More than
14,000 strikes have been launched at a cost of $8.4bn (£6.4bn) to the United
States and $365m (£280m) to the UK. Some 26,000 targets have been destroyed or
damaged.
When the
US-led coalition started bombing Islamic State targets in Iraq and Syria, we
were told by senior generals, politicians and whoever else had a stake in the
PR-sell, that it would be a 'generational struggle' that would last 'many
years'.
Well, two
years on, that prediction has certainly proved accurate. The campaign has had
its successes but is far from run.
Syria is a
mess. You'd be hard pushed to extract any encouraging developments there in the
past 24 months.
The campaign
statistics are staggering.
Rather than lessening, the
campaign has stepped up in its second year.
Not only have there been
2,336 more airstrikes, there have also been twice as many civilian deaths:
1,080 according to figures from a London-based monitor called Airwars.
For balance, the Pentagon
assesses that only 55 civilians have been killed by US aircraft, and the UK
Ministry of Defence says British strikes have not resulted in any innocent
deaths.
Some 3.2 million Iraqis
have been displaced. The number of Syrians is considerably greater. This mass
exodus has changed borders, swelled towns, emptied cities.
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