The alarm US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson plans to sound at a coalition gathering in Kuwait on Tuesday comes with the fight at a critical moment and the mission shifting from offensive military operations to stabilisation.
Distractions are adding up, such as Turkey's fighting with US-backed Kurdish rebels in Syria and renewed spillover from Syria's civil war.
What will Tillerson's message to America's allies be, U.S. officials say? "Eyes have to be on the prize." The prize, according to one senior official: "The enduring defeat of ISIS."
Anything that hinders that goal also gets in the way of broader objectives like a political transition in Syria that ultimately leads to an end of the war and blunts Iranian behavior throughout the region. "It's complicated enough as it is. Let's not make it more so," the official said in describing the administration's view.
Rising tensions between the US and NATO ally Turkey over Turkish military operations against the Kurds are a primary concern and Tillerson will end his five-nation swing through the region in Ankara on Friday after stops in Jordan and Lebanon.
Turkey's foreign minister said yesterday that Tillerson's visit, which follows a similar trip by national security adviser H.R. McMaster, comes at a make or break time for relations.
"Our relations are at a very critical stage," Melvut Cavusoglu said. "Either we will improve ties or these ties will totally break down."
The US officials allowed that the talks in Ankara would be difficult. But they maintained, as Tillerson and others have in the past, that the US appreciates Turkey's legitimate security concerns.
However, they also stressed that addressing those should not come at the expense of the anti-IS mission. If the Kurds feel threatened, the officials said, they will move their forces away from Islamic State fronts, prolonging the fight.
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