No-fly zone
would ‘require war with Syria and Russia’ – top US general
Published time: 22 Sep, 2016 20:34Edited time: 23 Sep, 2016 15:08
US Defense Secretary Ash Carter and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Joseph Dunford testify before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Capitol
Hill in Washington, DC, September 22, 2016 © Yuri Gripas / Reuters
Speaking to the US Senate, the Pentagon’s leaders blamed Russia for the
Aleppo aid convoy attack, but admitted they “had no facts.” Only US coalition
planes should be allowed over Syria, they said, though that would require war
against both Syria and Russia.
Defense Secretary Ash Carter and General Joseph Dunford, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, faced
the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday to report on the ongoing
military operations and “national security challenges” faced
by the US. They also asked the senators for more reliable funding, saying the
uncertainty was hurting the defense industry.
“Not only our people – our defense industry partners, too, need stability
and longer-term plans to be as efficient and cutting-edge as we need them to
be,” Carter told the
senators.
The lawmakers were far less interested in the war against Islamic State
(IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) than about the future of the Syrian government, Iran’s “malign
influence,” and “aggression” by China and Russia –
all ranked far ahead of terrorism on Carter and Dunford’s list of security
challenges.
The Pentagon had “no intention” of sharing intelligence
with Russia when it came to Syria, Dunford told the lawmakers unequivocally.
Secretary Carter explained that the joint implementation councils envisioned by
the ceasefire proposal negotiated in Geneva wouldn’t share intelligence, just
coordinate efforts – but that they were a moot point anyway, since the
ceasefire was effectively dead.
Both the lawmakers and the Pentagon chiefs blamed that development on
Russia, focusing on the alleged airstrike against the humanitarian convoy in
east Aleppo while the US-led airstrike against the Syrian Army fighting IS in
Deir ez-Zor went unmentioned.
“I don’t have the facts,” Dunford said, when asked about the convoy attack by Sen. Richard
Blumenthal (D-Connecticut). “It was either the Russians or the regime,” he
added.
“There is no doubt in my mind that the Russians are responsible,” whether directly or because they backed
the government in Damascus, Dunford said, describing the attack as “an
unacceptable atrocity.”
Carter explained Dunford’s logic in a response to Sen. Lindsey Graham
(R-South Carolina), saying that “the Russians are responsible for this
strike whether they conducted it or not, because they took responsibility for
the conduct of the Syrians by associating themselves with the Syrian regime.”
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The latest proposal by Secretary of State John Kerry involves grounding
only Syrian and Russian airplanes, Carter told Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-New
Hampshire).
“There can be no question of grounding US aircraft” over Syria, he said, adding that US jets
conduct their strikes “with exceptional precision… that no other
country can match.”
Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Mississippi) asked about what it would take for the
US to impose a no-fly zone over Syria, using the phrase “control the
airspace.”
“Right now… for us to control all of the airspace in Syria would require
us to go to war against Syria and Russia,” Dunford replied, drawing a rebuke from
committee chairman John McCain (R-Arizona), who argued a no-fly zone was
possible without war.
Asked about the video of US-backed Syrian rebels insulting US Special
Forces in Al-Rai and running them out of the northern Syrian town, Carter and
Dunford shrugged it off.
A “very small minority took verbal action” against US
troops, said Dunford, who admitted he did not watch the video but had discussed
it with US commanders. He said the incident was “irrelevant” because
the US-backed forces and Turkey were making “great progress” along
Syria’s northern border.
In their exchange with Graham, Carter and Dunford confirmed there is
a plan to arm the Kurdish militia in Syria, over Turkish objections, as a
way of advancing on the IS stronghold of Raqqa. Once Raqqa is taken, however,
an Arab force would be required to hold it. “We have a plan,” Dunford
said, but described it as “not resourced.”
Dunford agreed with Graham’s assertion that the US had two objectives –
to destroy IS and to “remove Assad,” referring to the Syrian
president – but admitted the Kurds were not interested in the latter.
“If the main fighting force inside of Syria is not signed up to take
Assad out, where does that force come from?” Graham asked. Neither Dunford nor Carter
had an answer to that.
Both the Pentagon heads and the lawmakers agreed throughout the hearing
that caps on military spending mandated by sequestration were harmful and
needed to be repealed. Lack of funding posed a significant threat to readiness
and maintenance, Carter and Dunford argued, before pointing out that the US
military was still the strongest, most powerful and most competent in the world.
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