European University Institute Library

Rolling back the Islamic State, Seth G. Jones, James Dobbins, Daniel Byman, Christopher S. Chivvis, Ben Connable, Jeffrey Martini, Eric Robinson, Nathan Chandler

Label
Rolling back the Islamic State, Seth G. Jones, James Dobbins, Daniel Byman, Christopher S. Chivvis, Ben Connable, Jeffrey Martini, Eric Robinson, Nathan Chandler
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 237-272)
Illustrations
illustrationsmaps
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Rolling back the Islamic State
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
985073901
Responsibility statement
Seth G. Jones, James Dobbins, Daniel Byman, Christopher S. Chivvis, Ben Connable, Jeffrey Martini, Eric Robinson, Nathan Chandler
Series statement
Research report, RR-1912
Summary
"The Islamic State is a byproduct of the 2003 American intervention in Iraq and the subsequent American departure in 2011. At its peak in late 2014, the group held more than 100,000 square kilometers of territory with a population of nearly 12 million, mostly in Iraq and Syria. Beginning in 2015, the Islamic State began to lose territory as it faced increasingly effective resistance. Still, the Islamic State continues to conduct and inspire attacks around the world. This report assesses the threat the Islamic State poses to the United States and examines four possible strategies to counter the group: disengagement, containment, rollback 'light' (with a reliance on local forces backed by U.S. special operations forces, Central Intelligence Agency and other intelligence assets, and airpower), and rollback 'heavy' (adding the employment of American conventional forces in ground combat). The authors conclude that the United States should pursue a light rollback strategy. They also recommend additional steps, such as rebalancing counterterrorism efforts to address grievances, loosening restrictions on U.S. military operations, increasing U.S. military posture in Africa, and tightening restrictions in the Islamic State's internet access."--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Part I. The challenge and approach. Introduction -- The rise and decline of the Islamic State -- U.S. strategy -- Part II. Country campaigns. Iraq -- Syria -- Libya -- Nigeria -- Egypt -- Afghanistan -- Part III. The global campaign. The ideological and information campaign -- Recommendations
resource.variantTitle
Rolling back IS
Content
Mapped to