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Melanie Phillips

ByMelanie Phillips, Melanie Phillips

Opinion

Qatar is not the West's ally

October 14, 2014 11:34
2 min read

There has been much very justified criticism of US strategy in attacking the Islamic State militia in Iraq and Syria. Air strikes have barely dented its advance. Various military types have weighed in with doubtless sage advice that, to have any hope of destroying Islamic State, boots are needed on the ground. To which, of course, neither the US nor the UK are prepared to commit, having been so badly bruised in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The core reason for the failure of the Iraq and Afghanistan campaigns, however, is currently being repeated in the campaign against Islamic State. For the message that the US and UK have signally failed to learn is that any war fought half-heartedly will be lost and the sacrifice of blood or treasure will be in vain.

Fighting whole-heartedly isn't just a matter of military tactics. There has to be a coherent strategy based on a correct analysis of what is the goal, who is the enemy and what is the nature of the war that the enemy is fighting. That enemy must then be fought with all appropriate means: military, political and economic. None of this is being done in the case of Islamic State. The war is not only half-hearted, but is focusing on the symptom while ignoring the cause. Islamic state is backed by Qatar, which along with Kuwait helped fund and form it before the militia became self-financing through plundering bank accounts, oil fields and territory on its spectacular advance.

However, Qatar and Kuwait are supposedly allies of the West. Indeed, America and its allies liberated Kuwait from Saddam Hussein in the first Gulf War. Yet the Kuwait Scholars' Union raised several million dollars for anti-aircraft missiles, rocket-propelled grenades and fighters, some of which went to Islamic State and some to the al-Qaeda front, Jabhat al-Nusra.