U.S. to Put More 'Boots on the Ground' in Iraq
Defense Secretary Carter announces plans to deploy
101st Airborne Division in latest escalation of war.
By Adam Johnson
January 23, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"Alternet"
- In
an
op-ed in Politico and in an appearance at
Davos World Economic Forum Friday morning, Secretary
of Defense Ash Carter announced the U.S. will deploy
"boots on the ground" in Iraq to help local forces
fight the so-called Islamic State. The policy shift
is a turnaround from the Obama's White House's
previous stance of not deploying combat troops in
Iraq and one sure to shape the foreign policy debate
in the 2016 election.
Though the U.S. military presence in Iraq has been
steadily growing over the past year-and-a-half this
marks the first time an express acknowledgment of
ground troops has been made by a senior official.
The first of such deployments will, according to
Sec. Carter, be the 101st Airborne Division
"Soldiers
in the storied 101st Airborne Division will soon
deploy to Iraq to join the fight against ISIL,"
Carter wrote in Politico. "They will head there with
the support of the American people and armed with a
clear campaign plan to deliver the barbaric
organization a lasting defeat, which I personally
shared with them last week at Fort Campbell."
The U.S.
withdrew troops from Iraq in 2011,
despite efforts to keep a "residual force" of
3,000 by then-Sectary of Defense Leon Panetta. The
current war in Iraq began on August 7th, 2014 when
Obama
announced "limited," "humanitarian" airstrikes
to protect an ethnic minority from ISIL fighters in
Sinjar Mountain in Iraqi Kurdistan. In an
interview at the time, Obama said he did not
intervene to stop ISIL earlier "because that would
have taken the pressure off of [Prime Minister Nuri
Kamal] al-Maliki.” Prime Minister al-Maliki has
since stepped down.
It remains
unclear if the Obama administration plans on
deploying any more troops. Sec. Carter's
predecessor, Panetta, claimed that the fight against
ISIL
would be a "thirty-year war".
"We're
looking for opportunities to do more, and there will
be boots on the ground — I want to be clear about
that — but it's a strategic question," Carter said.
"Whether you are enabling local forces to take and
hold, rather than trying to substitute for them".
Adam Johnson is an associate
editor at AlterNet.
Follow him on Twitter at
@adamjohnsonnyc.
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