dobrojim wrote:A strategy without an exit strategy or endgame plan isn't a strategy at all.
It will be doomed to failure. You need a realistic plan of response to
virtually every conceivable what if...You also need a realistic assessment
on the limits to the resources, both blood and treasure, you are prepared
as well as actually able to sacrifice. If you want to escalate our intervention,
you need to be prepared to explain what your plans and limits are.
The ironic/sad reality is that we probably need to align with Iran in order to
stabilize Iraq, Iraq being a Shia majority 'country' however artificially conceived.
They might be the most rational actors in the region at the present time.
Not sure how analogous Iraq/Syria are to Rwanda. I'd say they're a whole lot
more complicated. Just like every negotiation in which concessions are
made is not analogous to Chamberlain at Munich.
I know one thing for sure, no one should EVER listen to the neo-cons again.
They were so hugely wrong and so hugely incompetent all while casting
anyone who disagreed with them as unpatriotic wussies.
What George W. Bush's administration did nearly 15 years ago shouldn't damn tens of thousands to slaughter at the hands of a group this country largely created. When poor decisions have been made, responsible entities don't "cut and run" and leave neighboring allies in precarious situations.
ISIS isn't going to magically disappear. I spend a lot of time in the region on business, and what most won't say is it simply isn't possible to build a fighting force capable of defeating ISIS outside of Israel who has no interest in seeing them go away.
The three nations who can "afford" to fight them with sophisticated technology are fully reliant upon US training, however their armies are almost exclusively made up of "resident aliens", specifically Pakistanis (and in some cash Indian and Indonesian). They are there to collect a check and will tuck and run at the first sight of ISIS. The royals know this, as does the American military.
So there comes a choice. Let ISIS dominate the region, gain a huge portion's of the world's wealth and take a stranglehold on energy/trade in the region? All the while slaughtering 100,000+ and possibly far beyond? Or does the country that created the situation in the first place do something beyond "neocon" and "liberal" bitching and stop the genocide? If this was happening in Colombia on this scale, the US would have already put an end to it with military force. Sadly, for a misguided hispanic vote (dominicans wouldn't care). Muslims have been labeled evil etc etc by the media now, and sadly most people believe it......
These are mothers, fathers children all living quite normal lives. They are being slaughtered by true barbarics. Being put in cages, burned to death, decapitated with their heads put on spikes. Meanwhile the entire world just watches and pretends the "rich" neighbors of Iraq/Syria can actually do anything militarily. They can't. Those countries are all completely reliant upon the US military for intelligence, hardware, training. Anything they do, US military consultants direct.
The solution was an easy one, leave behind 10-20k troops in Iraq and any single incursion into Iraq ISIS would have been met with a barrage of precision artillery and air strikes. They wouldn't have gained any traction. Obama removed them all, without care of the Pentagon's objections seemingly to fulfill a misguided promise made prior to him having any knowledge whatsoever of foreign policy.
Someone needs to rescue these people, this is very similar to the run up of WW2. Atrocities being committed while the world turns a very knowing eye.