Obama's 'cautious' approach on ISIS is panned

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After President Barack Obama said he didn't yet have a strategy for ISIS in Syria, even a Democrat on Sunday criticized the President's approach to fighting the extremist terror group.


There's been the expected GOP criticism: Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Illinois, said the President's statement was 'unfortunate,' a predictable assessment from someone who disagrees with the Obama's handling of foreign policy.


But more notable is Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, who split with the leader of her party.


'I think I've learned one thing about this President and that is he's very cautious. Maybe in this instance, too cautious,' the California Democrat said on NBC's 'Meet the Press.'


Feinstein's description comes as the Obama administration is implementing a split strategy in dealing with the group now calling itself the Islamic State.


In Iraq, where America recently concluded a long war there, the United States has continued airstrikes against ISIS, including strikes near Amerli Saturday. In Syria, meanwhile, the President has been reluctant to pursue military action as a complicated web of factions, including ISIS, is fighting to defeat President Bashar al-Assad, also a U.S. opponent.


The threat

While members of both parties indicated that Syria is the most dangerous country in the world right now as it is considered ISIS' home base, Republicans differed from Democrats in that they insisted that the threat ISIS poses to the U.S. is immediate. 'I believe strongly that ISIS does plan on attacking the United States,' Rep. Peter King said on 'Fox News Sunday.'


Sen. John McCain went even further on CBS News' 'Face the Nation': 'I think it starts with an understanding that this is a direct threat to the United States of America, that it may be one of the biggest we have ever faced.'


The top Republicans' statements come just days after British Prime Minister David Cameron elevated the terror threat to 'severe,' the second-highest rating for that country.


But the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger of Maryland, played down the immediacy of a direct attack in the United States on CNN's 'State of the Union,' saying strong intelligence 'at this point' of an imminent attack on the U.S. does not exist.


Another Democrat, Rep. Adam Smith of Washington, acknowledged the threat ISIS poses is real, but it's 'a bit of an overstatement' to compare the threat of ISIS to al Qaeda.


'There is no evidence at this point that they are actually doing the sort of command-and-control plotting, planning specific attacks against Western targets, like al Qaeda was, gosh, for better -- for almost a decade before 9/11,' he said on 'Face the Nation.'


'A cancer'

Kinzinger used a cancer analogy describing ISIS, expanding upon an opinion piece written by Secretary of State John Kerry in The New York Times Friday when he said 'the cancer of ISIS will not be allowed to spread to other countries.'


'If you have cancer in your liver, and it's spreading to other parts of your body, you don't just treat the other parts, you treat the liver,' the Iraq War veteran said on CNN's 'State the Union.' 'The liver is Syria.'


While the President has been taking heat for saying he doesn't have a strategy for ISIS, a Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee discussed the challenges in formulating a strategy, in part, because obtaining intelligence about ISIS from war-torn Syria has been difficult.


'We have got to get the intelligence,' Ruppersberger said.


Smith echoed his colleague's sentiment.


'We can't simply bomb first and ask questions later. We have to have the right targets and the right support in order to be effective in stopping ISIS,' he said on CBS News' 'Face the Nation.'


Military action now -- or soon

Most Republicans, including McCain, are urging immediate airstrikes in Syria, the place where the terrorist group gained traction with its brutal tactics and mostly erasing the border between the Syria and Iraq.


The Arizona Republican joined Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who opened the door last week to putting more U.S. troops in Iraq. McCain said that a comprehensive strategy to defeating ISIS 'is going to require some more special forces.'


Ruppersberger was among the Democrats who urged a broad strategic plan that leaves the door open for a variety of actions, which is the message put out by the Obama administration over the past two days, including in Kerry's opinion piece.


'If we need to go ... to protect ourselves from ISIS, we will, but it's got to be a coalition,' Ruppersberger said on 'State of the Union.'


Democrats insisted that building an international coalition in the region and beyond is the first step.


'We have to build that coalition,' Smith said. 'We need reliable partners to work with in the region.'


But Rep. Mike Rogers of Michigan, the Republican head of the House Intelligence Committee, said the President should have been building that coalition for the past year.


'It's just very, very late in the game and it presents fewer options,' Rogers said on 'Fox News Sunday.'


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