After the fall of the Iraqi city of Ramadi to ISIS earlier this month, U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said that Iraqi forces had vastly outnumbered the militants, but showed no will to fight. Iraqi officials responded by blaming the U.S. for not delivering crucial weapons.
When President Obama first ran for office, he campaigned on ending the war in Iraq and keeping the U.S. out of new military conflicts. But now his administration is trying to defeat the ISIS militants in Iraq and Syria without dragging the U.S. into a prolonged regional conflict.
In this evening’s Frontline investigation airing on SDPB TV, Obama at War, correspondent Martin Smith examines the Obama administration’s struggle to deal with the deadly civil war in Syria and how the accompanying rise of ISIS has raised the stakes. Smith joined Dakota Midday and discussed the issues examined in Obama at War.