Times reported Thursday. The bases would be used for carrying out airstrikes and gathering intelligence as ISIS and its affiliates spread across the globe.
The proposal for the bases was made this fall and the White
House has declined to comment on whether it will pursue this option. There are
now eight groups affiliated with ISIS causing increased concern about further
attacks in Western states following the Paris terror attacks in November that
left 130 people dead and more than 350 injured.
Officials familiar with the matter told the New York Times
the cost of the bases would run in the “low millions” and would expand already
existing bases in Afghanistan and Djibouti with possible additions in Niger and
Cameroon. Host nations would have to approve any base. Special Operations
troops could use the bases as launching points for operations as heated debate
continues on Capitol Hill on whether the U.S.-led airstrike coalition will be
sufficient to counter ISIS.
Defense Secretary Ash Carter told the Senate Armed Services
Committee Wednesday adding ground troops to the current airstrikes would only
serve to further “Americanize” the conflict and has recommended against it,
Defense News reported.
“In the near-term, it would be a significant undertaking
that, realistically, we would embark upon largely by ourselves, and it would be
ceding our comparative advantage of special forces, mobility and firepower,
instead fighting on the enemy’s terms,” Carter said. “In the medium-term, by
seeming to Americanize the conflicts in Iraq and Syria, we could well turn
those fighting ISIL or inclined to resist their rule into fighting us instead.”
Leaders around the globe have expressed concern about the
spread of ISIS with Singapore’s defense minister saying Wednesday the terror
group was attracting more followers in Southeast Asia including Singapore,
Malaysia and Indonesia.
“The returned fighters have come back with allegiance to
ISIS and the mission to form an Islamic caliphate in our part of the world,”
Singaporean Minister Ng Eng Hen said. “They have sympathizers; they have
foreign fighters who are trained, who have the motivation, the means, and who
have a common vision.”
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