The recent terrorist attacks in Paris that left 130 people dead and hundreds more injured have thrust the issue of combating ISIS into the center of the 2016 presidential election. Here’s where the candidates stand:
Jeb Bush. The former Florida governor has called for a U.S.-led global coalition, including U.S. ground forces, to take out the Islamic State, or ISIS. “The United States should not delay in leading a global coalition to take out ISIS with overwhelming force,” Bush said Wednesday at The Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina. “Militarily, we need to intensify our efforts in the air — and on the ground.”
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Ben Carson. In an op-ed for The Washington Post, the retired neurosurgeon — who’s facing criticism over blunders on foreign policy — called for the U.S. to “dramatically increase its efforts to appeal directly to the moderate Kurds, Syrians and Iraqis.” To do that, Carson said, “will require a multi-pronged communications strategy that leverages our strengths in media production and messaging, combined with cutting off traditional access routes to social media for radical Islamist groups.” Carson also recommended either destroying or taking control of the oil fields along Syria’s eastern border to dismantle the Islamic State’s infrastructure, as well as enhanced security along U.S. borders. “While we should not open U.S. borders to refugees at this time, we should encourage the establishment of sanctuary zones in the contested areas of Iraq and Syria,” Carson wrote. “This would not involve a significant on-the-ground presence of Western armies. But we would provide humanitarian aid in the form of shelter, food, water and medical care to fleeing refugees.”
Chris Christie. The New Jersey governor spoke of an urgent need to destroy ISIS following the Paris attacks, calling on the U.S. to close its borders and find renewed national resolve. “We have seen evil visited upon innocent people once again,” Christie said Saturday at the Sunshine Summit in Orlando, Florida, a day after the attacks. “We stand with (the people of France) and pray for them. Our outrage must turn into action and resolve. ISIS warned us they would commit unspeakable carnage and now they have.”
Hillary Clinton. Speaking at the Council on Foreign Relations Thursday in New York City, the Democratic front-runner outlined three key pillars of her national security plan: defeating ISIS in Syria and Iraq, disrupting and dismantling the growing terrorist network and strengthening American defenses against external and homegrown threats. Clinton stood with President Obama on not sending hundreds of thousands of ground troops to the region, saying that would “just not [be] the smart move to make here.” But she broke with the administration in stating that her ultimate goal was not to “contain” ISIS, but to “defeat and destroy” the terrorist organization.
Ted Cruz. Although the Texas senator has turned his attention mostly toward barring Syrian refugees from coming to the U.S. since the terrorist attacks on Paris last week, he has also pledged to “defeat radical Islamic terrorism” as president. Militarily, Cruz has said he would arm the Kurds and use “overwhelming” air power. “There’s no reason to be putting our sons and daughters in harm’s way without a military plan to keep them safe and to win,” Cruz said Saturday on “Fox and Friends.” “If they have a commander-in-chief who has no strategy — he will not even utter the words ‘radical Islamic terrorism’ — he will not defeat them.”
Carly Fiorina. The former Hewlett-Packard CEO hasn’t offered any specifics for defeating ISIS, but she has been clear about one thing: She would do everything differently from Obama. “There are a whole host of things that we should have done that we have not done, and unfortunately I think Obama has managed to polarize the debate about what to do with ISIS with a false choice. The false choice that Obama presents to the American people is: If you don’t agree with what I am doing, then the only option is tens of thousands of boots on the ground. It’s simply false,” Fiorina said Thursday on Fox Business Network. She later criticized the Obama administration for not supplying Middle East allies with support sooner. “We’ve had a fairly effective bombing campaign over the last couple of days. Why haven’t we been doing that for a year and a half?” Fiorina said. “Because we’ve had politically expedient rules of engagement, that’s why.”
Mike Huckabee. Immediately after the Paris attacks, the former Arkansas governor told Breitbart News he would build a coalition — including NATO, Russia and Middle Eastern countries — to “bomb the absolute stink” out of ISIS. “Any nation that doesn’t participate [in the coalition,]” said Huckabee, “we sanction and isolate them.” Huckabee added that as president, he would make sure ISIS had no access to social media. He also said he would close U.S. borders “to people who are connected to any country where there’s a strong presence of ISIS or al-Qaeda” — a position he later doubled down on in an op-ed for TIME.
John Kasich. The Ohio governor has called for the U.S. to join a coalition with European and Middle Eastern allies that puts troops on the ground to defeat ISIS. “Bombings are not enough,” Kasich said in an op-ed for TIME. “We must root them out and destroy them.” Additionally, Kasich implored the U.S. to arm Kurdish forces and “enforce no-fly zones in Syria where refugees can find shelter.”
Martin O’Malley. In an op-ed for the Daily News, the former Maryland governor called for “[a]ir strikes in concert with our allies and regional partners and more effective human intelligence.” As for ground troops, O’Malley argued that strategically placed special forces would be “more effective in the long run than large American combat battalions.” He added that there must be greater attention paid to the terrorists’ encryption capabilities, “which has enabled them to ‘go dark’ well before they strike.”








