ISIS
The question of what the United States should do about ISIS and other threats from the
Middle East may be one of those where the so-called prudent, middle-of-the-road
solution is worse than either extreme. The present policy on ISIS is a middle-of-the-road
one of moderately funding and supporting its opponents, inflicting minor
casualties on it with drone strikes and very limited bombing, and hoping it
will be contained. (Until recently the administration even refused to attack
the oil convoys which provided ISIS with much of its funding out of concerns
for environmental damage to the desert
of Syria and Iraq.)
One “extreme” alternative
would be to bow out of policing Syria and Iraq and let ISIS and
its Shia and other opponents fight it
out. Proponents of this argue that we have no strategic interest in determining
what factions rule Syria and Iraq, that random and infrequent attacks by terrorists are not a casus belli, and (sometimes) that our leaving
ISIS alone might lead to their leaving us alone.
Another approach would treat ISIS as a serious enemy which
is making war on the United States and respond by giving ISIS a taste, not of
George W. Bush’s war or Barack Obama’s war, but of Franklin Roosevelt’s war –
hard, ruthless, unrelenting, and ending only with their unconditional
capitulation or total destruction. Proponents of this argue that the war with
Islamic fanatics has already begun, that the fanatics plan for a fight to the
finish, and that we should wake up and give them one.
I do not know enough to decide which of the extreme
alternatives is better. I prefer some version of the first one with our obtaining our oil in North America and moving
away from policing Syria and Iraq and eventually the rest of the Middle East.
However I do not know if it is too late for that or not. If the enemy really is
implacable and bent on conquest, it should be destroyed while it is still weak.
I do know that it makes no sense to hit a
person, a group, or a country just hard enough to make him or them mad and
vengeful, but not hard enough to put him or them down. Yet that seems to have
been our government’s practice under both Bush and Obama.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home