Nope, the US is quite able of targeting moving vehicles without anybody on the ground, see drone strikes. There is nothing that stops them from targeting big, juicy ISIS convoys like the ones that conquered Palmyra (and assembled and moved together for several days). They may not be able to take the fight to the entrenched positions among civilians, but they could restrict any large-scale troop movement - and once that is done, it is only a matter of time before the local superiority of the enemies of ISIS will win out.Simon_Jester wrote:This is basically true, I think. To use airstrikes to full effect, you need troops on the ground directing them, spotting targets, occupying ground that the enemy abandons because they can't survive air attack while trying to hold it, and so on. Otherwise, after each airstrike the enemy just digs out of the rubble and keeps on doing business as usual to the best of their ability. Their ability may be diminished but it's not gone.
Without that use of troops on the ground, you're limited to strategic bombing. While strategic bombing can delay and weaken an enemy, you don't really get to control how much it will delay and weaken them. Not unless you use nuclear weapons, make a desert, and call it peace.
Here's what you don't get - ISIS got a huge power boost out of Iraq. Before that, the Syrians were holding and winning against them. So at the very least, ISIS would be much, much less of a threat. The reasons why ISIS was able to establish itself are due to the US occupation.Would Syria not be having a civil war if not for the invasion of Iraq? How would that work- would we have sat quietly while Saddam or one of his sons* intervened in the war? Would even that have prevented it?
Because one might believe that supporting the sides that are not fanatic muslims would be better than another even-more-extreme-than-the-Taliban state.Also, if invading a country was wrong last time, why are normally antiwar people urging us to invade another one, in a situation where the US would logically end up the target of both sides of the civil war because we hate both Assad and the fanatics opposing him.
Nope, just bomb the massive convoy ISIS was assembling for days.OK, but if you're going to switch into that mode, I assume you also don't have a problem with Palmyra falling to ISIL? Because it sure looks like preventing that would have required sending soldiers into Syria to kill and blow stuff up.
Wrong, despite the odd border war both Syria and Iraq were quite stable and had stable government for decades.I broke your reply here into three separate points, because they merit separate replies:
1) The Middle East was unstable long before most US intervention in the region- the US became involved but did not create that problem, because it's existed pretty much ever since the fall of the Ottoman Empire, and has been violent ever since the European colonial empires left in the 1940s and '50s.
I am on record of arguing against a US invasion against Assad and charging the US for again acting without a plan.2) Did you oppose those steps at the time? In the early phase of the Syrian Civil War, Assad looked like the greater evil. Now he looks like the lesser evil. Were you content to leave Assad alone when he was gassing his own cities to suppress opposition to his rule?
Link, Link
On and obviously (I think I have to spell this out because it is you, after all) this was not because I like gassed civilians but because I feared another Libya. What did we get? Libya 2.0.
Look at the ethnic cleansing in Iraq done by US allies and puppets, and then ask yourself why the Sunnis might support ISIS.3) Could you please expand on the campaign of ethnic cleansing to which you refer, and in which country it took place?
Here is a simple exercise for you - compare the training regimen of Iraqi and US soldiers, then claim again with a straight face the training was done to any real standard. The US had one objective - put bodies in the field and then cut and run. The quality of those bodies, or the stability of the US puppet state, did not matter. What matter was declaring victory and then exiting quickly.On a related note- The US spent vast sums training the Iraqi military; their uselessness is in spite of US efforts, not because of it. The US does not have a magic "inspire patriotism and courage in foreigners fighting for a government that is supported by an occupying army" spray. If it did, I assure you that spray would have been used on the Iraqi army during the Bush administration, as it would no doubt be far more cost-effective than the training we actually supply them with.
It is even more intellectually dishonest to claim the US was doing all it could in Iraq. Heck, they didn't even have a real plan in place until several years after the invasion. Are you denying the US did a piss-poor job in Iraq?It is intellectually dishonest to blame the US for trying and failing to do something unless you have a clear idea how it could have been done better.
This represents an active choice on the part of every nation in the region which is not the US. Why are they not prepared to do anything? Why is only the US physically prepared to do anything, the US which is already committed to not backing Assad (who has used nerve gas on his own major cities)?[/quote]The US however is the only country in the area which however does have the means to strike at ISIS at will with little danger in return.
Because only the US has the means to strike at ISIS without much danger to their forces in return.
About the same time the choice was between a secular dictator and people who introduce widespread child sex slavery.When did you come to the conclusion that the US should intervene to support Assad against those rebelling against his authority?
So you agree that the US stood by because they did not want to support a secular dictator against child-sex-slavers, not even against a common enemy. Well, at least you are honest enough to admit that.The US has the forces and is employing them in other respects, and does not maintain the bulk of its airforce on standby as a rapid reaction force to batter ISIL columns in motion across the desert... precisely because the US is NOT directly intervening in the Syrian Civil War on any major scale. By contrast, the US IS intervening in Iraq on a somewhat larger scale, though still not as large as I'd like.So how was the massive ISIS convoy allowed to assemble and march uncontested - and unmolested by airstrikes which could easily have destroyed the whole convoy - for over two days? Because the US stood idly by and said "not our problems, let the Syrians have it".
I have long argued in favour for more funding for the Bundeswehr since 1998, but I cannot claim to have magically foreseen us needing to intervene in Syria. My argument was for an increase in funding along the board. And an intervention would not be possible due to our constitution anyway without a UN mandate.Were you in favor of such increases in German military spending back in 2011 and 2012?
How about back in 2005 or so, which is when the money should have been spent, in order to build up the capability that would be needed for Germany to successfully intervene in 2011-12?
If the answer is 'yes' to both, my compliments on your foresight and good historical judgment; you have avoided the exact mistake that cost democratic Europe so dearly in the 1930s.
.On the contrary, the British and the French started it, the Israelis have been methodically making it worse for no real benefit to themselves since 1973, and the Soviets did a good deal to stir the pot in the 1960s, '70s, and '80s. The US merely catastrophically mismanaged it so badly as to share a large fraction of the blame.
Again, I fail to see the direct chain of events by which the US caused the Syrian Civil War, as opposed to, say, Assad causing the war. Or the various backers of ISIL
See above, without having Iraq to fall back on ISIS would have long been crushed by the Syrian army. ISIS expanded into Iraq to escape their string of defeats at the hand of the regime.
a) Europe does not have the capability right now. Even if we were to pool all fighter, we cannot launch them as we have no bases and no aircraft carriers large enough. Only the US does.Was doing something not possible for Europe? If so, why? If it was possible, why was it not done? The US is not the only country that should be expected to behave like a responsible adult willing to protect innocents from screaming lunatics.
b) Again, legal complications. The constitution cannot be changed.
c) Again, none of that excuses the US for creating the mess in the first place and now refusing to do anything serious to clean it up. You are behaving akin to the idiot who breaks a vase and then asks his neighbour why he is not cleaning the mess up.
Because (as I have explained numerous times and will not further repeat myself again) the choices that promised success were either to fully support the rebels (which means airstrikes and possible ground forces), or do nothing and allow the process to play itself out (as it does all over the world but funny how the US does not intervene in Sudan, or Jemen, or the african countries, or Burma etc.) The US did neither, instead they fucked around and helped create a stalemate by weakening Assad and providing token support to the rebels - not enough to win, but enough to prevent being wiped out, thus lengthening the war and creating more death. This of course made the situation worse.So the answer was to sit there and let Assad kill the 2011-12 rebels, so that the vicious rebels of 2014-15 would not come into existence.
I just want to make sure I'm clear on this- the solution to the Syrian Civil War was to NOT arm the people fighting a tyrant and being gassed and missiled in their own major urban centers.
For the good of preventing the sack of Palmyra.
Did I get that right? If not, why not?
Had Iraq been a functioning state (fault of the US) then ISIS would never have resurrected itself after getting pushed out of the main of Syria.
You do however bitch a lot about the US having to fulfil hegemon duties, as evidenced in the thread, where the reaction to "Act like the hegomon, USA" from you is "Why? I don't want to. Why don't you act? Why do I have to act?"And you will note... despite this, I DON'T complain about the existence of the American hegemon. So I'm already following my own advice.
And of course, no one else is, because they chose to lack the means to do anything consequential other than complain?You broke it, you bought it. The US is involved, it can easily act, they have the means to act, so they can take the criticism if they are not acting.The US should never have been so heavily involved in the Middle East in the first place, so why is it now only the US that is condemned for not taking effective action to protect it?
Hey, idiot, stop pretending like you don't know very well the problems we currently have with the Airbus plane. (and before you launch in your follow-up spiel about how the EU should never have had that plane, take note that we were doing the responsible thing of trying to have an independent defence industry that would not require the US to pitch in). Also, I assume you concede that any intervention without UN support is illegal for Germany?]Why does Germany lack the transportation equipment? Is your nation too poor to afford aircraft or ships? Is your government too stupid to foresee the need to do such a thing?
Surely not...
Russia and China will veto, as you well know.Why, then, has the UN not provided the mandate? ISIL has killed thousands if not millions, pillaged multiple World Heritage sites already, and generally thrown half the region into chaos. Surely there are grounds for seeking a UN mandate to oppose them.
Bullshit, the Iraqi army of Saddam was perfectly capable of keeping order and fighting a huge war with Iran. They were more than adequate for keeping the borders intact, something the US-"trained"-army is incapable.I must note that some things (like producing a fighting and competent Iraqi Army) are things the US sincerely tried to do and failed because they are hard. At the end, not even Saddam Hussein had much luck assembling an Iraqi army that could actually fight; what chance did we, a bunch of foreigners, have?