IS will 'soon' pose threat to US: top general
Washington (AFP) - The US
military's top general believes Islamic State extremists will "soon"
pose a threat to America and Europe and that an international coalition
will be needed to confront it, his spokesman said Monday.
US commanders
are preparing possible "options" to counter IS jihadists both in Iraq as
well as Syria, according to General Martin Dempsey's spokesman, Colonel
Ed Thomas.
Defense Secretary
Chuck Hagel adopted a more strident tone last week at a Pentagon news
conference, suggesting the IS militants presented a dire threat that
surpassed the danger posed by the Al-Qaeda network.
But Pentagon officials insisted Hagel and Dempsey shared the same views on the IS.Dempsey "believes that ISIS (Islamic State) is a regional threat that will soon become a threat to the United States and Europe," Thomas said in a statement.
"He (Dempsey) believes that ISIS must be pressured both in Iraq and in Syria," he added.
"He believes that it will be necessary to form a coalition of capable regional and European partners to confront the ISIS threat so that their cloak of religious legitimacy is stripped away."
Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has consistently portrayed IS as a regional threat that could evolve into a direct threat to the United States and Europe, as foreign fighters with Western passports could try to stage terror attacks.
Dempsey's "current mission is to protect US persons and facilities and that includes, of course, actions necessary to protect the homeland wherever those threats reside," Thomas said.
In consultation with
the US Central Command, which oversees American forces in the Middle
East, Dempsey "is preparing options to address ISIS both in Iraq and
Syria with a variety of military tools including airstrikes," the
statement said.
Defeating the jihadists, who have seized territory
in Syria and northern and western Iraq, will require "a sustained
effort over an extended period of time and much more than just military
action," it added.US warplanes have been carrying out bombing raids in Iraq against the IS militants since August 8, with most of the nearly 100 strikes targeting jihadists in the north near Mosul dam. Iraqi and Kurdish troops have seized back control of the dam since the air attacks began.
The Obama
administration has said all options remain open on potential military
strikes in Syria, but there has been no decision to go ahead with
bombing the extremists there.


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