US President Barack Obama speaks at the Pentagon in Washington, DC on September 11, 2014 (AFP Photo/Jim Watson) |
Washington (AFP) - The White
House declared Friday the United States was at war with Islamic State
radicals, seeking to rub out another semantic flap over its Syria
policy.
But pressed
to clear up doubts about how President Barack Obama sees the conflict,
the White House and Pentagon left little doubt.
"The
United States is at war with ISIL in the same way that we are at war
with Al-Qaeda and its Al-Qaeda affiliates all around the globe," said
White House spokesman Josh Earnest.
Pentagon
spokesman Rear Admiral John Kirby said that the US was not fighting the
last Iraq war and used similar language to Earnest.
"But
make no mistake, we know we are at war with ISIL in the same way we're
at war and continue to be at war with Al-Qaida and its affiliates," he
said.
Obama is scheduled to be
in Tampa, Florida Wednesday to receive a briefing from top commanders at
US Central Command, which oversees American forces in the Middle East.
In
interviews on Thursday, as Kerry toured the Middle East building an
anti-IS coalition, he was reluctant to use the term "war" in referring
to the US campaign, telling people not to indulge in "war fever."
"I
think 'war' is the wrong terminology and analogy but the fact is that
we are engaged in a very significant global effort to curb terrorist
activity," Kerry said.
- 'Different' from last war -
The dispute over
wording may seem trivial when American planes and drones have been
pounding Islamic State targets in Iraq for weeks in more than 160
operations.
But it indicates
the administration is skittish about using language that could alarm
Americans weary of years of foreign conflict and who embraced Obama's
vow to "end" the US wars in Afghanistan and Iraq during two presidential
election campaigns.
"The
first thing that's important for people to understand is the president
has made clear how the strategy that he is pursuing in Iraq and Syria to
degrade and ultimately destroy ISIL is different than the strategy that
was pursued in the previous Iraq War," said Earnest on Friday.
Obama's
new strategy, announced in a prime-time televised address on Wednesday,
expands US air strikes in Iraq against IS and envisages new action
against the group in Syria.
In
addition, Obama plans to train "moderate" Syrian rebels to take on IS
and to reconstitute the Iraqi army, parts of which fled an IS blitzkreig
across northern and western Iraq.
But
he has insisted that there will be no deployments of US ground troops
in the operation -- especially none that would recall the vast US land
armies that were targeted by insurgents in the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
The debate over
the word "war" is only the latest verbal kerfuffle to hamper Obama's
attempts to clarify his increasingly under-fire foreign policy.
Two
weeks ago, the president sparked a political storm by admitting he did
not "yet" have a strategy for combating IS in Syria after the beheading
of two US journalists.
Critics also accused the administration of seeking to "manage" the problem of Al-Qaeda rather than seeking to decimate it.
On Wednesday, Obama said that his goal was to "destroy" IS.
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