Cheryl
Pellerin at the DoD News offers the below piece:
WASHINGTON, Oct. 4, 2017 —
The end of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria is in sight, but the military
effort is only one part of the coalition campaign to defeat ISIS, a Defense
Department official told a House Armed Services subcommittee yesterday.
Mark Swayne, acting deputy
assistant secretary of defense for stability and humanitarian affairs in the
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and
Low-Intensity Conflict, testified before the HASC Subcommittee on Oversight and
Investigations.
The topic was DoD efforts to
enable Iraq to achieve and maintain stability after the recent liberation of
Mosul.
“The key to preventing the
re-emergence in Iraq of ISIS or any other violent extremist organization is
effective and inclusive governance,” Swayne said in prepared remarks.
“For this to develop,” he
added, “the United States and our coalition partners must continue to work by,
with and through the government of Iraq to consolidate military gains and
stabilize liberated areas.”
Such an approach puts the
military instrument of power in a supporting, enabling role, Swayne said.
Winning Momentum
The Iraqi security forces led
the way in defeating ISIS in Mosul, liberating the city and freeing its people.
The Iraqi forces carried a winning momentum to the next ISIS stronghold in Tal
Afar, delivering swift victory there, the acting deputy assistant secretary
said.
“One year ago, virtually all
of Ninevah governorate was controlled by ISIS. In late August, Baghdad
announced [its] complete liberation,” Swayne said. “Every day, Iraqi security
forces fight to return their country to the Iraqi people and out of the hands
of ISIS terrorists.”
As Iraqi security forces
maintain the initiative and continue to bring the fight to ISIS, they are backed
by strong Iraqi leadership in Baghdad and unwavering support from a 73-member
global coalition, he added.
Swayne said that to make
possible long-term peace in Iraq, the United States and its coalition partners
are bolstering the government of Iraq, enabling security services and promoting
local reconciliation among the Iraqi people.
“In the fight to defeat
ISIS,” he said, “we saw unprecedented cooperation between the Kurdish peshmerga
forces and the Iraqi security forces -- fighting and taking casualties to
achieve a common goal for Iraq. The recent Kurdish referendum on independence
presents a challenge to this cooperation but hopefully this can be overcome.”
Long-Term Commitment
The military defeat of ISIS
is the first step in a long-term commitment to rid the world of violent
extremist organizations, Swayne added, noting that the seeds of the next
extremist resurgence lie in the rubble of the defeat ISIS campaign.
“Following the defeat of
ISIS’ physical caliphate, it is vital that the government of Iraq, with the
support of the U.S. government and the international community, continues to
prioritize humanitarian assistance and stabilization efforts in order to allow
the expedient return of internally displaced persons,” he said.
Millions of Iraqis have
returned home but more than 3.2 million are still displaced because of ISIS
occupation, Shayne said.
“We are working closely with
the Department of State, the U.S. Agency for International Development, the
United Nations and our coalition partners on near-term stabilization activities
to support the government of Iraq,” he said. Examples of U.S.-supported
activities include demining, removing rubble and restoring essential services
and access to potable water.
DoD does not have the
authority to conduct stabilization activities on its own, but it continues to
support interagency partners in their efforts to stabilize Iraq and the results
speak for themselves, he added.
More than 2.2 million Iraqis,
including more than a quarter million Mosul residents, have returned home,
Shayne said, and there is more work to do.
Continuing the Global
Campaign against ISIS
Shayne said part of ISIS’s
success comes from its ability to capitalize on sectarian grievances and
disenfranchisement.
“Allegations of abuses,
extrajudicial killings and other Law of Armed Conflict violations feed ISIS’
narrative that the government of Iraq is illegitimate,” Shayne said. “For this
reason we continue to advise the government of Iraq on the importance of
transparency and investigating all credible allegations of abuse.”
Iraq’s Prime Minister Haider
al-Abadi is personally committed to the effort, Shayne said, and has said that
he will thoroughly investigate any such allegations and hold those deemed
responsible accountable in accordance with due process and Iraqi law.
Even after the ISIS caliphate
is physically destroyed, the global campaign to defeat ISIS will continue, he
added, to bolster long-term stability in Iraq by engaging ISIS globally and
preventing the flow of foreign fighters back to the region.
The deputy assistant
secretary said the whole-of-government global campaign will continue to attack
ISIS and its affiliates to further degrade their ability to recruit and
maintain a fighting force, and the U.S.-led coalition and interagency partners
will pressure the international community to counter the radical
Salafi-jihadist ideology that fuels many of the world’s violent extremist
organizations.
“All of these efforts will
serve to help prevent a resurgence of ISIS, provide an opportunity for
inclusive and effective governance at all levels to thrive and promote
long-term stability,” Shayne said.
Note: In the above U.S. Army photo Iraqi
security forces trainers disassemble an M16 rifle before they teach their
fellow trainers at Camp Taji, Iraq on Sept. 24, 2017. The photo was taken by
Spc. Alexander Holmes.
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