Posted: 18 Nov 2015 11:44 PM PST
Last year at a NATO summit, Obama explicitly disavowed the idea
of containing ISIS. "You can't contain an organization that is running
roughshod through that much territory, causing that much havoc, displacing
that many people, killing that many innocents, enslaving that many
women," he said.
Instead
he argued, "The goal has to be to dismantle them."
Just before the Paris massacre, Obama shifted back to containment. “From the
start, our goal has been first to contain them, and we have contained them,”
he said.
Pay no attention to what he said last year. There’s a new message now. Last
year Obama was vowing to destroy ISIS. Now he had settled for containing
them. And he couldn’t even manage that.
ISIS has expanded into Libya and Yemen. It struck deep into the heart of
Europe as one of its refugee suicide bombers appeared to have targeted the
President of France and the Foreign Minister of Germany. That’s the opposite
of a terrorist organization that had been successfully contained.
Obama has been playing tactical word games over ISIS all along. He would
“degrade and ultimately destroy” ISIS. Or perhaps dismantle the Islamic
State. Or maybe just contain it.
Containment is closest to the truth. Obama has no plan for defeating ISIS.
Nor is he planning to get one any time soon. There will be talk of
multilateral coalitions. Drone strikes will take out key figures. And then
when this impressive war theater has died down, ISIS will suddenly pull off
another attack.
And everyone will be baffled at how the “defeated” terrorist group is still
on the march.
The White House version of reality says that ISIS attacked Paris because it’s
losing. Obama also claimed that Putin’s growing strength in Syria is a sign of
weakness. Never mind that Putin has all but succeeded in getting countries
that were determined to overthrow Assad to agree to let him stay.
Weakness is strength. Strength is weakness.
Obama’s failed wars occupy a space of unreality that most Americans associate
with Baghdad Bob bellowing that there are no American soldiers in Iraq.
(There are, according to the White House, still no American ground forces in
Iraq. Only American forces in firefights on the ground in Iraq.)
There’s nothing new about any of this. Obama doesn’t win wars. He lies about
them.
The botched campaign against ISIS is a replay of the disaster in Afghanistan
complete with ridiculous rules of engagement, blatant administration lies and
no plan for victory. But there can’t be a plan for victory because when Obama
gets past the buzzwords, he begins talking about addressing root causes.
And you don’t win wars by addressing root causes. That’s just a euphemism for
appeasement.
Addressing root causes means blaming Islamic terrorism on everything from
colonialism to global warming. It doesn’t mean defeating it, but finding new
ways to blame it on the West.
Obama and his political allies believe that crime can’t be fought with cops
and wars can’t be won with soldiers. The only answer lies in addressing the
root causes which, after all the prattling about climate change and
colonialism, really come down to the Marxist explanation of inequality.
When reporters ask Obama how he plans to win the war, he smirks tiredly at
them and launches into another condescending explanation about how the
situation is far too complicated for anything as simple as bombs to work.
Underneath that explanation is the belief that wars are unwinnable.
Obama knows that Americans won’t accept “war just doesn’t work” as an answer
to Islamic terrorism. So he demonstrates to them that wars don’t work by
fighting wars that are meant to fail.
In Afghanistan, he bled American soldiers as hard as possible with vicious
rules of engagement that favored the Taliban to destroy support for a war
that most of the country had formerly backed. By blowing the war, Obama was
not only sabotaging the specific implementation of a policy he opposed, but
the general idea behind it. His failed wars are meant to teach Americans that
war doesn’t work.
The unspoken idea that informs his strategy is that American power is the
root cause of the problems in the region. Destroying ISIS would solve
nothing. Containing American power is the real answer.
Obama does not have a strategy for defeating ISIS. He has a strategy for
defeating America.
Whatever rhetoric he tosses out, his actual strategy is to respond to public
pressure by doing the least he can possibly do. He will carry out drone
strikes, not because they’re effective, but because they inflict the fewest
casualties on the enemy.
He may try to contain the enemy, not because he cares about ISIS, but because
he wants to prevent Americans from “overreacting” and demanding harsher
measures against the Islamic State. Instead of fighting to win wars, he seeks
to deescalate them. If public pressure forces him to go beyond drones, he
will authorize the fewest air strikes possible. If he is forced to send in
ground troops, he will see to it that they have the least protection and the
greatest vulnerability to ISIS attacks.
Just like in Afghanistan.
Obama would like ISIS to go away. Not because they engage in the ethnic
cleansing, mass murder and mass rape of non-Muslims, but because they wake
the sleeping giant of the United States.
And so his idea of war is fighting an informational conflict against
Americans. When Muslim terrorists commit an atrocity so horrifying that
public pressure forces him to respond, he lies to Americans. Each time his
Baghdad Bob act is shattered by another Islamic terrorist attack, he piles on
even more lies.
Any strategy that Obama offers against ISIS will consist of more of the same
lies and word games. His apologists will now debate the meaning of
“containment” and whether he succeeded in defining it so narrowly on his own
terms that he can claim to have accomplished it. But it really doesn’t matter
what his meaning of “containment” or “is” is. Failure by any other name
smells just as terrible.
Obama responded to ISIS by denying it’s a threat. Once that stopped being a
viable strategy, he began to stall for time. And he’s still stalling for
time, not to beat ISIS, but to wait until ISIS falls out of the headlines.
That has been his approach to all his scandals from ObamaCare to the IRS to
the VA.
Lie like crazy and wait for people to forget about it and turn their
attention to something else.
This is a containment strategy, but not for ISIS. It’s a containment strategy
for America. Obama isn’t trying to bottle up ISIS except as a means of
bottling up America. He doesn’t see the Caliph of the Islamic State as the
real threat, but the average American who watches the latest beheading on the
news and wonders why his government doesn’t do something about it. To the
left it isn’t the Caliph of ISIS who starts the wars we ought to worry about,
but Joe in Tennessee, Bill in California or Pete in Minnesota.
That is why Obama sounds bored when talking about beating ISIS, but heats up
when the conversation turns to fighting Republicans. It’s why Hillary Clinton
named Republicans, not ISIS, as her enemy.
The left is not interested in making war on ISIS. It is too busy making war
on America.
Daniel Greenfield is a New York City based writer and blogger
and a Shillman Journalism Fellow of the David Horowitz Freedom Center.
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