue, 11/17/2015 - 8:46am

New US stance is now being taken.......

Rebels use TOW to blow up Humvee used by Iraq'i Shiite forces in southern Aleppo
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VhKTnvBTQGU

Its the 4th destroyed and or captured

FSA Central Div says they killed the leader of Iraqi shiite militia Ansar Allah by destroying his Humvee with a TOW missile south Aleppo.

Maybe it is just a new DoD recycling program....or just a normal day on the Syrian front lines using Humvees for TOW target practice.....

But at least it is a US stance on something.....US clearly supporting Iraqi Shia in their fight against Syrian Sunni's......

Robert C. Jones

Tue, 11/17/2015 - 9:14am

Duplicate

Robert C. Jones

Tue, 11/17/2015 - 9:13am

In reply to by Bill M.

Bill, the details of any particular event, situation or conflict are always infinitely unique and complicated by all the myriad factors of history, geography, culture, etc.

But we are discussing fundamentally human endeavors, and as such there are simple, durable and universal frameworks rooted in human nature that one can build "simple" theories around that provide frameworks for durable, universal strategic understanding. That is why Clausewitz works for war.

Where we get into trouble is when we ignore the presence and effect of human nature altogether (American Exceptionalism - that we are so pure and unique that human nature does not apply to us); or when we apply a war framework to these internal political conflicts that simply are not war.

A tomato is a fruit, but looks and acts like a vegetable. That is true, interesting, but doesn't really matter if you don't know or care. Internal political conflict is more closely related to marital/family disputes than it is to political warfare between nations. We apply the wrong model, so we focus in the wrong facts in the wrong context. We think we are special as well. It has proven a deadly and failed combination.

For strategic concept development my goal is: simple, scalable, repeatable. I find that such concepts in this line of work are heavily rooted in human nature. When one overly encumbers these concepts with excessive facts from one's current situation or bias, they quickly become complicated, fixed and situational. Our lessons learned from the past 16 years or so are dominated by the later.

Bill M.

Tue, 11/17/2015 - 1:59am

In reply to by Robert C. Jones

Bob,

Your arguments have merit, even if they're grossly over simplified and too broadly applied to fit to every situation. If only the world could be so simple and romantic as you make it out to be. Mao is another figure misrepresented by history, largely due to the General Stilwell shaping the narrative that was never challenged until recent years. Stilwell effectively blamed his own incompetence on Chiang Kai-shek, and that myth stood for decades. Now historians taking a harder and less bias look, realize Mao wasn't a popular figure and Chiang's army fought much more effectively than Mao's. His victory was a the result of accidents throughout history. His detention by a war lord, heavy casualties due to fighting the Japanese while Mao largely recovered from almost being defeated, to Stilwell's overly critical review of Chiang that limited Western aid, while Mao received sufficient aid from the USSR. The more I study history, the more I realize it isn't predetermined by anyone's predictive models.

Ho didn't win due to legitimacy, he won because support from China and the USSR enabled him to defeat South Vietnam with overwhelming military force. Our tanks could have rolled into Hanoi, but we didn't seek to defeat North Vietnam, due to the perceived risk of triggered a nuclear war with China or the USSR. External factors shaped the outcome just as much as internal factors.

As for our leaders fearing change and embracing the status quo, nothing could have been further from the truth when we first got involved. The post WWII world was anything but static (the world never has been), it was undergoing rapid change in many parts. Our leaders recognized this, and attempted to shape the changes. They wrestled with the tension of promoting self-determination and containing the spread of communism. We didn't even care that much about Vietnam, but since France managed to convince us that if we didn't support them in Vietnam France could fall to communism we provided support, and foolishly stayed after France packed up and went home. Combine that with the red scare and our hubris we stayed. We were half commited to the wrong war.

Fast forward to today, both internal and external factors will drive our future actions in Syria. Those actions won't be shaped simply by the so-called legitimacy of the various groups. That model doesn't help us much with the real world we live in, but it should inform us on how difficult the road will be to get to our desired ends.

Outlaw 09

Mon, 11/16/2015 - 8:43am

In reply to by Robert C. Jones

Have always liked your assessments for a number of reasons.

A few points many miss---Ho as a dishwasher in Paris had joined the French Communist Party while in Paris---but he was always in his many writings impressed by George Washington and the US Revolution and spent a lot of time reading about both before heading to VN. He also had requested and we turned him down--that the US assist him in regaining VN from the Japanese after their surrender--instead we supported the French in taking over their former colony and from there it went downhill badly.

Another revolutionary in the 1970s Khomeini also rode it out in Paris when the Shah kicked him out and with 15 cent audio cassettes changed the face of Iran forever.

You have stated a number of times---IS can only be defeated by the Sunni's and that is proving to be correct.

My heart burn is we have two Syrian army groups---one in the south FSA (95% Syrian and not Islamist) and one in the north SDF (Arab, Christian, and Kurds) ready/willing to take on IS--but the FSA is dodging Russian bombs daily and the SDF is hamstrung by the Turks and their fears of the Kurds.

We are also so hamstrung by Obama's indecision---

So we have the Sunni willing and able to take on IS they just need political support and the correct weaponry and they would be off and running.

But we cannot seem to find the trees in the forest and provide the Sunni's a potential future in Syria and Iraq that they themselves could strive towards in the face of the Iranian Shia aggression, Assad's genocide and now Russian air strikes.

Robert C. Jones

Mon, 11/16/2015 - 3:55am

In reply to by Bill M.

"Communism" as applied by Mao and Ho worked as an effective revolutionary/resistance ideology in an agrarian Asia where most were trapped in lives as tenant farmers for large land owners who were either foreigners, or in bed with the foreigners, worked because they focused on the issue of Land Reform. Ho and Mao also both drew heavily from the foreign ideas captured in the American battle for its own independence and creation of a new, unified nation free from the inherent illegitimacy of Foreign control, and built upon the inherent legitimacy of self-determination.

I stand by my earlier assessment. Of course many in the South who profited from their relationships with the French and American occupiers did not want to loose what they had to a revolution. Revolution is illegal democracy, but like most forms of democracy it does not mean that everyone gets what they want, or likes what they get. Revolution is the worst form of democracy, but has nobility in the fact that it is often the only form of democracy available to a population where many are happy with the status quo, but where the bold few are willing to risk it all for the promise of what self-determined legitimacy and sovereignty might one day bring.

That "one day" is becoming a reality in China and also in Vietnam - both places slowed in that journey by the manipulations and exploitations of more powerful foreigners.

The Middle East is currently in a struggle very similar to what occurred post-WWII in Asia. But like there, we prefer the certainty of the status quo over the uncertainty of our professed ideals, and we fixate on the extreme aspects of the messages and tactics employed, rather than taking a leadership role in helping to address the real problem at hand.

Bill M.

Sun, 11/15/2015 - 10:23pm

In reply to by Move Forward

It was a myth because the French unified modern Vietnam, they weren't politically coherent before then except for a short period. Then the Japanese came, and then the French returned. Ho began imposing the foreign concept of communism after WWII. A foreign concept from the West and anything but legitimate. He imposed it by force on his own people, and defeated the French. Due to his success Vietnam was then divided into north and south, and you know the story after that. Little known fact, we got involved to keep France in NATO. Some think they blackmailed US with threats of France going communist if We didn't support them. We stay93rd for a lot reasons.

Bob is mistaken if he thinks the north had political legitimacy in the south with a broad majority. He is right the puppet government we installed wasn't exactly a success either. However, after we left, the south fought the north with great valor. They didn't collapse and simply embrace unity with the north as Bob would have you believe. Our doctrine naively assumes we can fix bad governance and when do the insurgency will simply collapse. That is American Exceptionalism pure and simply.

Move Forward

Sun, 11/15/2015 - 9:37pm

In reply to by Bill M.

Don't understand. If one unified Vietnam divided by the West is a myth, then why did the U.S. support South Korea with a long-term commitment but left South Vietnam to fend for itself? As pointed out by Wolverine57, had we at least bombed the 1975 North Vietnamese invasion as we did during the 1972 Easter Offensive, there might be a thriving South Vietnam today.

Also don't understand how "one unified Vietnam" has relevance to COIN or discredits that doctrine since Hauben's article and history illustrate that CORDS/Phoenix (although he minimizes the latter's influence) had decimated the Viet Cong, plus Vietnamization and its draft were working to a degree.

The more recent example of Soviet occupation of Afghanistan with heavy armor and largely indiscriminate use of force and landmines with over 14,000 Soviet dead also contrasts with the 1/7th as large numbers of ISAF fighter heroes and far fewer lost aircraft from practicing COIN with a coalition.

In addition, as near as I can tell the areas where the Taliban is having the most success against the ANA are largely Pashtun areas that not surprisingly should be ruled primarily by Pashtuns rather than multi-ethnic but largely Northern Alliance-controlled Kabul.

Robert C. Jones

Sun, 11/15/2015 - 9:04pm

In reply to by Bill M.

No myth. Ho led a revolution that threw out the foreign occupiers, defeated their puppet regimes, and unified the three regions described by Move Forward into a single sovereign nation, much as exists now. And it scared the shit out of a US confronting what we perceived as a wave of communism that threatened our own approach to governance, so we applied the solution from the just resolved war in Korea to the just resolved revolution in Vietnam. We lied to the Vietminh about our intentions, tricked them into pulling their troops into what became North Vietnam, orchestrated a mass migration of Catholics from that region into the South, and somehow our adopted boy Diem got over 100% of the "vote."

We love our fairy tales, but the one we tell ourselves about Vietnam has haunted us in Iraq and Afghanistan. We borrowed the tactics of Malaya but ignored the strategy. We took council of our ideological fears then, just as we do now.

Robert C. Jones

Tue, 11/17/2015 - 9:16am

In reply to by Bill M.

Duplicate

Bill M.

Sun, 11/15/2015 - 8:38pm

In reply to by Move Forward

The one unified Vietnam divided by the West is an enduring myth that continues to mislead our findings from the war and discredits the basis of much of our COIN doctrine. A doctrine built upon a flawed narrative.

Move Forward

Sun, 11/15/2015 - 7:58pm

In reply to by Robert C. Jones

RCJ, the following quote from Michael Hauben’s SWJ article of a few weeks back (Postscript: Lessons from a Field Adviser’s Perspective) would seem to contradict your assertion of “one” Vietnamese people:

<blockquote><strong>Reflections on US Misapprehensions Re: Nationalism and the Ethnic Dimension:</strong>

From the outset, the US was obsessively concerned with projecting a stridently anti-colonialist image that it assumed would, by drawing distinctions between Americans and the French and pointing to a shared anti-colonial heritage, resonate with the South Vietnamese masses. On the other hand, it remained consistently ignorant of the depth of the Southern ethnic consciousness—and contemptuous distaste for <strong>North and Central Vietnamese, considered alien ethnic groups</strong>—in the ethos of the Southern (i.e., Deltaic) people.

Consequently, the US early-on decided to oppose leadership by the Southern elite because they were so patently Francophile, and threw their support behind Diem, an ethnic <strong>Central</strong> Vietnamese with strong nationalist credentials but a <strong>Northern Catholic</strong> power base and constituency. (This constituency, far from representing a <strong>Northern</strong> elite, were for the most part impoverished peasants, many from the autonomous Catholic bishoprics, who had accepted evacuation to the South as refugees on the orders of their clergy when the country was divided in 1954. There, they were the beneficiaries of a veritable Diem affirmative action revolution, which meted out favoritism that aroused the resentment of many Southerners of all classes.)

But, as Race pointed out in his classic, War Comes to Long An, it was definitely not nationalism that motivated the Southern peasantry[xix] (whom I found so remarkably void of chauvinism in the modern, nationalist sense), to whom colonialism was a distant irrelevancy, to first take up arms at the behest of the Party. Most had never even laid eyes on a Frenchman, anyway. And later, when the battle was joined against the American enemy, neither anti-imperialist nationalism nor “reunification” with the North struck a chord with Southerners, who had other reasons for fighting.[xx]

Deep-seated Southern regionalism, which well preceded the French colonialism that used this sentiment to its advantage, both generated animosity against <strong>Northern (Catholic)</strong> officials of the Diem regime (at time when Party cadre were locals), and enforced the post-Tet backlash against PAVN. Yet the obvious overrepresentation of ethnic <strong>Northerners</strong> in the civil service and officer corps of the Thieu government precluded the GVN from using ethnic passion as the basis for its appeals to the populace to resist North Vietnamese aggression.

But given the depth of feeling that defined <strong>Northerners</strong> as unwelcome outsiders, it is inconceivable that PAVN’s ethnicity did not of itself motivate Southerners to reject outright the prospect of rule by the DRV. (As for the population segment of <strong>Northern Catholic</strong> origin, expected to remain loyal to GVN because of their 1954 flight south as refugees from Communism, certainly by 1974, anti-war Communist propaganda was gaining a ready audience in the teeming, <strong>North Vietnamese Catholic</strong>, urban slums of Saigon-Bien Hoa, now hard hit by a faltering economy, reflecting a noticeable erosion of the inhabitants’ commitment.)</blockquote>

I added paragraphs where none originally existed and bold emphasis anytime “Northern” and “Central” Vietnamese were mentioned. PAVN was the North Vietnamese Army while GVN was the South Vietnamese Army. Then, don’t forget Outlaw’s Montagnards.

Robert C. Jones

Sun, 11/15/2015 - 5:39pm

In reply to by Wolverine57

You are arguing the right facts, but in the wrong context.

Consider: There never was a "north" or "south" Vietnam for the US to either support or defeat. Those were political fictions created by us, for us. The reality is there was only Vietnam, the newly independent country that defeated the colonial occupation of first Japan, and then France. They were ready to stand tall and embrace their hard earned independence when we intervened to cut their victory in half and create the political fiction we still embrace to this day.

So, with half their gain consolidated and legitimized by the West, and half their gain stolen and reflagged as the illegitimate nation of South Vietnam, the resistance insurgency war against foreign manipulation continued, as did the revolutionary movement to remove the puppet regimes created by those Western powers.

The US strategy in Vietnam is the same strategy we attempted in both Iraq and Afghanistan. It has never worked for us, but because we continue to drink our own Kool-Aid we cannot get past arguing about how we won the gunfights, but never address the elephant in the room: we are blinded by our belief in American Exceptionalism.

We think the laws of human nature do not apply to us. We are wrong on that belief. We think self-determination is only important in liberal Western culture, but not to others. We are wrong on that belief as well.
We think that legal legitimacy trumps perceptions of popular legitimacy for purposes of societal stability. On this point we are perhaps the most wrong of all.

Defenders of our status quo beliefs will label those who dare to see the facts of our history in a context free of our bias as "revisionist." IMO, this is a history long overdue for a revisionist perspective, particularly when that revision frees us from inaccurate perspectives that doom us to recreating the same failure over and over with tragic results for both us and those we apply them to.

Azor

Sun, 11/15/2015 - 7:11pm

In reply to by Bill M.

Bill,

I fully agree with you that whack-a-mole won't defeat ISIS. But short of boots on the ground, it will have to do. And yes one can't segregate ISIS from: disenfranchisement of Sunni elites post OIF, the Kurdish question, our Gulf "partners" running amok, and Turkish and Iranian regional aspirations.

I have vommented elsewhere that only ground forces will defeat ISIS.

A novel approach may be to put the Egyptian Army to work as a Sunni occupying force, with Coalition air cover and funding. Just a thought...

Azor

Sun, 11/15/2015 - 7:11pm

In reply to by Bill M.

Bill,

I fully agree with you that whack-a-mole won't defeat ISIS. But short of boots on the ground, it will have to do. And yes one can't segregate ISIS from: disenfranchisement of Sunni elites post OIF, the Kurdish question, our Gulf "partners" running amok, and Turkish and Iranian regional aspirations.

I have vommented elsewhere that only ground forces will defeat ISIS.

A novel approach may be to put the Egyptian Army to work as a Sunni occupying force, with Coalition air cover and funding. Just a thought...

Bill M.

Sun, 11/15/2015 - 3:11pm

In reply to by Azor

Azor,

I associate the scalpel approach with our HVI whack-a-mole approach, which we do very well, but it doesn't work. I think a sledge hammer approach did work on North Vietnam, but failed in South Vietnam for a lot of reasons. It may result in a short term tactical victory in Raqqa, but you can't defeat a network with a sledge hammer. This presents a challenge that traditional approaches will not meet.

The first step in developing an effective strategy is to correctly define the problem. We don't do that well with our normal approach of attempting to artificially disagregate the problem, instead of dealing with the whole problem. Can we really have a strategy for ISIL without one for the Middle East and globally?

Wolverine57

Sun, 11/15/2015 - 8:25am

In reply to by Azor

Right now the city of Sinjar does not look much like scalpel work. I do not believe ISIS is contained. By scalpel, if you mean that our forces and those we advise look more like a SWAT team than fire and maneuver of units at war, I must disagree. Lets see, 9/11 had a ratio of 1(hijacker):158 (Americans) in favor of the hijackers. Paris recently was 1 terrorist killing 16 and wounding 44. And, you want to use a scalpel. We need to get serious about this.

Azor

Sat, 11/14/2015 - 8:55pm

In reply to by Wolverine57

I disagree with anyone claiming that the US was militarily defeated in Vietnam.

However, South Vietnam was no South Korea, and I do believe that it was politically doomed.

As far as attrition goes, the back-of-the-envelope calculation is that 1/3 of fit for duty males of the opposing side need to be eliminated for the enemy to accept defeat.

Given that ISIS recruitment benefits from Shia militias running amok and Coalition strikes causing Sunni casualties, that number of males will increase exponentially if we start carpet-bombing Raqqa and Mosul...

Now that ISIS is contained - their picking up the Al Qaeda torch notwithstanding - we need a scalpel not a sledgehammer.

Wolverine57

Sat, 11/14/2015 - 8:42pm

I have to disagree. Ninety two (92%) of South Vietnam was under government control by 1972. That sounds a whole lot like success to me. Neither the VC nor the NVA could mount a significant operation after 1968/69. The Communists failed to hold on to any of their territorial gains. Even the Easter Offensive (1972) was not successful and mostly advisers were left in country. But, as long as US air was in support, the North was not successful. Lots of journalist and writers like to dwell on the sensational actions like Ia Drang, TET, Khe Sanh, Hue, etc. What they fail to grasp is the day-to-day actions that led to the 92% under GVN control. At no time did the South rise up in support of the North as was hoped. The South was not on the verge of collapse. From 1957 to 75 the National Liberation Front had assassinated over 37000 village and hamlet leaders, teachers, social workers, and medical types. They kidnapped more that 58000. And, does anyone think the South Vietnamese liked or supported the North? After TET of 68 US units had more target information coming in than could be acted on. An additional factor is that we controlled the night. To suggest otherwise only plays in Hollywood. They couldn't move large forces without being hit. That isn't too bad considering we had our own government officials passing information to the North through the Swiss. And, our government using air strikes as a negotiating tool. I have an attitude. We were winning when I left on 1 February 73. What happened after that is pure politics. A.E. Stahl writes in the Armed Forces Journal, February 2011, "Hunt to Kill": "If the history of warfare has shown us anything, it is that breaking the enemy's will is best facilitated by constant physical attrition". I believe a strategy of attrition would work against ISIS.

Azor

Sat, 11/14/2015 - 6:22pm

In reply to by Wolverine57

Wolverine57:

I appreciate your service in Vietnam, but Westmoreland's focus on attrition proved to be a failure. The North Vietnamese and Vietcong were prepared to suffer tremendous casualties, and they did. From the perspective of casualty ratios, one would think that Vietnam was an unqualified American success. It wasn't.

The B52 carpet bombings were not especially accurate - unlike today's targeted strikes. ISIS hides among civilians and is careful not to mass in large formations in the open. There is a lack of pure military targets to strike, making the question of weapon platform moot.

The air campaign is containing ISIS, however, it would take a protracted and bloody ground campaign to root them out.

In that respect, it would be easier than Vietnam as there would be no safe harbor (e.g. The North, Cambodia), but the US public would not countenance boots on the ground...

Wolverine57

Sat, 11/14/2015 - 4:00pm

Maybe this administration should order our forces into more aggressive Islamic sensitivity training before we offend someone. I'm being facetious.

I hope we do take a tougher stance. I am a Vietnam Vet with 4 trips south. I have an attitude. It is time to introduce ISIS to the Westmoreland strategy of attrition with a vengeance. That could be accomplished by aggressive search and destroy operations. To search and destroy, we add our firepower. (I am not talking about smart bombs taking out one Toyota at a time. I'm talking B52s in trail.) To firepower, we pile on and wipe them out. And, yes, body count will be one measure of success. To the Russians, we say stay out of this like we did during the Cuban crisis and in the 73 Israeli war. What is happening now looks like a politician's attempt to "pick and choose" and "piece-meal" our military into a fight. Been there, done that.