Haggis said:
Then, without outside intervention, ISIS becomes the preeminent military force regionally and, eventually, internationally, driven by the world's new politically dominant religion.
Not if the commie hordes get us first! Or we could throw in an alien invasion... :
There are what, 15,000 fighters in ISIS? The sky isn't falling.
Now IF we were serious about dealing with them, we would cut off the Saudis immediately, and engage with the Iranians and the Russians. The optics of dealing with Assad are not good, but we're pretty adept at doing about faces when it suits our needs. Saddam and Qaddafi could tell you that if they were still alive. The problem is this means accepting ISIS is a greater threat to Western interests than Iran or Russia, undoing our "strategy" in the region of the last 10 years.
It's tiresome at this point, because the same people pushing for further intervention now are the same people who won't accept the deal with Iran, and who were also supporting action against that country as well. Oh, and we definitely CAN'T deal with Russia because Putin is apparently bent on invading Western Europe again :
. I would say we can't have it both ways, but more accurately, we can't have it
every way that works for us in a particular 5 year period. Our (the West broadly) policy in the region is absolutely incoherent, and we're reaping the blow back from ISIS, just as we did with the Mujahedeen and Al-Qaeda before it.
There was also a time (around 3 years ago) when the usual suspects were pushing for intervention against Assad. He's awful, just as Putin is, but again this has never stopped us before from dealing with people like them. Assad's Syria
is was actually a modern secular nation with guarantees for religious minorities including Christians and Jews. He's done horrific things in the name of fighting extremists (so has his father, remember the Aleppo and Hama Massacres of the early 80s) but who hasn't? The Russians were pitiless in their war with the Chechens, and the US kills more civilians than actual targets with drone strikes. Israel killed over 1000 civilians in its most recent operations in Gaza. The point is, we're being pretty selective when using Assad's crimes as a reason we can't coordinate with him and the Russians in the fight against ISIS.
When we decided to support "moderate factions" against Assad we actually ended up arming and training ISIS. The Russians are now responding because they (unlike us somehow) seem to understand what happens when a stable government (no matter how distasteful) collapses and ISIS is there to fill the void. Not only did we help the Saudis train and equip ISIS, we threw down the welcome mat by destroying the government/civil society in Libya even though we knew what happens in a vacuum (Iraq).
Realistically, our governments are ok with NOT dealing with ISIS, because the main targets of our policy in the region are Iran, Russia and to a lesser extent, China. ISIS is simply a tool we no longer control, and our refusal to deal with the Russians or Iranians on the matter only underlines how low it is on the priority list.
So either we go to war with everyone, ISIS, Iran, Russia, etc etc, OR we do what we always do when our own meddling gets us into a pickle. We about face. We decide that the Saudis are actually the threat, we publicly announce what we've known for years, that the Saudis have been exporting radical Wahhabism, training and equipping terrorists (and exporting those as well), and we reorient to Iran.
Of course, then we get into the real reason we can't deal with Iran, which is our relationship with Israel. Israel understands the key to its survival is making that survival a crucial pillar in Western policy in the region. Years of lobbying and funding pro-Israel groups in the US (and Canada to a far lesser extent) have achieved a lot on this front. Actually very commendable from a purely political point of view.
So realistically we can continue "sort of" bombing ISIS, pretending that the Saudis are our allies and are somehow preferable to Iran and Assad's Syria, and maintaining our close ties to Israel as much as that country no longer serves our purposes either.
Progressives often critique realism in foreign policy as being immoral (or more accurately, amoral) in that human rights, justice and equality will always take a back seat to national interest. But what we've done since 9/11 wouldn't even pass muster as being effective realist policy! At every turn it seems decisions have been made without even a thought for implications beyond the next 12 months. So now we're stuck in this cycle of whack-a-mole, having to deal with every new threat that arises, and creating new ones in the process.
Oldgateboatdriver said:
There is, actually one thing the rest of the world can do, and must do at some point in my opinion, even though I think that 'big business" has the ear of too many world leaders and want to protect their profits more than solve some of the world's problems: Stop selling them friggin ammunition !!!!!
Do you know how much ammunition the part of the world under isis control produces? None, nada, zero.
Let them run out of bullets and then see how long they last when they fight by hitting one another over the head with their AK-47's or Machine Guns.
I am just not sure the world is ready to do that, unfortunately.
100% agree, and I think that business interests can explain most of what I wrote above. But to take your point to the logical conclusion, the Saudi LAV deal must be reconsidered as well.