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The Pentagon has been pushing these fictions for weeks. They’ve said
that ISIS had lost 25% of its territory. Days later they were besieging
Ramadi, a key city just 70 miles from Baghdad. It looks as if the
Pentagon under Obama is more interested in making his airstrikes look
good than in telling the truth.
Exclusive: Pentagon Map Hides ISIS Gains
The U.S. military presented
evidence that it was beating back the so-called Islamic State but it
doesn’t even count coalition setbacks.
The Defense
Department released a map last week showing territory where it is has
pushed ISIS back, claiming that the terrorist group is “no longer able
to operate freely in roughly 25 to 30 percent of populated areas of
Iraqi territory where it once could.” This was touted as evidence of
success by numerous news outlets.
Pushing ISIS back is clearly a good step. But the information from
the Pentagon is, at best, misleading and incomplete, experts in the
region and people on the ground tell The Daily Beast. They said the map
misinforms the public about how effective the U.S.-led effort to beat
back ISIS has actually been. The map released by the Pentagon excludes
inconvenient facts in some parts, and obscures them in others.
The Pentagon’s map assessing the so-called Islamic State’s strength
has only two categories: territory held by ISIS currently, and territory
lost by ISIS since coalition airstrikes began in August 2014. The
category that would illustrate American setbacks—where ISIS has actually
gained territory since the coalition effort began—is not included.
“Taken in isolation, the map definitely gives an impression that
anti-ISIS efforts have succeeded in pushing the group back along a
northern and north-eastern peripheries, but it fails in one huge
respect—it fails to specifically identify territory gained by ISIS
during the same period,” said Charles Lister, a visiting fellow at the
Brookings Doha Center.
The map also shows areas where ISIS is “dominant,” as opposed to the
terrorist group’s operational reach—the areas where it can inflict
violence.
The document “was not meant to be a detailed
tactical map—it is simply a graphic used to explain the overall
situation,” the Pentagon spokesman said.
“A far more important facet of assessing our success or failure is measuring ISIS’s capacity to continue offensive
operations and to reach beyond its lines of actual control. In that
respect, I’d say ISIS has been very minimally challenged since August
2014 and its only this kind of measurement that will persuade local
actors on the ground that ISIS is losing,” Lister told The Daily Beast.
The Defense Department, naturally, doesn’t agree. “ISIL’s own
doctrine says it must gain and hold territory. This map shows they are
not achieving their stated goals,” Pentagon spokesman Colonel Steven
Warren told The Daily Beast, using the government’s preferred acronym
for the terror group.
But Warren seemed to acknowledge that the map isn’t entirely accurate.
The document “was not meant to be a detailed tactical map—it is
simply a graphic used to explain the overall situation,” he said.
The entire battlefield of the ISIS war isn’t depicted, however. For
some reason, the Pentagon’s ISIS map excludes the entire western side of
Syria—which, coincidentally or not, is an area where ISIS has gained a
significant foothold since the U.S.-led bombing effort began last year.
Western Syria is also an area dominated by the Syrian regime, led by
President Bashar al-Assad. The United States has insisted that Assad
must leave office, but has not elucidated a clear strategy for how to
compel this to occur.
Jennifer Cafarella, a fellow specializing in Syria at the Institute
for the Study of War, said that while the map, as presented, looked
accurate, she would “highlight that the map doesn’t extend to include
western Syria, where there is growing ISIS presence… the map cuts off,
essentially ignoring ISIS in the Syrian-Lebanese border region and
Damascus.”
ISIS gains in the area excluded from the Pentagon’s map should be
noted, Cafarella continued, because “they are a forward investment for
ISIS that will create long-term opportunities for further expansion into
zones in which coalition airstrikes are unlikely, at least in the near
term, to penetrate..”
Since airstrikes began in August, ISIS has also shown its force on
the northeastern suburbs of Damascus, near Qabun. More recently, ISIS
made international news through a violent takeoverof the area surrounding a Palestinian refugee camp called Yarmouk, which U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has described as “the deepest circle of hell.”
The Department of Defense marks off the Salamiyeh district, in
central Syria, as ISIS-controlled. What it doesn’t note is that ISIS
expanded into this area after the coalition airstrikes began, and that
the so-called Islamic State is threatening the lives of the locals, who
are largely Ismaili—a group of Muslims that ISIS militants view as
apostates.
“While the Obama administration says that it is fighting ISIS in
Syria, ISIS is actually expanding into Salamiyeh… without [being
confronted by] a single U.S. airstrike,” said Omar Hossino, director of
public relations for the Syrian American Council, a grassroots
organization that helps bolster opposition to the Assad regime. “The
people of Salamiyeh are under threat of genocide, especially the Ismaili
majority.”
Abu Ali, the pseudonym of a resident of Salamiyeh, said in an email
to The Daily Beast that ISIS operations in the area “have intensified
during the recent period in Salamiyeh district, which indicate the
expansion of this organization and the expansion of its military
operations, at a time when it is not being shown any resistance or an
appropriate response by both the international coalition.”
“This frequency, and acceleration of [ISIS] military operations in
the vicinity of the city… justifies concern,” Abu Ali continued, “as it
strengthens the suspicious intersection of interests between the regime
and [ISIS] to target Salamiyeh as a calculated assault on the minorities
in Syria.”
In a note (PDF)
accompanying the map, the Pentagon describes ISIS gains in Syria to be
offset by ISIS losses elsewhere in the country, a contention disputed by
scholar Charles Lister.
“I’d fairly forcefully debate that assessment as being more than a bit positive,” he told the Beast.
And there are at least two other areas in Iraq and Syria where the
Obama administration’s information notes ISIS control without pointing
out that it happened after U.S.-led airstrikes began. In Deir Ezzor,
ISIS has encircled neighborhoods and cut off thousands of people from
the basic necessities of life.
“In recent months, ISIS has tightened its grip around the city of
Deir Ezzor, encircling some 200,000 civilians in both the Al-Joura and
Al-Qusour districts and further cutting them off from both food and
medical aid,” said Evan Barrett, a political adviser for Coalition for a
Democratic Syria, a Syrian-American opposition umbrella group. “Regular
appeals are made from the city for support, including in the form of
international strikes, but according to Syrian independent broadcasters,
strikes in the province focus on ISIS oil assets and border areas far
from the besieged provincial capital.”
The area of Hit district, in Iraq’s Anbar province, fell to ISIS in
October 2014, well after U.S.-led airstrikes began, noted Sinan Adnan, a
pseudonym for an Iraqi-American employee at the Institute for the Study
of War.
And while the Pentagon’s map is generally accurate in showing
territory that the U.S.-led coalition has taken back from ISIS, it omits
that many of these areas still remain unpopulated by their original
inhabitants.
“For the most part, Iraqi Sunnis are not being allowed back into
their areas,” Adnan said “Depopulated communities would be a ripe
environment for a new insurgency when and if ISIS is defeated.”
- See more at: http://pamelageller.com/2015/04/pentagon-map-hides-isis-gains.html/#sthash.DUkCRNrf.dpuf
The Organization of Islamic Cooperation and its Role in Enforcing Islamic Law
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The gravity of the existential threat we face from Islamic Jihad is truly of epic proportions. It is essentially a battle pitting free-civilized man against a totalitarian barbarian. What is at stake is the struggle for our very soul - namely who we are and what we represent. The lives that were sacrificed for individual rights and freedoms that we've come to cherish are being chiseled away from right under our noses by the stealth jihadists. And many of us are in denial and totally clueless.
The left's appeasement and pandering to evil is nothing new. What makes their utopian delusions so infuriating and unpardonable is that it is not only they who will have to pay the consequences, and deservedly, so, they are thwarting and undermining our best efforts at resistance and are thus dragging us down in the process as well.
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