Bush wants larger U.S. role
The Republican presidential hopeful calls for leadership and more troops to fight Islamic State.
BY DAVID LAUTER
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MIC SMITH Associated Press
WE MUST restore our place as the leader and indispensable power of the free world, Jeb Bush said at the Citadel military college in South Carolina, calling for expanding the active-duty Army and Marine Corps.
WASHINGTON The U.S. will need to increase our presence on the ground in the Middle East to combat Islamic State, Jeb Bush said Wednesday, crossing a line that several of his rivals for the Republican presidential nomination have so far sidestepped.
In a speech that his campaign billed as a major address on military policy, the onetime Republican frontrunner did not specify how many troops he would send or whether he would have them engage in direct combat against Islamic State.
The bulk of these ground troops will need to come from local forces that we have built workable relationships with, said Bush, the former governor of Florida.
But the U.S. should not delay in leading a global coalition to take out ISIS with overwhelming force, he said, using an acronym for Islamic State.
While air power is essential, it alone cannot bring the results we seek, he added.
The Obama administration has dispatched several thousand U.S. troops to Iraq to train Iraqi forces and help direct airstrikes. And late last month, the administration announced it would send special operations forces to Syria.
But President Obama has resisted a direct combat role for U.S. troops. Iraqi and Syrian forces need to take primary responsibility for recapturing territory that Islamic State has seized in those two countries, he has said.
How much Bushs plan would differ from the administrations in practice is unclear because the candidate has not specified what sort of force he has in mind.
The scope ... should be in line with what our military generals, not politicians, recommend will be necessary, he said in his speech, delivered at the Citadel military college in South Carolina.
Though his plan lacked details, Bush clearly set up a contrast in language with Obama.
Radical Islamic terrorists have declared war on the Western world, he said. Their aim is our total destruction. We cant withdraw from this threat or negotiate with it. We have but one choice: to defeat it.
Bush did agree with Obama on one key point, regarding Syrian President Bashar Assad.
To take out ISIS, we must end Assads brutal war against his own people and create a political solution that allows for a stable Syria, he said. Obama said Monday that a political settlement in Syria was a necessary step toward defeating Islamic State.
Ending the Syrian civil war, now in its fifth year, has stymied diplomats from the U.S. and other nations.
Russia and Iran back Assad and say the U.S. and its European allies should join forces with the Syrian leader to defeat Islamic State. On the other side, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and other predominantly Sunni Arab countries say Assad must leave power, and they have made the fight against him a higher priority than efforts against Islamic State, which is a Sunni Muslim militant group.
In keeping with the overall Republican critique of Obama as being too passive in the face of international crises, Bush called for a more active U.S. role.
We dont need to be the worlds policeman, but we must restore our place as the leader and indispensable power of the free world, he said, calling for expanding the size of the active-duty Army and Marine Corps and for accelerating the Pentagons purchase of new ships and planes.
He also said he would restore the National Security Agencys controversial program, begun by the administration of his brother, George W. Bush, after the Sept. 11 attacks, to stockpile information about telephone calls made in the United States.
Under legislation passed by Congress this year, the NSA is scheduled to stop its bulk collection of such phone data after Nov. 29. david.lauter@latimes.com Twitter: @DavidLauter
Clinton draws lines on Islamic State
The candidate details differences between her views and those of Obama and Republican hopefuls.
BY DAVID LAUTER AND EVAN HALPER
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SPENCER PLATT Getty Images
IN A POLICY SPEECH in New York, Hillary Clinton outlined her approach to defeating Islamic State. To be successful, airstrikes will have to be combined with ground forces, she said.
WASHINGTON The U.S. needs to intensify and broaden its effort against Islamic State militants in Syria and Iraq, including sending more ground forces, Hillary Clinton said Thursday in a speech that set out clear differences with the Obama administration as well as the Republican presidential field.
A more effective air campaign is necessary, but not sufficient, Clinton said. We should be honest that to be successful, airstrikes will have to be combined with ground forces to take back the territory that Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, has conquered in Syria and Iraq.
Clintons speech laid out a significantly more active approach toward combating Islamic State than President Obama has been willing to accept, a view she shied away from last weekend during the latest Democratic candidates debate.
Clinton, the former secretary of State, repeated her call for creating no-fly zones in northern Syria, which Obama has rejected; sharply criticized Turkey and Saudi Arabia, U.S. allies that have been on-again, off-again partners in the effort against Islamic State; and said the U.S. should make clear to the Iraqi government that Washington will arm Sunni Arab militias and Kurdish forces in Iraq with or without Baghdads cooperation.
She also warned that the encryption technology firms such as Apple have embraced for mobile phones and other devices may be interfering with the governments ability to prevent terrorist attacks.
We need Silicon Valley not to view government as its adversary, she said, but to work with the government to develop solutions that will both keep us safe and protect our privacy.
In the aftermath of last weeks attacks in Paris, which French authorities say were planned by Islamic State, the question of how to combat the group has become central to the presidential campaign.
Jeb Bush, the onetime Republican front-runner, laid out his policy on Wednesday in a speech in South Carolina that resembled Clintons on several key points including the call for an expanded U.S. presence on the ground in Syria although with fewer specifics.
Clintons chief rival for the Democratic nomination, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, also spoke about Islamic State during a speech Thursday that mainly discussed his ideas about democratic socialism.
Sanders said the U.S. should help create an organization like NATO to confront the security threats of the 21st century.
The U.S. should work with its allies to defeat Islamic State, he said. But, he added, wealthy and powerful Muslim nations in the region can no longer sit on the sidelines and expect the United States to do their work for them.
In her speech, Clinton made clear that an expanded ground force does not mean a full-scale U.S. combat mission. That is just not the smart move to make here, she said, adding that if we have learned anything from 15 years of war in Iraq and Afghanistan, its that local people and nations have to secure their own communities.
But, she added, the U.S. needs to be prepared to deploy more special operations forces than Obama has authorized and give U.S. troops currently in Iraq more leeway to embed with Iraqi units engaged in combat.
As recently as Monday, Obama rejected the idea of creating a no-fly zone over northern Syria. Clinton, however, said that creating that kind of safe area would be a strategic opportunity that would reduce the refugee crisis in Europe by giving a haven to Syrians fleeing the countrys civil war. It would also give the U.S. more leverage in negotiations with Russia, Turkey and other nations aimed at ending Syrias civil war, now in its fifth year.
Clinton also said she believes that Russian President Vladimir Putin may be prepared to cooperate more with the U.S. effort against Islamic State, which has taken responsibility for blowing up a Russian airliner over Egypts Sinai Peninsula last month. And she held out what appeared to be an incentive for Russian involvement, saying that the U.S. needs to prioritize the fight against the Islamic State over the effort to remove from power Syrian President Bashar Assad, a Russian ally.
There is not going to be a successful military effort at this point to overturn Assad, Clinton said. So our efforts should be focused on ISIS, which she described as the common enemy.
The Obama administration has been skeptical of Russias willingness to help in the effort against Islamic State and has worried that a public acknowledgment that Assad might remain in power, even for a transitional period, would alienate Sunni Arab allies such as Saudi Arabia, which sees Assad as a client of Iran.
Clinton, however, seemed less concerned with placating the Saudis and Gulf Arab states. Once and for all, the Saudis, the Qataris and others need to stop their citizens from directly funding extremist organizations as well as schools and mosques around the world that have become centers of recruitment for extremist militant groups, she said.
Our efforts will only succeed if the Arabs and Turks step up in a much bigger way, she said. This is their fight, and they need to act like it.
In a statement, the Republican National Committee labeled Clinton the architect of the failed Obama foreign policy that has presided over a steep increase in radical Islamic terrorism.
Rather than putting forward a new plan to defeat ISIS, Hillary Clinton offered soaring platitudes and largely doubled down on the existing Obama strategy, the statement said.
Clinton offered her own riposte, criticizing Republicans who have called for blocking Syrian refugees from entering the U.S. or allowing in only Christian refugees.
We cannot allow terrorists to intimidate us into abandoning our values, she said. Turning away orphans, applying a religious test, discriminating against Muslims, slamming the door on every Syrian refugee, that is just not who we are. We are better than that, she said.
Referring to a common refrain among Republicans on the campaign trail, Clinton said the obsession in some quarters with a clash of civilizations or repeating the specific words radical Islamic terrorism
gives these criminals, these murderers more standing than they deserve.
Islam is not our adversary. david.lauter@latimes.com evan.halper@latimes.com
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