The Romulan Republic wrote:Do you honestly see a plausible scenario where Russia agrees to accept a large American force occupying all or part of Syria long term? Because I sure as hell don't.
If you can't it's because you lack the imagination.
The US fucking allied with
Stalin and the USSR to counter a mutual threat, once upon a time. During the Cold War they managed to at least speak to each other and cooperate on mutual ventures. We sure as hell can get together with present-day Russia and counter this threat. If there is one thing the US and Russia have demonstrated it is the ability to work together even when we don't particularly like each other's governments.
Doesn't mean it will be easy. Some Americans will have to swallow the word “compromise” - which inclines me to think the problems and reluctance here are not on the
Russian side of the equation.
The Romulan Republic wrote:I am obviously not saying all the things you claim I am saying. I obviously do not need it explained to me that groups like IS exist, that they are vile, and that they are going to keep fighting.
If multiple people are doing that, though (and they are) then it is time for you to consider that what they are hearing when you speak and what you are trying to say are not the same thing.
Yes, I believe that their are certain methods that are inexcusable, both for moral reasons and because they may make the situation worse. I object to excessive brutality and mass murder. I object to acts that are likely to escalate the conflict. I make no apology for that. If you feel that that makes me a naive imbecile, so be it.
Yes, I do.
Here's the problem –
the other side thinks brutality, torture, slavery, and murder are GOOD things. They do inexcusable, immoral things and fucking brag about them. They have and continue to engage in brutality. They have committed not only mass murder but also genocide. THEY are escalating the conflict – they've recently bombed an airplane and shot up several hundred people in Paris counting the wounded as well as the dead. WE are not the instigators of this, THEY are. This is not a matter of the poor, downtrodden third world protesting foreign interference, these people have an intent to conquer.
You seem to think that the mere existence of people like IS is a rebuttal to this and a justification for your condescension, that their existence automatically justifies using such methods regardless of their morality, legality, or practicality.
No, their mere existence is not an automatic justification for anything. What you fail to grasp, though, is that ISIS is not play-acting. They
really do think we are evil, that things we value highly like freedom of thought and religion, equal rights of women, men and women interacting in public are evil and should be stamped out. They
really do think they are good, and they really do think killing people of different beliefs, public death by torture, mass killing in the name of their god, using women as fucktoys, buying and selling women for sexual pleasure, and so on are good things.
Their world and our world are
not compatible. We might be able to bring ourselves to leave them be, if they would only agree to stay in one small spot and not bother the rest of us...
but they can't do that. To them, to NOT attempt to convert the rest of the world to their viewpoint is an unmitigated evil. God would be very, very angry with them if they ignored the festering evil around them, they must kill it with fire (and bullets and bombs and anything else they can get their hands on).
Are they presently an existential threat to the rest of the world (not just the west – they hate everyone not them, remember)? No – but they sure as hell are a pain in the ass. If they continue to grow and acquire resources they will require more and more effort and ugliness to eradicate. How far will that have to go? I don't know.
As to alternatives, your misrepresentation notwithstanding, I have mentioned possible alternatives. As I said (in response to Broomstick, I believe), I think that we need to continue the policy of limited bombing in support of local ground forces while working diplomatically to unite everyone against IS, that we need to be doing better counting IS's propaganda, and that we need to be prepared to invest a lot of money in rebuilding certain countries. I also think we need to stop alienating our Muslim population in the west by treating them as the enemy. You may not like this approach or consider it viable, but that is not the same as my failing to offer an approach.
Uh-huh – the current status quo. How well is that working out? I suppose we can point to some small progress here and there... but we haven't eliminated the threat, have we?
“Limited bombing” is still bombing. It's still dead bodies and body parts and blood running in the gutters. It's still broken buildings. It's not what happened to Dresden or Tokyo in WWII, but it's still killing people and breaking things. The people killed aren't less dead because the bombing was “limited”. Do you really understand that or not?
WHAT ground forces? The Kurds, so long as the ammo holds out, seem able to stand their ground but other people have fled before ISIS. They really are scary bastards, so I'm told.
Currently, various nations ARE trying to work things out diplomatically – hence Obama and Putin have a little talk at the G20. Do you think the French aren't talking to the Russians and Americans? Of course they are. There is a shit-ton of diplomacy being done but that sort of diplomacy isn't easily or quickly done.
Hell, just having three nations currently bombing the same city without anyone accidentally slamming into or shooting the wrong party is a pretty good trick to pull off. You think that's happening without a lot of mutual talking?
But talk isn't going to solve the problem here. The best outcome of diplomacy will be coordinated action. “Coordinated action” that will probably involved killing more people and breaking more things.
That's what war is: you kill people and break things. Only children and the naïve think differently. It's utterly fucking brutal, hence why it is referred to as “hell”. Even “limited” war is that, the main difference between limited and not limited being that with the former some of the world can go to bed at night without fearing a bomb will wake them up.
You keep framing this as America vs. the Middle East. That's not what this is. ISIS isn't at war with the US,
they are at war with everyone who isn't them. Write that on your shaving mirror so you can read it every morning. Last Friday I heard someone say “just how many nuclear powers is ISIS determined to piss off?” which is a good summation of how ISIS just keeps jabbing a pointed stick in the eye of everyone else. They downed a Russian airliner. They attacked Paris... they haven't gotten around to the US yet but have declared their intention to do so. I'm sort of wondering when they'll go after China.
Given that France could just as easily nuke ISIS as the US or Russia could, and hasn't, is yet one more indication that “the west” has not, in fact, gone all out.
NOBODY wants to go all out, except maybe ISIS. They are, in fact, counting on that restraint.
Consider, too, that Assad has, in fact, used poison gas in the war in Syria. ISIS seems to take that as a challenge and encouragement rather than a deterrent. The war in Syria has
already moved beyond the conventional, not by action of anyone in the west but by a local
What do we do if limited warfare doesn't work? What if doing it the conventional way is too costly? – because no one in the west has infinite money and resources to throw at this. OK, maybe we
could do it conventionally IF we were willing to ramp things up to a WWII style production of weapons and delivery systems... do you want that? I don't, not particularly. Not even US style where we just didn't have new cars for a few years and some minor food rationing and people got killed on the job because fuck employee safety, we're at war. Not UK style, with more serious rationing and restrictions. On the other hand, if a few years of that would end ISIS... yeah, I could make that trade off. The problem is, things
never go back to what they were before. And if we did go to that you can be absolutely sure that the slaughter on the battlefield will be orders of magnitude worse than it is now. You don't need NBC warfare to burn down a city and kill a hundred thousand and more in a single night – see Tokyo, March 9-10, 1945.
The west (some of us) remember what happened last time the limits were removed, and I think it gives us pause. We don't want to unleash total warfare again. I think such restraint on the part of the world's major powers is a good thing. To ISIS, on the other hand, it is probably incomprehensible to have a weapon and NOT use it. That's a significant difference between the two sides.