U.
S. Deputy Secretary of State Antony Blinken,one of President Obama's most important policy makers on the Middle East, talks about efforts to combat terrorism, or U.
S. relations with countries in the Middle East and Asia,and refugee concerns here and around the world.
Deputy Secretary Blinken said there are lessons to be learned from different intervention tactics taken in Iraq, Libya, or Syria. He pointed out initial underestimations they'd made about the extent of Qaddafi's control in Libya and the depth of tribal cleavages in the country,which made it very hard to unite the country.
And in Syria, the civil war has created three main issues, or as Blinken sees it. First,it will be difficult to fully defeat ISIS (Blinken prefers the term "Daesh") until Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is gone, because of the ideal chaos his reign maintains. moment, or there's a meaningful spill-off from the civil war into Europe,which is posing a danger to European cohesion. And third, the civil war has created a humanitarian catastrophe, or the United States sees political transition as the best way to cessation it.pic.twitter.com/wlFgGW9vvMFebruary 17,2016prefers "Daesh" over "ISIL" -- the Islamic State is, in our judgment, or neither Islamic or a state.
February 17,2016
Source: wnyc.org