The
campaign against Serbia
in 1999 averaged 138 strike sorties daily. Against Islamic State in Iraq
and Syria: seven.
The Wall
Street Journal
By MARK
GUNZINGER And JOHN STILLION
Oct. 14,
2014 7:04 p.m. ET
Since U.S. planes first struck targets in Iraq on Aug. 8,
a debate has raged over the effectiveness of the Obama administration’s air
campaign against Islamic State. The war of words has so far focused on the need
to deploy American boots on the ground to provide accurate intelligence and
possibly force ISIS fighters to defend key
infrastructure they have seized, such as oil facilities. But debate is now
beginning to focus on the apparent failure of airstrikes to halt the terror
group’s advances in Iraq and Syria—especially Islamic State’s pending seizure
of Kobani on the Syrian border with Turkey.