WASHINGTON –
Following a meeting with his National Security Council,
President Barack Obama today offered condolences to those affected by the June
12 shooting that killed 49 people at a nightclub in Orlando, Florida.
“The American people and our allies and friends all over the
world stand with you and are thinking about you and are praying for you,” Obama
said during a news conference at the Treasury Department here. The NSC meeting
was focused on cutting off the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant’s revenue
sources.
Stopping Such Attacks
“We are doing everything in our power to stop these kinds of
attacks,” he added.
The shooter, identified as 29-year-old Omar Mateen from Fort
Pierce, Florida, had accessed “extremist information and propaganda over the
internet,” Obama said.
Mateen was killed during a confrontation with police.
Fifty-three people were injured in the shooting. Among those killed was Army Reserve Capt. Antonio Devon Brown, Navy
Capt. Jeff Davis told reporters today. “We express our condolences to his
family and to all the families and loved ones of the victims," he added.
Those who joined the president on the podium included Joint
Chiefs Chairman Marine Corps Gen. Joe Dunford, FBI Director James Comey,
Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper and Treasury Secretary Jack
Lew.
Defense Secretary Ash Carter, who is in Brussels for
meetings with NATO defense ministers, participated in the NSC meeting via
teleconference.
Obama said the meeting was part of his administration’s
regular effort to review and intensify the campaign to destroy ISIL.
“I want to remind them that they are not alone,” the
president said of the people of Orlando.
Counter-ISIL Meeting
During the NSC meeting, Carter and Dunford reviewed the
military campaign against ISIL, Obama said, adding that the mission to destroy
the terrorist group continues to be a difficult fight, but one that is making
significant progress.
“Over the past two months, I've authorized a series of steps
to ratchet up our fight against ISIL,” the president said. These include adding
more U.S. personnel, including special operations forces in Syria to help local
forces battling ISIL there, more advisors to work more closely with Iraqi
security forces, and other assets such as attack helicopters and more support
for local forces in northern Iraq, he said.
“Our aircraft continue to launch from the USS Harry Truman,
now in the Mediterranean. Our B-52 bombers are hitting ISIL with precision
strikes. Targets are being identified and hit even more quickly,” Obama said.
So far, he added, 13,000 airstrikes have been launched against ISIL.
ISIL’s Experiencing Pressure
The counter-ISIL campaign is firing on all cylinders, “and
as a result, ISIL is under more pressure than ever before. ISIL continues to
lose key leaders,” he president said.
He added, “This includes Salman Abu Shabib, the senior
military leader in Mosul … who plotted external attacks; Shaker Wahib, ISIL's
military leader in Iraq's Anbar province; and Maher al-Bilawi, the top ISIL
commander in Fallujah.”
The coalition has killed more than 120 top ISIL leaders and
commanders, and ISIL continues to lose ground in Iraq, Obama said. In the past
two months, he said, local forces in Iraq with coalition support have liberated
the western town of Rutbah and moved up the Euphrates River Valley, liberating
the strategic town of Hit and breaking the ISIL siege of Haditha.
“Iraqis forces have surrounded Fallujah and begun to move
into the city. … In the north, Iraqi forces continue to push up the Tigris
River Valley … and now [are] preparing to tighten the noose around ISIL in
Mosul,” Obama said.
In Syria, helped by U.S. Special Forces, the coalition of
local forces is tightening the noose around ISIL in Raqqa, he added.
Reducing ISIL’s Revenue Stream
“In short,” Obama said, “our coalition continues to be on offense.
ISIL is on defense and it has now been a full year since ISIL has been able to
mount a major successful offensive operation on either Syria or Iraq.”
As a result of strikes against ISIL’s oil infrastructure and
supply lines, its revenue from oil is down by millions of dollars per month,
and the coalition’s destruction of storage sites for its cash, ISIL is deprived
of many millions more, the president said.
“ISIL's cash reserves are down; it has had to cut salaries
for its fighters, [and] it's resorting to more extortion of those trapped in
its grip. And by ISIL's own admission, some of its own leaders have been caught
stealing cash and gold. Once again, ISIL's true nature has been revealed. These
are not religious warriors. They are thugs, and they are thieves,” Obama said.
The terrorist group’s ranks and morale also are shrinking,
he said.
“As one defector said, ISIL is not bringing Islam to the
world, and people need to know that,” he added.
Stemming Foreign Fighter Flow
International efforts have made it possible to stem the flow
of foreign fighters, Obama said. The U.S. intelligence community, he added, now
assesses that the ranks of ISIL fighters have been reduced to the lowest levels
in more than two and a half years.
The coalition also is addressing factors that have allowed
the terrorists to gain traction in parts of the world, Obama said.
In Iraq, he said, this means helping Iraqis stabilize
liberated communities and promote inclusive governance so ISIL can’t return. In
Syria, it means continued support for the fragile cessation of hostilities
there. ISIL, and al-Nusra -- al-Qaida's affiliate in Syria -- also continue to
terrorize Syrians, the president said.
Beyond Syria and Iraq, ISIL is also losing ground in Libya,
he added.
“Forces of the Libyan Unity Government are going after ISIL
in their stronghold in Sirte, and we'll continue to assist the new Libyan
government as it works to secure its country,” Obama said.