Republican presidential
candidate Jeb Bush on Wednesday called for the U.S. to send more troops to the
Middle East to fight the Islamic State group.
"This is the war of our
time," the former Florida governor said at the Citadel five days after
Islamic State militants attacked Paris and killed at least 129 people.
"Radical Islamic
terrorists have declared war on the Western world. Their aim is our total
destruction. We can't withdraw from this threat, or negotiate with it. We have
but one choice: to defeat it."
Bush had planned for weeks to
deliver a speech about Pentagon and military purchasing reform at the
prestigious South Carolina military college. But the horrific events in France
Friday moved Bush, who has supported the potential deployment of troops in Iraq
and Syria, to call for ground troops.
"The United States, in
conjunction with our NATO allies and more Arab partners, will need to increase
our presence on the ground," he added, calling air power insufficient.
He offered no specifics, but
said the number of Americans sent to the region should be "in line with
what our military generals recommend, not politicians."
The speech came as European
nations hunted for conspirators in the attack and amid a fierce political
debate within the U.S. over whether to limit or halt the resettlement of
refugees fleeing war-ravaged Syria. One of the Paris bombers was thought to
have arrived in a wave of migrants surging toward the West, but a top German
official later said the Syrian passport found at a Paris attack scene was
likely a fake.
The Paris attack has put
national security atop the conversation in the 2016 presidential race.
Democratic front-runner Hillary Rodham Clinton, a former senator and secretary
of state, was expected on Thursday to deliver her own prescription for defeating
ISIS and fighting jihadis.
Bush, the brother and son of
presidents, has projected himself as a potential commander in chief able to
handle such challenges. But his focus on national security has increased as his
own campaign for the presidential nomination has struggled to gain traction,
and especially since the Paris attacks.
"The brutal savagery is a
reminder of what is at stake in this election," Bush said. "We are
choosing the leader of the free world. And if these attacks remind us of
anything, it's that we are living in serious times that require serious
leadership."
It's no mystery why Bush made
the speech in South Carolina. Many of the Republican primary voters in the
early voting Southern primary state are retired and active-duty military.
Bush is not the only
Republican presidential candidate who supports sending ground troops to fight
the Islamic State. South Carolina's own senior Sen. Lindsey Graham has been an
aggressive advocate. Ohio Gov. John Kasich has also suggested sending U.S.
troops. Florida Sen. Marco Rubio was generally supportive of President Obama's
decision to put 50 special operations troops in Syria, and has suggested the
number ought to grow. However, he hasn't called for a larger scale
mobilization.
Bush has long faulted
President Barack Obama's administration and Clinton for allowing wholesale
federal spending cuts prompted by the 2013 budget reconciliation after Congress
and the president were unable to craft more strategic cuts.
The cuts affected military and
non-military spending alike, at a time when conflicts in Syria and Iraq
"spiraled out of control," Bush said.
And while Bush has often
referred to the Islamic State as an unconventional threat, his prescription for
the military includes heavier spending on its conventional elements.
He called for doubling the
U.S. Marine Corps' battle-ready strength to 186,000, and updating the U.S.
nuclear weapons capacity.
Bush also proposed increasing
production of next-generation stealth bombers, which can cost roughly $150
million apiece. Bush did not suggest a way to pay for the buildup.
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