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TERROR WARS
McCain suggests US 'losing' against IS
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) July 7, 2015


US House approves closer military ties with Jordan
Washington (AFP) July 7, 2015 - US lawmakers on Tuesday approved legislation that would ramp up military cooperation with Jordan, including accelerated arms sales to a Middle East ally contending with growing threats from Islamist extremism.

Jordan has become a focal point in the fight against the self-described Islamic State because the Hashemite kingdom borders Syria and Iraq, two nations where large swathes of land have been claimed by IS extremists.

US forces are training a small group of vetted Syrian rebels in Jordan. A Jordanian pilot captured by IS in December was burned alive on video, in one of the jihadist group's most brutal executions.

The House of Representatives passed the bill by voice vote and it now heads to the Senate for consideration.

House Foreign Affairs Committee chairman Ed Royce said the measure sends a "strong message of support" to a critical partner at a vital time.

"Jordan sits on the front lines of the fight against ISIS (IS) and a refugee crisis in Syria where millions have been displaced," Royce said.

"As a longtime key partner for peace and security in the region, it is important the US support Jordan as it confronts these security challenges."

House Speaker John Boehner, who visited Jordan in March, added that the legislation would "strengthen our ties with King Abdullah, a good friend and solid partner in the region."

The measure adds Jordan, for a period of three years, to a list of countries that benefit from "expeditious consideration" of contracts for US arms exports, benefits currently provided to members of the NATO alliance along with Australia, Israel, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea.

In February Washington announced its intention to increase overall US assistance to Jordan from $660 million to $1 billion annually for the 2015-2017 period.

According to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, as of June there were 629,000 registered Syrian refugees in Jordan, most of whom live outside refugee camps.

US Senator John McCain blasted the military strategy against the Islamic State group Tuesday, suggesting the United States was "losing" the fight and criticizing the pace of training for Syrian rebels.

Several lawmakers including McCain, the 2008 Republican presidential nominee, grilled Defense Secretary Ashton Carter and the military's top general, Martin Dempsey, on topics ranging from Ukraine to the Middle East.

"There is no compelling reason to believe that anything we are currently doing will be sufficient to achieve the president's long-stated goal of degrading and ultimately destroying ISIL (IS) -- either in the short-term or the long-term," McCain said at the Senate Armed Services Committee, which he chairs.

"Our means and our current level of effort are not aligned with our ends. That suggests we are not winning, and when you are not winning in war, you are losing."

The sometimes testy exchanges came a day after President Barack Obama spoke at the Pentagon and said the US-led coalition battling IS jihadists was "intensifying" its campaign against the group's base in Syria, but cautioned the fight would be long.

But McCain said the policy was unlikely to succeed, and called claims of success delusional.

"When it comes to ISIL, President Obama's comments... reveal the disturbing degree of self-delusion that characterizes the administration's thinking," he said.

Obama said more than 5,000 air strikes had been carried out against the group, eliminating "thousands of fighters, including senior ISIL commanders."

In recent days, the coalition has bombarded IS in a series of heavy raids, particularly targeting its de facto Syrian capital Raqa.

- Only 60 trained Syrian rebels -

America also wants to train moderate Syrian rebels to fight IS forces, but Carter said only a few dozen had so far been approved for training.

Carter said the US was training about 60 fighters as of last week.

"This number is much smaller than we had hoped for at this point," he added, pointing to difficulties in vetting suitable candidates.

"We know this program is essential. We need a partner on the ground in Syria to assure ISIL's lasting defeat."

McCain criticized what he called "not a very impressive number."

In January, the Pentagon said about 5,400 Syrian rebels would be trained and armed in the first year of the program and US lawmakers have allocated about $500 million to the effort.

McCain said the "reality" on the ground is that IS jihadists continue to gain territory in Iraq and Syria, while expanding their footprint across the Middle East, Africa, and Central Asia.

Additionally, McCain also asked whether the US military planned on providing lethal weapons to Ukraine, whose troops are fighting pro-Russia separatists in the east.

"Yes, I haven't changed my views," Carter replied.

But Carter stressed that sanctions against Russia and economic help to Ukraine, largely from Europe, are the "main event" in resolving the conflict.


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TERROR WARS
Jordan says it has foiled Iran-backed bomb attack
Amman (AFP) July 6, 2015
Jordanian authorities have foiled a "terrorist" attack and arrested an Iraqi man in possession of explosives said to have come from Iran's Revolutionary Guards, a judicial source said on Monday. "Security services thwarted a terrorist plan at the last minute which was going to be carried out by an Iraqi on behalf of Iran's Quds Force," the source told AFP, without providing further details. ... read more


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