By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates, May 28, 2014 – The United
States is not politically exhausted, “and it would be a mistake to come to that
conclusion,” Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey said during an interview here today.
“In fact, it would be a mistake to decide that we are
politically exhausted or weary militarily,” the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff told Sky News.
Many in the Persian Gulf region believe that the United
States is exhausted from 13 years of war. They point to the withdrawal of
troops from Iraq and the coming drawdown in Afghanistan as proof of this
weariness, and they extrapolate a U.S. withdrawal from the region at large.
But this is not the case, Dempsey said, citing what has
happened to al-Qaida as an example. Al-Qaida was a centralized organization
based out of Afghanistan and Pakistan. The United States and its allies --
including the United Arab Emirates -- put pressure on the terror organization.
Central al-Qaida is a shadow of its former self, but the group has adapted, the
chairman said.
“They have taken advantage of unsettled and ungoverned
spaces elsewhere in the Middle East and North Africa,” the general said. “The
terror group is a long-term problem and not one the United States is giving up
on.”
Rather than being weary or wary, Dempsey said, the United
States is “rebalancing our efforts to build partners, to enable others and to
do certain things ourselves -- but that should be our last resort.”
“For the most part,” he added, “we ought to address these
challenges collaterally and collaboratively with partners.”
U.S. forces do face fiscal challenges, the chairman said,
but he doesn’t see that affecting the Persian Gulf region. “We are going
through a period of retraction in our budget, but it’s a matter of history,” he
explained. “We go through this about every 20 years, and the United States
still has the military capability to do many more than one thing at a time.”
The United States doesn’t face a choice to be either in the
Atlantic or the Pacific, in Europe or the Middle East, or in Asia or Africa,
Dempsey said.
“We have global responsibilities. We have global
partnerships,” the chairman said. “One of the greatest strengths of the United
States is its alliances, its partnerships, unlike some others who aspire to be
great powers, but they don’t have friends, they don’t have partners. They try
to go it alone. We, on the other hand, see our strength through our partners.”
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