{"id":15862,"date":"2014-09-17T12:30:42","date_gmt":"2014-09-17T02:30:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=15862"},"modified":"2014-09-24T13:09:02","modified_gmt":"2014-09-24T03:09:02","slug":"isis-the-challenge-and-the-opportunity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/isis-the-challenge-and-the-opportunity\/","title":{"rendered":"ISIS: the challenge and the opportunity"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a>After President Obama\u2019s announcement of his long-awaited strategy to defeat ISIS, there\u2019s been considerable discussion as to how the world might respond to the strategy and the likelihood of its success. There\u2019s also a growing and necessary discussion of what Australia\u2019s role should be.<\/p>\n The rise of ISIS\u2014and the somewhat patchy response by the West\u2014has been both interesting and disturbing to watch. The common view<\/a> is that it\u2019s a regional problem with global implications and that states like Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Turkey should be more forthright in their response.<\/p>\n My concern is that far too many commentators are focused on the impending \u2018fight\u2019, and the means to execute it, to the exclusion of all else. There\u2019s little said about the broader regional landscape after the fight. My fear is that the conventional wisdom again sees the answer solely in US leadership of a coalition of supporting nations with highly-mixed capabilities\u2014some offering nothing but rhetoric, others a limited range of combat capabilities surrounded by so many caveats on their use as to add little value.<\/p>\n The Arab League has joined the chorus for a collective response but its ability to bring together one of its own is questionable<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n Disturbingly, the key lesson of two Iraq Wars and Afghanistan seems already to have been forgotten\u2014success turns on winning the peace. A strategy to build the social infrastructure and governance necessary for nations to grow and thrive economically after the fighting ceases needs to be part of the plan from day one of combat, not something appended late in the campaign.<\/p>\n The current focus on disrupting, degrading and containing ISIS is too narrowly cast. While limited operational objectives are important to guard against \u2018mission creep\u2019, the broader regional context must also be part of the collective thinking as the strategy to counter ISIS is developed.<\/p>\n