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U.S. Senator and Republican presidential candidate Marco Rubio (R-FL) questions U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Roberta Jacobson on U.S.-Cuba relations during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington May 20, 2015. REUTERS/Jim Bourg Image Credit: REUTERS

Do you hear that? It is the sound of the groundwork being laid for US ground troops to return to Iraq for another indefinite war with no end game. US Republican presidential candidates (of which there now seem to be more than a dozen) have spent the past month ripping President Barack Obama for his administration’s approach to the war against Daesh (the self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant), in which the US military has dropped tens of thousands of bombs, sent 3,000 troops back to Iraq, and killed more than 12,000 people — all without any legal authorisation.

Predictably, the Republicans have no problem with the war technically being illegal, or the tens of thousands killed — only that America has not used more of its military weaponry yet.

The New York Times detailed many of the Republican candidates’ nebulous “criticisms” of the Obama administration, most of which assume a fantasy world in which Obama is not sending the US military to fight Daesh at all, even though he has authorised thousands of air strikes per month in both Iraq and Syria.

Most of the candidates, while competing with each other over who can sound more “muscular” and “tough”, are too cowardly to overtly call for what they likely actually want: Another ground war in the Middle East involving tens of thousands of US troops.

The vague bull**** statements made by Republican candidates would be hilarious if it was not possible that they will lead to more American soldiers dying in the coming years.

Fantasy land?

“Restrain them, tighten the noose and then taking them out is the strategy” is Jeb Bush’s hot take on Daesh. Thanks, Jeb — I cannot believe the Obama administration has not thought of that!

Marco Rubio’s “solution” is even more embarrassing: According to the Times, he responded to a question about what he would do differently — and this is real — by quoting from the movie Taken: “We will look for you, we will find you and we will kill you.”

Rubio has also called for “strategic overhaul”, but his radical plan seems to be virtually indistinguishable from what the Obama administration is actually doing — yet another sign that Republicans tend to live in a fantasy land where Obama is an anti-war president rather than someone who has bombed more countries than his Republican predecessor. (That is not a compliment, by the way.)

While Republican candidates use innuendo and coded language to prepare the public for the idea of sending in ground troops, other conservatives and military hawks are much more overt.

The Guardian’s Spencer Ackerman wrote that military leaders are starting to signal they want ground troops — possibly in both Iraq and Syria.

In the Daily Beast, unnamed Special Forces soldiers were quoted as “begging” to go fight Daesh on the ground. Since the beginning of the current military campaign, it has been clear that the US military always wanted to send in ground troops, even if the Obama administration refused to admit that they were considering it.

Meanwhile, arch neoconservative Fred Kagan told Congress that the US needs to send 15,000-20,000 troops back to Iraq. His brother Robert went even further, calling for a return of US “imperialism” in the Middle East. Why either Kagan brother is still taken remotely seriously considering their hand in the initial Iraq catastrophe is anyone’s guess, but you can bet Republican contenders are paying attention.

Disturbing

The most breathtakingly inhumane argument came from unnamed Iraqi and American military sources whose anonymous statements were dutifully printed by the New York Times: The reason Iraqi forces are losing ground to Daesh is not because the Iraqi forces refuse to fight, but because the US is too afraid to kill civilians.

Putting aside the fact that the US has already killed hundreds of civilians, as Glenn Greenwald pointed out, the idea that being willing to kill more civilians is key to victory is disturbing in the extreme.

Unfortunately, nothing much has changed since George W. Bush invaded Iraq years ago: The main controversy is not whether military engagement in the region is a smart strategy, but whether America should be only bombing the Middle East or also sending in ground troops.

No one even bothers asking any of the Republican candidates (except Rand Paul) if Congress should actually vote to send troops to war against Daesh for the next decade. When America wakes up eight years from now, still mired in Iraq — at a cost of countless more lives and millions of dollars — will anything be any different?

— Guardian News & Media Ltd