How could Obama have 'underestimated' ISIS? - ANALYSIS

22:37 | 30.09.2014
How could Obama have 'underestimated' ISIS? - ANALYSIS

How could Obama have 'underestimated' ISIS? - ANALYSIS

 ISIS, a top intelligence official said more than a year ago, has "ruthlessly grown in effectiveness."

In October a senior administration official said the terror group represented "a major and increasing threat" -- to the region and the United States.Eight months ago, the military's top intelligence official warned ISIS "will attempt to take territory."Those were the public assessments of ISIS coming from President Barack Obama's own administration dating back more than a year. So why is the President saying now his intelligence agencies misjudged the terror group, currently being pummeled by U.S. and coalition airstrikes?In an interview with "60 Minutes," Obama admitted the U.S. "underestimated what had been taking place in Syria" that allowed the country to become "ground zero for jihadists around the world."He cited his director of national intelligence James Clapper, who told the Washington Post in mid-September the U.S. "underestimated ISIL [the government's name for ISIS] and overestimated the fighting capability of the Iraqi army."Those remarks echoed Obama's own statement from early August, when he told reporters "intelligence estimates" hadn't accurately predicted ISIS' advances through Iraq and Syria.In remarks and testimony, however, U.S. officials have been warning of ISIS' rise going back more than a year -- while at the same time warning of the limited intelligence-gathering capacity inside the countries where ISIS was expanding.The warnings extend as far back as July 2013, when David Shedd, then acting as deputy director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, told a conference that al Qaeda-affiliated groups were gaining strength in Syria."It is very clear over the last two years they have grown in size, grown in capability and ruthlessly grown in effectiveness," he said at a CNN-sponsored panel at the Aspen Security Forum. "They will not go home when it is over. They will fight for that space. They are there for the long haul."Since then, officials have warned that ISIS wasn't going anywhere -- including in October, when a senior administration official told reporters on a conference call that the danger from ISIS was intensifying."This is really a major and increasing threat to Iraq's stability ... and it's an increasing threat to us," said the official, who was previewing a visit to Washington by then-Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki.(CNN)Bakudaily.Az

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