Never Mind

Pentagon Walks Back Promise to Attack ISIS Capital ASAP

When the defense secretary promised an assault on ISIS’s capital in ‘weeks,’ the Pentagon reacted with a collective WTF. Defense officials say an attack is more like six months off.
Defense Secretary Ash Carter’s claim last week that the assault on Raqqa, the capital of the so-called Islamic State, was “within weeks” was a surprise to the commanders planning the war, who believe local troops will not enter the city for months, three defense officials told The Daily Beast.
One official told The Daily Beast the attack on the ISIS capital could be six months away.
“The broader question of retaking Raqqa and who does that is still open and we’re gonna continue to discuss that with all of our coalition partners,” Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, explained to reporters Wednesday.
The local forces needed have not all been identified, their roles have yet to be defined, the weapons and training have yet to be allocated, and the so-called Islamic State has yet to be cut off from supply lines and foreign fighter flows that allow it to build up its defensive measures, officials said.
“Weeks?!” one commander said when he first heard the weeks-long timeline to be within the city limits of Raqqa. “I’ve never heard anyone say that.”
Given all that, the only concrete U.S. plan so far is that in the coming weeks, U.S.-led coalition war planes will turn up strikes on the outskirts of Raqqa, softening the perimeter defenses and signaling to civilians that it’s time to flee, if they can, two senior U.S. military officials told The Daily Beast.
“You don’t necessarily have to have all these issues worked out to continue the isolation phase and advance that,” a senior military official said Wednesday. “Isolation” is a military term of art describing encircling the enemy and cutting them off from escape or resupply.
The forces the U.S. would like to meld together to take Raqqa—Kurdish and Syrian Arab fighters and Turkish forces—are at odds with each other politically and sometimes on the battlefield. While the Syrian Arabs are willing to work with the Turkish troops, the Kurds thus far are not, defense officials said. The officials spoke anonymously because they were not authorized to describe the planning for the Raqqa assault publicly.

For the U.S., the Kurdish forces known as the YPG have proven the most effective guerilla fighting force in the region, and are partnered with U.S. special operators based in Syria who help the fighters coordinate strikes and plan operations.

The Kurds want to trade their help in taking Raqqa for U.S. support for an eventual homeland. The Turks don’t want the YPG in any Raqqa offensive. And the U.S. wants to defeat ISIS and is looking for viable partners on the ground to lead the assault, even ones that are foes to their NATO ally, Turkey.

Further complicating matters is a possible direct conflict between Turkey and the YPG on the battlefield. Turkey is threatening to enter another Syrian city, al Bab, which currently is under ISIS control, but also part of Kurdish aspirations for an autonomous region in the north that city. The YPG would view an assault on Raqqa as secondary to keeping al-Bab out of Turkish control.

So far, U.S. officials have yet to reach any kind of deal with Turkey and but remain optimistic, albeit less so with each passing day.
“Nobody feels the need to take that off the table,” the official said of Turkey’s offer to take part. “There might be some role.”
Ideally, the Americans want Turkey’s support for the operation on Raqqa, but for now, would settle for their acquiescence to an SDF-led campaign, which to date has not been forthcoming.

“There’s a significant Arab element of the Syrian Defense Forces—a third of them—who would be willing to work with Turks,” the official added.
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