Trump gives generals 30 days for new anti-IS strategy

Trump gives generals 30 days for new anti-IS strategy
US President Donald Trump has ordered members of his Cabinet to begin a 30-day review of the nation's strategy to combat the Islamic State group.
3 min read
30 January, 2017
Trump mocked Obama's slow pace in the fight against the extremist fighters [Getty]
President Donald Trump signed an executive order over the weekend giving the US military 30 days to devise a plan to "defeat" the Islamic State group.

The text calls for a "comprehensive strategy and plan" to defeat the group and could mean more US forces and military hardware move into Iraq and Syria.

Pentagon chief James Mattis is also tasked with recommending changes to US rules of engagement and policy restrictions to eliminate those that "exceed the requirements of international law regarding the use of force against ISIS" (another acronym for the group) under the order, which also seeks to cut the group's financial support.

Trump had previously mocked and criticised the slow pace of his predecessor Barack Obama's progress in the fight against the extremist fighters.

In a telephone call, Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin agreed to establish "real coordination" against the Islamic State group in Syria.

Yet many in the US military are suspicious of Russia's role in Syria, with Moscow seen as seeking first and foremost to support and defend President Bashar al-Assad's regime.

"We have to get rid of ISIS. We have no choice," Trump told Fox News in an interview broadcast on Thursday.

"This is evil. This is a level of evil that we haven't seen."

Barack Obama took a longer-term view of the anti-IS fight, with a more cautious commitment of US forces and instead ramping up an air war against the violent extremists.

"President Trump might be looking for something with quicker results, that could put some more options on the table," retired lieutenant general David Barno, who led coalition forces in Afghanistan from 2003 to 2005, told National Public Radio on Friday.

The United States currently has 5,000 troops in Iraq and 500 in Syria as "advisers" – but also US artillery and aircraft to help in the fight.

They have provided substantial support to the assault led by Iraqi forces on Islamic State's hold on the key city of Mosul.

The slow, steady assault has driven IS fighters out of part of the city on the east bank of the Tigris River, and forces are now preparing an assault on IS-held Mosul neighbourhoods on the river's west bank.

According to reports, an escalation of the US role could involve more US armour and helicopters engaging in the assaults on IS positions together with Iraqi, Turkish and Kurdish forces.

Trump "could elect to put American boots on the ground in larger numbers," Barno said.

"That all entails new uses of military power... and that opens the prospect of a deeper involvement with more casualties."