It began almost 14-years ago as a campaign to wipe out a bunch of terrorists in Afghanistan. Or so we thought.
Today our once hopeful adventure in the Hindu Kush has metastasized into a conflict with radical Sunni fundamentalism that stretches from South Asia to western North Africa. And even though we've got a dandy fleet of jet fighters lobbing bombs into Iraq, overall we're really falling behind.
ISIS, Daesh, call them whatever you like, they're on a bit of a roll. They just staged a mass beheading in Libya of about 21 Coptic Egyptians they kidnapped some time earlier.
ISIS, it seems, operates a bit like an outlaw biker gang. It spreads through chapters established in various countries, states and provinces. You sign on, go through some sort of ritual, and - boom - you're in business. So, when we unload our stuff on one chapter, the others are free to go about their business virtually unmolested. Hmm, that so doesn't sound like a plan.
When you compound that dilemma by pointing out that we're only making a symbolic gesture anyway, (let's face it - six CF-18s does not an airwar make) it gets even worse. We're not really trying to put out a fire. We're just trying to keep the smoke down a bit.
I don't know how you fight a plague like ISIS with symbolic gestures. They're dandy for making voters believe you're doing something just so long as they don't dwell on what that 'something' really is and what it isn't.
We've already got nearly 15-years in on this and precious little to show for it. What are we going to do, another 15? The people we're going after seem perfectly willing to keep it going as long as we like.
We don't have an exit strategy. We don't even know what 'victory' against these guys looks like or how to achieve it. We've set the bar so astonishingly low for ourselves that we don't even know what failure looks like any more. That last one? That's bad.
At the beginning of all this 'shock and awe' folly I was known to tell people that anything resembling 'victory' would entail a couple of decades of intense warfare on the ground, in the air and probably eventually on the sea. Tens of thousands of deaths on our side and hundreds of thousands on theirs.
ReplyDeleteAnd then it would require another 2 or maybe three decades of intense Marshall Plan like dedication to rebuilding and, most importantly, educating to at least 20th century standards.
Amounting to many trillions of dollars expenditure.
Then I asked if they were up for it.
I was roundly ridiculed and even kicked off a couple of boards.
It's still all true - and we haven't even really begun yet.
Homo stultus.
We, the West, destabilised both Iraq & Libya & s started the next one hundred years war.
ReplyDeleteInterestingly both countries had announced that they would no longer sell oil in USD$$
I doubt ISIS will survive more than a few years, as they have nothing to offer in reward but pain, but I have no doubt that the local wars will last for many years.
Canada's contribution is little more than lip service to the USA as is it's commitment to the F35 aircraft.
The Anglo pact really is the new thousand year Reich.
If your the oppositoin your scared to tell the people playing whack a mole with half million dollara pop munitions only feels good.
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