By Jim Garamone
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Dec. 2, 2014 – If confirmed as the next
assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs, Elissa
Slotkin told a Senate panel today that she’d develop U.S. policies and
partnerships to address security challenges in an increasingly complex world.
Slotkin, currently the principal deputy assistant secretary
of defense for international security affairs, testified before the Senate
Armed Services Committee. The assistant secretary of defense for international
security affairs is the principal adviser to the defense secretary and the
undersecretary of defense for policy on security policy and strategy involving
Europe -- including NATO -- the Middle East and Africa.
“America’s security interests in these parts of the world
are as profound as they are vast,” she said.
NATO Alliance
The United States needs to ensure the NATO alliance is
prepared to meet the challenge Russia poses with its aggressive behavior,
Slotkin said. The U.S., she added, must also meet the threats emanating from
the Middle East and North Africa and proliferating extremist groups in both
Central Asia and Africa. There is also the challenge posed by transnational
criminal gangs in the Western Hemisphere.
Slotkin spoke about a Turkish request to create a no-fly zone
or a buffer zone against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant inside Syria
along its border with Turkey.
“The idea of a safe zone or a buffer zone or a no-fly zone
is something the Turks have been talking to us about for a couple of years
now,” she said. “We’re in regular discussion about their proposal.”
She noted Vice President Joe Biden talked about the proposal
with Turkish authorities during his visit to the country last week.
“We currently don’t think a no-fly zone fits the bill, but
it is something that the elements of which we are looking at very closely to
see if there is a proposal that advances our combined objectives,” she said.
“The proposal involves a full range of air and land elements.”
Assistance for Ukraine
On Ukraine, U.S. officials are looking at proposals to
provide lethal defense assistance.
“I think it is important to note that we have provided over
$116 million worth of security assistance to the Ukrainians,” she said. “More
important than that is the joint commission we have set up with the Ukrainians,
the 25 visits that our generals have made from U.S. European Command to work on
the medium and long-terms of the Ukrainian military to build them into a truly
substantial force.”
In Iraq, Prime Minister Haydar al-Abadi “is saying the right
things and starting to do the right things on the critical issue of reform and
reconciliation in Iraq,” Slotkin said.
“This is different than what Prime Minister (Nouri al-)
Maliki did, particularly after 2011,” she added. “In fact, Prime Minister Abadi
has been deconstructing some of the things that Maliki did during his time.”
Abadi removed 20-plus Ministry of Interior officials today
for corruption and mismanagement, Slotkin said.
If confirmed, Slotkin said she’d push to build capabilities
and capacity for allies worldwide.
“We’ve all talked about the complexities of the world
problems, the unpredictability of the world and there is nothing more important
than the capacity and capabilities of partners in addressing those common
threats,” she said.
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