ISIS nearly made it to Baghdad airport, top U.S. military leader says
 The leader of U.S. military efforts to fight ISIS in Iraq says the 
terror group came within 25 kilometers (15.5 miles) of the Baghdad 
airport.
Offering what appeared to
 be previously unreported details, Gen. Martin Dempsey told ABC's "This 
Week" that the United States had to risk bringing in low-flying attack 
helicopters to keep ISIS at bay.
"The tool that was 
immediately available was the Apache [helicopter]. The risk of operating
 in a hostile environment is there constantly," the chairman of the 
Joint Chiefs of Staff said.
"You're not going to wait
 until they're climbing over the wall," Dempsey said. "Had [ISIS forces]
 overrun the Iraqi unit, it was a straight shot to the Baghdad airport. 
So, we're not going to let that happen."
CNN's Barbara Starr reported October 7 the United States had used the Apache helicopters
 to push back ISIS forces advancing near Falluja. The aircraft can carry
 out precise airstrikes but do so at a lower altitude, risking a 
possible strike by surface-to-air missiles ISIS is known to possess.
At the time, Starr 
reported the United States did not predict ISIS making a direct run for 
Baghdad. However, there had been general concern that ISIS elements are 
in the city and around the airport and have been in mortar range for 
months.
Dempsey's comments Sunday
 clarified for the first time that the Apache was used to protect the 
Baghdad airport from such an overt threat.
The comments came in a 
wide-ranging interview with ABC"s Martha Raddatz about U.S. efforts to 
destroy ISIS. Dempsey minced few words about the potential scope of U.S.
 and coalition involvement and the difficulty of targeting ISIS because 
of their adaptability.
Dempsey created messaging
 headaches for the Obama administration weeks ago testifying before 
Congress that if he thought ground troops might be needed at some point,
 he would recommend it to the White House.
President Barack Obama 
has repeatedly insisted he will not put U.S. forces on the ground and 
will instead work to advise and train coalition and Iraqi forces to 
fight ISIS.
In Sunday's interview, 
Dempsey conceded that having U.S. troops on the ground, in theory, would
 help Iraqi forces spot ISIS targets. But he still insisted the U.S. is 
not at that point.
"Yeah, there will be 
circumstances when the answer to that question will likely be yes. But I
 haven't encountered one right now," Dempsey said.
"I'd actually use the 
example of you know Mosul will likely be the decisive battle in the 
ground campaign at some point in the future," Dempsey said. "When they 
are ready to go back on the offensive, my instinct at this point is that
 that will require a different kind of advising and assisting because of
 the complexity of that fight."
Meanwhile, coalition 
partners continue to look to the United States for more military might. 
Obama has long resisted calls for a no-fly zone over Syria. However, 
Turkish leaders have repeatedly pressed for one.
"We want to have a 
no-fly zone. We want to have a safe haven on our border," Turkish Prime 
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told CNN's Christiane Amanpour in an interview that aired October 6. "Otherwise, all these burdens will continue to go on the shoulder of Turkey and other neighboring countries."
Dempsey said that while a no-fly zone is not in the works at this point, it can't be ruled out.
Coalition airstrikes 
continued over the weekend in Syria and Iraq. By some assessments, ISIS 
appeared poised for a victory in the disputed city of Kobani along the 
Turkish-Syrian border.
World leaders have repeatedly warned that should ISIS take the city, residents there could be massacred.
"Whether there are still
 5,000 people there or not is, is a matter of conjecture," Dempsey said.
 "But I have no doubt that ISIL will conduct the same kind of horrific 
atrocities if they have the opportunity to do so."
Source: By Mary Grace Lucas, cnn.com, Re-posted by Abdulgafar Abdulrauf Adio (www.econsforumnews.blogspot.com) 


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