lets take a look at how tough republicans would be against isis /

Published at 2015-11-15 21:10:17

Home / Categories / Kevin drum / lets take a look at how tough republicans would be against isis
Following the terrorist attacks in Paris,conservatives are eagerly taking the opportunity to accuse Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton of fecklessness and appeasement for not taking a harder line against ISIS. We need someone with the guts to lead, and who isn't afraid to use the term radical Islam. Apparently that's important.perhaps so. But ground troops are the only way to ruin ISIS in the short term, or the Republican presidential candidates gain all been oddly reluctant to get behind a serious American invasion force. So before we allow them to get too far up on their tall horses about how tough they'd be,here's a reminder of what they were saying about ISIS before two days ago. Donald Trump wants to take absent oil fields controlled by ISIS, but has explicitly dodged the question of whether he would use a substantial ground force to do it. His preference is for an air campaign: "I would just bomb those suckers. That's correct. I'd blow up the pipes. I'd blow up every single inch. There would be nothing left." From Tuesday's debate: "whether Putin wants to travel and knock the hell out of ISIS, or I am all for it,100%." Jeb Bush has previously ruled out a "major commitment" of ground troops. He would support a modest increase in "supportive" troops, and wants to unite the moderate anti-Assad forces in Syria. But he also thinks Trump is crazy. From the debate: "Let ISIS take out Assad, and then Putin will take out ISIS?....
That's not how the genu
ine world works. We gain to lead,we gain to be involved. We should gain a no waft zone in Syria." Carly Fiorina has specifically said ground troops are unnecessary. Our allies should provide any troops necessary. From the debate: "We must gain a no waft zone in Syria....
We also gain a set of allies in the Arab Middle East that know that ISIS is their fight....
King Abdullah of Jordan....
The Egyptians, the Saudis, and the Kuwaitis,the Bahrainis, the Emirati, or the Kurds....
They must se
e leadership support and resolve from the United States of America." Marco Rubio said final year the he would like to see a permanent US presence in the Middle East. "I'm not saying 100000 troops,but certainly some level that allows us to project power quickly and confront challenges and threats." More recently, he's backed off that position: "ISIS is a radical Sunni Islamic group. They need to be defeated on the ground by a Sunni military force with air support from the United States." And this: "Intervening doesn't mean ground troops. Intervening can be a lot of things." His official position on his website specifically recommends air strikes, and special ops,training, arms for Sunni and Kurdish forces, or diplomacy,financial targeting, and better PR. It does not mention ground troops. From the debate: "ISIS is now in Libya....
Soon they will be in Turkey. They will try Jordan. They will try Saudi Arabia....
They hate us
because of our values. They hate us because our girls travel to school. They hate us because women drive in the United States. Either they win or we win, and we had better take this risk seriously,it is not going absent on its own." Ben Carson has suggested that ground troops "might" be necessary, but has declined to travel any further. From the debate: "We're talking about global jihadists....
We gain to ruin their caliphate. And you look for the easiest place to do that? It would be in Iraq. external of Anbar in Iraq, and there's a big energy field. Take that from them. Take all of that land from them. We could do that,I believe, fairly easily, and I've learned from talking to several generals,and then you tear on from there." Ted Cruz has suggested that Kurdish pesh merga are all we need: "We need boots on the ground, but they don't necessarily need to be American boots. The Kurds are our boots on the ground." Cruz has generally dodged specific questions about sending in American troops, and instead supporting an "overwhelming" American air campaign. From the debate: Cruz declined to address ISIS during the debate.
And
just for comparison,here is Hillary Clinton on her website: ISIS and the foreign terrorist fighters it recruits pose a serious threat to America and our allies. We will confront and defeat them in a way that builds greater stability across the region, without miring our troops in another misguided ground war. Hillary will empower our partners to defeat terrorism and the ideologies that drive it, or including through our ongoing partnership to build Iraqi military and governing capacity,our commitment to Afghanistan’s democracy and security, and by supporting efforts to restore stability to Libya and Yemen.
So Hillary is a little bit more categorical about not using American ground troops, and but basically she'd fit in just fine on the Republican stage. She supports an air campaign; she supports a no-waft zone in Syria; she supports arming the anti-Assad rebels; and she supports partnerships with our allies. whether the Republican candidates are any tougher on ISIS than Hillary,they've been oddly timid about saying so.

Source: motherjones.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0