DAVID IGNATIOUS, WASHINGTON POST
What happens when an American plan for
limited war against the Islamic State meets the savage reality of
combat, as happened this week when the extremists pounded Kurdish fighters just inside Syria’s border with Turkey ?
The cry rose in Washington and abroad for more American military
involvement. This is how conflicts that start off contained begin to
escalate.
Here’s President Obama’s
dilemma in a nutshell: He has proposed a strategy for dealing with the
Islamic State that is, in the words of Harvard professor Graham Allison,
“limited, patient, local and flexible.” This calibrated approach makes
sense to Allison, one of America’s most experienced strategists, because
it limits U.S. exposure in fighting an adversary that doesn’t
immediately threaten the United States.
The problem is that military history, since the
days of the Romans, tells us that limited war is rarely successful.
Policymakers, when faced with a choice between going “all in” or doing
nothing, usually choose a middle option of partial intervention. But
that leads to stalemates and eventual retreats that drive our generals
crazy. The warrior ethos says, “If you’re in it, win it.” The politician
rounds the edges.
Allison argued recently in the National Interest that other nations should bear the brunt of this war: “If our friends and allies . . .
to whom ISIS [the Islamic State] poses an imminent or even existential
threat are unwilling to fight themselves, to kill and to die for their
own interests and values, Americans should ask: Why should we?”
Frustration with no-win conflicts led Gen. Colin Powell to declare what came to be known as the “Powell Doctrine” — that America should go to war only when vital national security is threatened, the public is supportive, allies are on board and there’s a clear exit strategy. Obama, too, hoped to avoid frustrating, unpopular wars in Syria and Iraq.
N.Y. TIMES
C.I.A. Study of Covert Aid Fueled Skepticism About Helping Syrian Rebels.
WASHINGTON — The Central Intelligence Agency
has run guns to insurgencies across the world during its 67-year
history — from Angola to Nicaragua to Cuba. The continuing C.I.A. effort
to train Syrian rebels is just the latest example of an American
president becoming enticed by the prospect of using the spy agency to
covertly arm and train rebel groups.
An internal C.I.A. study has found that it rarely works.
The
still-classified review, one of several C.I.A. studies commissioned in
2012 and 2013 in the midst of the Obama administration’s protracted
debate about whether to wade into the Syrian civil war, concluded that
many past attempts by the agency to arm foreign forces covertly had a
minimal impact on the long-term outcome of a conflict. They were even
less effective, the report found, when the militias fought without any
direct American support on the ground.
The findings of the study, described in recent weeks by current and
former American government officials, were presented in the White House
Situation Room and led to deep skepticism among some senior Obama
administration officials about the wisdom of arming and training members
of a fractured Syrian opposition.
Although
Mr. Obama originally intended the C.I.A. to arm and train the rebels to
fight the Syrian military, the focus of the American programs has
shifted to training the rebel forces to fight the Islamic State, an
enemy of Mr. Assad.
The
C.I.A. review, according to several former American officials familiar
with its conclusions, found that the agency’s aid to insurgencies had
generally failed in instances when no Americans worked on the ground
with the foreign forces in the conflict zones, as is the
administration’s plan for training Syrian rebels.
One exception, the report found, was when the C.I.A. helped arm and train mujahedeen rebels fighting Soviet troops in Afghanistan
during the 1980s, an operation that slowly bled the Soviet war effort
and led to a full military withdrawal in 1989. That covert war was
successful without C.I.A. officers in Afghanistan, the report found,
largely because there were Pakistani intelligence officers working with
the rebels in Afghanistan.
But
the Afghan-Soviet war was also seen as a cautionary tale. Some of the
battle-hardened mujahedeen fighters later formed the core of Al Qaeda
and used Afghanistan as a base to plan the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.
This only fed concerns that no matter how much care was taken to give
arms only to so-called moderate rebels in Syria, the weapons could
ultimately end up with groups linked to Al Qaeda, like the Nusra Front.
“What
came afterwards was impossible to eliminate from anyone’s imagination,”
said the former senior official, recalling the administration debate
about whether to arm the Syrian rebels.
Last
month, Mr. Obama said he would redouble American efforts by having the
Pentagon participate in arming and training rebel forces. That program
has yet to begin.
Rear
Adm. John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, said last week that it would
be months of “spade work” before the military had determined how to
structure the program and how to recruit and vet the rebels.
“This is going to be a long-term effort,” he said.