Susan Page writes at USA Today that Leon Panetta, former head of the CIA and Secretary of the Department of Defense, says Americans should be braced for a long battle against the brutal terrorist group Islamic State that will test U.S. resolve. "I think we're looking at kind of a 30-year war," says Panetta, one that will have to extend beyond Islamic State to include emerging threats in Nigeria, Somalia, Yemen, Libya and elsewhere. Panetta also says that decisions made by President Obama over the past three years have made that battle more difficult — an explosive assessment by a respected policymaker of the president he served. Not pushing the Iraqi government harder to allow a residual US force to remain when troops withdrew in 2011, a deal he says could have been negotiated with more effort "created a vacuum in terms of the ability of that country to better protect itself, and it's out of that vacuum that ISIS began to breed." It is no surprise to Panetta that the assessment in his new book "Worthy Fights: A Memoir of Leadership in War and Peace" is drawing White House ire. "Look, I've been a guy who's always been honest," Panetta says. "I've been honest in politics, honest with the people that I deal with. I've been a straight talker. Some people like it; some people don't like it. But I wasn't going to write a book that kind of didn't express what I thought was the case."
(Score: 1) by Ethanol-fueled on Monday October 06 2014, @11:24PM
What the doctrine of "permanent war" looks like is a military overthrow of the United States, happening in slow-motion. The U.S.' intelligence services had for decades drafted plans to attack American soil and blame the attacks on foreigners, but had to wait until an administration crooked enough to allow it was in place.
I'm also wondering if all this flurry in the news about Ebola, ISIS, and whatever else is a desperate effort to divert attention from any upcoming leaks which could be especially dangerous to the establishment (assassinating American citizens on American soil, for example).
As an anonymous online poster once said, "There's no need to worry about it if it's in the mainstream media."