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Pentagon prepares new military options for Trump
By Thomas WATKINS
Washington (AFP) Jan 18, 2017


US Senate committee approves Trump's pick for Pentagon chief
Washington (AFP) Jan 18, 2017 - James Mattis, President-elect Donald Trump's pick for defense secretary, breezed through a Senate committee vote Wednesday, paving the way for his full confirmation and quick swearing-in after Trump takes office.

The Senate Armed Services Committee approved Mattis's nomination all but unanimously, with just one Democratic senator voting no.

Mattis is the first cabinet nominee to pass the committee stage of his nomination, and he could be fully confirmed as soon as Friday, Senate Democratic minority leader Chuck Schumer said.

Some Democratic senators had initially expressed reservations that Mattis's appointment runs counter to decades of Pentagon tradition -- and US legal custom.

US law prohibits officers from serving as defense secretary for seven years after leaving active duty -- but retired Marine general Mattis only hung up his uniform in 2013.

A cornerstone of US democracy is that civilians, not people in uniform, control the military, and the commander-in-chief is the president.

Mattis is known as a colorful commander and is famed for his pugnacious aphorisms. The media dubbed him "Mad Dog" for his battle-hardened swagger and the sort of blunt language Marines are famous for.

He has been quoted as saying, "Be polite, be professional, but have a plan to kill everyone you meet."

While Mattis looks sure to secure his position, Democratic lawmakers are putting up greater resistance to other Trump cabinet picks, including the proposed education secretary and the health and human services secretary nominee.

Mattis would replace Ashton Carter, a longtime Pentagon bureaucratic warrior who served as President Barack Obama's fourth defense secretary.

Retired Canadian general recruited to deal with Trump team
Ottawa (AFP) Jan 18, 2017 - Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has tasked a retired general Wednesday with helping Ottawa build bridges to Donald Trump's incoming US administration.

Retired lieutenant general Andrew Leslie was appointed parliamentary secretary to the foreign affairs minister, a position from which he will help steer Canada's most important bilateral relationship.

Leslie, who was elected to parliament last year, will "play a critical role in building ties with the new US administration," a government statement said.

Leslie served 35 years in the Canadian military, including a deployment to the former Yugoslavia during the conflict in the Balkans.

Canadian media said he is a close friend of Trump's National Security Advisor Michael Flynn and soon-to-be Defense Secretary James Mattis.

Trudeau told reporters he hopes to nurture a "constructive working relationship" with the Trump administration.

"That's why our ambassador and senior members of my team have been engaged with the incoming administration over the past weeks to talk about a broad range of issues," he said.

"Much of it focused on trade," he added, reflecting on the "millions of middle class jobs" both in Canada and the United States that rely on Canada-US free trade.

Trudeau last week reshuffled his cabinet, only one year into his mandate, to reflect the new reality in Washington.

Notably, foreign affairs minister and Trump critic Stephane Dion was sacked and replaced by former trade minister Chrystia Freeland, a leading Russia critic who shares some of Trump's concerns that globalization is failing workers.

About 75 percent of Canadian exports last year went to the United States, through the North American Free Trade Agreement that Trump has panned as the "worst deal in history."

Canada has said it is open to renegotiating the 1994 pact with the United States and Mexico.

In her new job, Freeland will maintain responsibilities for Canada-US trade issues.

He wants to frantically bomb the Islamic State group and has slammed White House micromanagement of America's warfighting generals, but President-elect Donald Trump has offered few specifics about what his Pentagon will look like.

While Obama administration officials, who cede control of US foreign policy at noon Friday, say they did everything possible to destroy IS, senior military commanders are now drawing up fresh plans.

These could potentially see more US troops being sent to the Middle East and have the Pentagon taking a more aggressive stance in other key areas, which include countering growing Iranian regional influence.

During his campaign, Trump said he would "bomb the shit" out of IS and claimed to have a secret plan to quickly defeat the group.

He gave no details, but later said he will convene his top generals and "give them a simple instruction: They will have 30 days to submit to the Oval Office a plan for defeating" IS.

An early indication of a break from Obama policy came last week at the confirmation hearing for incoming Pentagon chief James Mattis, a retired Marine general who has garnered broad cross-party support and will likely be one of the first of Trump's cabinet to be sworn in.

He said an ongoing push toward Raqa, the IS group's main stronghold in Syria and the capital of its supposed caliphate, "needs to be reviewed and perhaps energized on a more aggressive timeline."

A key question is whether America will arm Syrian Kurdish forces to lead the fight -- a move sure to infuriate ally Turkey, which considers the Kurdish fighters terrorists -- or whether the United States should send in more combat troops.

A US defense official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP that senior planners are readying a slew of options for the president and Mattis to weigh.

"If the proper resources -- including arms -- cannot be distributed to the partners who are actually going to fight going into and around Raqa, then another option would be to put coalition or US folks somewhere on the ground to be able to leverage that kind of combat power or direction of combat resources," the official said.

- Arming the Kurds -

Potential Syria plans could include adding one or more US fighting brigade, each of which has thousands of troops.

Currently, only about 500 US troops are in Syria, mostly special operations forces working behind the front lines to train local Kurdish and Syrian Arab fighters.

"Having more US troops would be one way that you can offset not having the ability to properly arm and resource the (local forces), that would be an option," the official said.

General Joe Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Wednesday he would present Mattis with options to "accelerate the campaign" against IS.

"What is really important is first that we have a conversation about what we are doing today, why we are doing it, and what other things might be done and why we haven't done it to date," Dunford told reporters in Brussels.

Because Obama was elected in 2008 on the promise of ending US conflicts in the Middle East, he has been loathe to put US forces in combat and has insisted on oversight of even minor strategic tweaks.

Trump, on the other hand, is a business executive accustomed to delegating, so may grant Mattis greater autonomy.

The anti-IS campaign began in earnest in August 2014 and has seen a US-led coalition pummel targets across Iraq and Syria.

Some military officials privately voice frustration over the piecemeal nature of the effort, with every new "accelerant" and additional troop deployment needing presidential approval.

Commanders say they worry as much about selling policies in Washington as they do actually fighting the war.

"There are active requests for different authorities that are unresolved on Inauguration Day that the new administration will have an opportunity to look at," the official said.

In an interview with USA Today, Air Force Chief of Staff General David Goldfein said military chiefs are readying options that would grant commanders greater authorities to use secret cyber-warfare and space weapons.

- Killing jihadi families -

Trump, whose campaign was underscored by fiery rhetoric, has said he wants to kill the families of suspected jihadists.

Such inflammatory remarks likely will be resisted by Mattis, a scholar who says such a move is inconsistent with US law and the Geneva Conventions.

But Mattis is hawkish on Iran and has publicly called it the "single most belligerent actor in the Middle East."

Iranian gunboats frequently shadow US destroyers in the Persian Gulf and buzz dangerously close to the ships.

The official said that the United States could take a more assertive stance against Iranian influence, including a more systematic checking of maritime traffic for hidden Iranian arms shipments.

Mattis and Trump must also address China's South China Sea military aspirations, what to do about the North Korean missile program and, pressingly, how to deal with Russia.

Trump had signaled a rapprochement with President Vladimir Putin, but Mattis accuses Russia of trying to break up NATO and has said the United States needs to stand up to its old foe.


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