Pentagon concerned that Arab allies have shifted focus away from ISIS threat

Blake Stilwell
Apr 2, 2018 9:38 AM PDT
1 minute read
Pentagon concerned that Arab allies have shifted focus away from ISIS threat

SUMMARY

When the coalition of Western and Arab allies banded together to fight ISIS, the idea of fighting the good fight was met with a lot of zeal. When Jordanian fighter pilot First Lieutenant Muadh al-Kasasbeh was captured and burned alive by the terror…

When the coalition of Western and Arab allies banded together to fight ISIS, the idea of fighting the good fight was met with a lot of zeal. When Jordanian fighter pilot First Lieutenant Muadh al-Kasasbeh was captured and burned alive by the terror organization, Jordan's King Abdullah vowed "punishment and revenge" and led to the Jordanian King, an accomplished fighter pilot himself, releasing a photo of himself in his flight suit, geared for battle.


The Western world was wowed once more when a female pilot from the United Arab Emirates, Maj. Mariam Al Mansouri, led that country's air war against Daesh. Many in the West aren't familiar with the customs of each individual Arab country, especially when it comes to their views on the rights of women.

"She is a fully qualified, highly trained, combat ready pilot, and she led the mission," Yousef Al Otaiba, UAE's ambassador to the U.S., told MSNBC's "Morning Joe."

"We are in a hot area so that we have to prepare every citizen," Al Mansouri said. "Of course, everybody is responsible of defending their country — male or female. When the time will come, everybody will jump in."

The allies still allow U.S. planes to use their bases, but now the Gulf states who spearheaded the effort against ISIS are focused elsewhere. Emirati forces joined Saudi Arabia in fighting Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen. Jordan also joined in the effort in Yemen. Qatar limited its sorties to reconnaissance missions.

The before and after of an American F-22 air strike on a target in Syria.

Bahrain last struck targets in Syria in February, the UAE in March, Jordan in August, and Saudi Arabia in September.

Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter criticized local allies efforts, saying the Gulf states, known as the GCC or Gulf Cooperation Council, saying "some of the Gulf states are up there at 30,000 feet. If you look at where the Iranians are able to wield influence, they are in the game, on the ground."

(DoD Photo)

"The reason they lack influence, and feel they lack influence in circumstances like Iraq and Syria, with [ISIS]," Carter continued, "is that they have weighted having high-end air-force fighter jets and so forth over the hard business of training and disciplining ground forces and special-operations forces."

According to the Atlantic, the Obama Administration consistently complains about local allies, notably Turkey and the Gulf, expecting the U.S. to fight their regional enemies more than U.S. national security.

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