The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Rukmini Callimachi
On The Nation: Lisa Owen interviews Rukmini Callimachi
Lisa Owen: Donald Trump has
reached the 100-day mark in his presidency, and it’s been
an interesting 100 days, to say the least. Despite bold
promises during his campaign, Trump’s Mexican wall is off
the cards, Obamacare hasn’t been repealed, and a ban on
Muslims entering the US has been bogged down in the courts.
I’m joined now by the Middle East correspondent for The
New York Times, Rukmini Callimachi. Good morning. Thanks for
joining us. Tell me, how do you think Trump has generally
done in his first 100
days?
Rukmini Callimachi:
Well, among the promises that Trump made in the campaign
leading up to his win is that he would take aggressive
action against ISIS. I just came back from Mosul last week.
I was in western Mosul, which is the scene of the heaviest
fighting now, and from my perspective, ISIS remains as
strong and entrenched as ever. So at least on that front he
seems to be running into difficulty.
All right, well,
one of his biggest fights that he had was over this travel
ban. How has it played in those
countries?
It’s been pretty disastrous in
these countries. Wherever I went in Iraq, I was being
accompanied by Iraqi troops, many of whom have been trained
by US forces and who are close to the coalition. And they at
every stage expressed confusion and frustration at this ban,
because they see themselves as being the entity that is
fighting the Islamic State most directly. It’s not US
troops that are fighting the terror group; it’s Iraqi
troops. And so they don’t understand how it is that their
country was among the countries that was listed. And I think
the reaction has been the same in all the majority-Muslim
nations that were named on the travel ban.
And
Trump also focused hard on terror during this campaign
trail, saying that he was going to get rid of ISIS. What do
you think his strategy is to actually achieve
that?
Well, the one
concrete thing that we’ve seen is that the procedure for
calling in airstrikes has been loosened and has been
streamlined. What I was hearing from Iraqi commanders, again
in Mosul, and these are the people that are right there on
the front lines fighting this terror group, is that it’s
much easier now for their spotters on the ground to call in
an ISIS position. It’s much easier for that information to
now make it up to the coalition and for the airstrike to be
approved. Now, I’ll back up by saying last year and the
year before last, the strictness of the rules of the
engagement was one of the main complaints that I kept
hearing in Iraq and also in Syria from the rebel units and
the Iraqi army that are working in tandem with the
coalition. Back then they were telling us that the rules of
engagement were just too restrictive and it made it too hard
to fight the terror group. So that was, I think, a
legitimate complaint. But what’s happened now is it seems
that we’ve flipped to the other side and some of the
safety mechanisms that were in place to avoid mass civilian
casualties have, at least according to Iraqi sources, been
removed. And one of the tragedies that occurred quite
recently is an airstrike that essentially took down an
entire block of buildings in western Mosul. When I left
western Mosul, they were still digging up the bodies there.
And we’re hearing that the death toll could claim as high
as 300 people killed. If it really reaches those numbers,
that single airstrike could be one of the deadliest in terms
of civilian casualties in America’s
history.
Can you tell me, what do you hear
about what ISIS thinks of Donald Trump as
president?
So, ISIS has
been relatively coy in terms of its official communications.
They only just recently put out their first official
statement about Donald Trump post-election and
post-inauguration. They used insulting language to speak of
him. They described him as dumb. But what’s interesting is
to look at the social media posts of ISIS fighters and
followers, and they have been— I mean, to put it bluntly,
they have been overjoyed by the election of Donald Trump.
They see him as useful to their cause, because, in their
minds, he is putting out a version of foreign policy that
targets Muslims, and that’s exactly what they think
America is trying to do, and for them, Donald Trump is just
doing it explicitly.
So, what, is he having a
positive impact from their point of view on
recruitment?
Well, it’s
hard to measure recruitment, but one of the comments that I
collected when I was in Mosul earlier this year, this was a
conversation that my translator had with a friend of his who
was in one of the occupied portions of western Mosul, and
that civilian was saying that he was overhearing ISIS
fighters on his street joking about how the travel ban was
in fact ‘the blessed ban’, because from the point of
view of these ISIS fighters, it was going to help their
cause. So there’s really no concrete way for us to measure
recruitment. We don’t have exact numbers of how many more
fighters have joined the group or have been drawn to the
group, but it goes without saying that rhetoric that
alienates Muslims is not helpful to a fight where the terror
group is positioning itself as the protector of Sunni
Muslims.
The thing is, I suppose, when you
look at the numbers for Trump, he’s, what, the worst
approval ratings of any new president, but when people have
surveyed voters who voted for him about whether they would
vote for him again, about 96% of people have said they will
vote for him again. So, clearly, there is a bunch of people
that really like Donald Trump’s hard line on terror, his
hard line and flexing his military muscle with the strike on
the Syrian air base. Some people like it. It’s working for
him, isn’t it?
I mean,
those numbers speak for themselves, and I think part of that
is a reaction to the previous administration that was seen,
really, as having, in a way, turned a blind eye to the rise
of the Islamic State. The administration was caught off
guard when Mosul fell in 2014, and many, in retrospect, have
blamed that failure on the premature pull-out of troops. The
point of terror, the very etymology of terror, is to
terrorise people, to frighten people. And what ISIS has, I
think, succeeded in doing, and not just in America but
we’re seeing it now in Europe, where Marine Le Pen is a
real contender in the presidential election, is people are
frightened, and so they’re looking— In a reaction to
that, they don’t fully understand the mechanisms of
terror, they don’t understand, for example, that the vast
majority of ISIS acts of terror, both inspired and directed,
have not been carried out by immigrants; they’ve been
carried out by native-born citizens of each of those
countries. But in that reaction and that fear, they reach
out to a political figure like Trump or like Marine Le Pen
who they think are talking tough, you know, against
terrorism.
Rukmini Callimachi, thank you so
much for joining us this
morning.
My pleasure,
Lisa.
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