WASHINGTON - The White House
gave vague assurances on Friday that U.S.
military involvement in Iraq
will be limited in nature, seeking to ease political and public concern about
Americans being drawn back into another war. Continue...
During his daily briefing, White House press
secretary Josh Earnest repeatedly stated that the U.S.
would not engage in "prolonged" efforts to beat back the Islamic
State, the militant group formerly known as ISIS .
But Earnest wouldn’t define what the administration viewed as prolonged, and,
notably, he told reporters an end date hasn't been set for military operations,
which began on Friday morning with two airstrikes.
"The president has not laid out a
specific end date," Earnest said. "Those kind of decisions are
evaluated regularly and are driven by the security situation on the ground,
both as it relates to the safety and security of the American personnel but
also as it relates to supporting the ongoing efforts of both Kurdish security
forces and Iraqi security forces."
Earnest acknowledged the tension between
President Barack Obama’s unwillingness to be dragged back into a protracted war
and the urgent need to provide humanitarian aid to civilians and protect
American interests in Iraq .
The issue is complicated further by the president's own history with Iraq , having been elected to the White House in
large part on a promise to end U.S.
involvement there.
Earnest said repeatedly that air strikes will
be "very limited in scope." Their primary goal, he said, is to
protect U.S.
personnel in the area from encroaching Islamist militants and to ensure that
food and water are provided to tens of thousands of stranded Iraqi Yazidis, a
religious minority that the militants are targeting.
"There is not a timeframe that I can
share right now," he said, when pressed on how long it would all last.
"I'm not in a position to offer a specific date [of withdrawal], but I am able
to offer a specific presidential commitment that a prolonged military conflict
that includes U.S.
involvement is not on the table here."
Even without a clear end game, the president
currently enjoys broad support on Capitol Hill for U.S.
military engagement in Iraq .
House and Senate Democrats have almost unanimously signed off on Obama's
decision to authorize air strikes there. As of Friday afternoon, the lone
skeptics who have released public statements are Sens. Richard Blumenthal and
Chris Murphy, both Connecticut Democrats.
"I oppose open-ended military
commitments, which the President's actions in Iraq could become," Blumenthal
said. "Humanitarian relief is necessary to prevent genocide and provide
food and water to meet an urgent emergency, but the President owes the American
people a better, fuller explanation of the scope and strategy of military
actions."
“Like President Obama, I was elected to end America ’s recent history of military hubris in
the Middle East ,” Murphy said. “The president
has stated that his goals for immediate humanitarian and military action in Iraq
are extremely limited -- to prevent a genocide of the Yezidi community and
protect American personnel from imminent harm. These are legitimate reasons for
action, but the president needs to better explain how this intervention is
strictly time and scope limited.”
He
added, “I will oppose any efforts to continue this military campaign in order
to provide tactical advantage or disadvantage to either side of this conflict.”
Anti-war groups echoed those concerns in statements of their own. But if anything, the White House has gotten much louder criticism from Republicans, who think Obama should have acted sooner and with more force (here).
Anti-war groups echoed those concerns in statements of their own. But if anything, the White House has gotten much louder criticism from Republicans, who think Obama should have acted sooner and with more force (here).
Source: here
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