French
President Francois Hollande has called the Paris attacks an ‘act of
war’ by the Islamic State and called on the global community to step up
its fight against the terrorist regime by bombing Syria. Simone Del
Rosario reports from Paris.
...........
November 18, 2015
Amb. Marc GinsbergFmr. U.S. Ambassador to Morocco; White House Middle East Adviser
France Cries ISIS -- Obama Cries Uncle -- A Field Guide to a Better Battle Against ISIS
Posted: 11/18/2015 10:10 am EST Updated: 1 hour ago
Based
on President Obama's defiant ("I know better than everyone") defensive
crouch at his post-Paris attacks G-20 Turkey press conference don't
expect a sea change in White House policy against ISIS. Just think of
more sloppy spit across the ISIS swamp. Better yet, designate it
"Leading From As Far Behind as Possible, Version 2.0."
It was
Obama at his most unappealing - setting up the red herrings and
imaginary (if not imaginative) policy alibis that is his want in a vain
attempt to silence his growing chorus of ISIS critics. The president's
stubborn insistence that anyone daring to challenge his failing,
slap-dash anti-ISIS strategy that has squandered so much and produced so
little is merely playing politics: "W" wannabees bent on repeating the
historical error of the Iraq invasion.
If only, as Obama whined in
Anatalya, his ISIS critics would cease engaging in petty "political
games or offering shallow solutions..." by challenging him on ISIS, life
would be well and good for all. It's akin to him asserting that between
birth and death there is nothing in between, case closed!
Smearing
anyone who smells the malodorous odor of a failing Syria/Iraq/ISIS
policy a mile away is a self-serving falsehood Obama frequently resorts
to when cornered. By persisting in this un-presidential conduct Mr.
Obama camouflages his own failures no longer able to be hidden - sinking
to the low level of Politician-in-Chief rather than rising to a
respected Commander-in-Chief as ISIS pounds at our doorstep.
French prosecutor: 9th suspect in Paris terror attacks being sought
France
made an unprecedented demand Tuesday that its European Union allies
support its military action against the Islamic State group after the
attacks in Paris.
by Tiffany Wilson
Tuesday, November 17, 2015 03:33PM
GERMANY (KGO) --
Authorities
are seeking a ninth suspect in Friday's attacks in Paris, a French
prosecutor's spokeswoman told ABC News. The spokeswoman did not reveal
any details about the suspect's identity.
France took
unprecedented action Tuesday when it invoked the Mutual-Defense article
of the EU Treaty. Now all 28 member nations must help France in its war
against ISIS.
French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said all
27 of France's EU partners responded positively, and they could help
"either by taking part in France's operations in Syria or Iraq, or by
easing the load or providing support for France in other operations."
"Every country said: I am going to assist, I am going to help," Drian said.
Arriving
for talks in Brussels with his EU counterparts, Greek Defense Minister
Panagiotis Kammenos told reporters that the Paris attacks were a
game-changer for the bloc.
"This is Sept. 11 for Europe," he said.
French
President Francois Hollande has vowed to forge a united coalition
capable of defeating the jihadists at home and abroad. NATO allies were
sharing intelligence and working closely with France, NATO chief Jens
Stoltenberg said.
Noting that victims of the Paris attacks came
from at least 19 nations, Hollande says the international community, led
by the U.S. and Russia, must overcome their deep-seated divisions over
Syria to destroy IS on its home turf.
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