So what I'm understanding you to be saying...
Part 1... the environment for the formation of ISIS was Bush's fault... (Mr. not everything is Obama's fault)
My response to Part 1...K, who gives a fuck? How we got here has no bearing on what we need to do.
You can't fix a problem if you don't know what the problem is, so knowing how we got here is a prerequisite for making good decisions. But don't tell that to the people running for President, it's just "carpet bombing and overwhelming force" that'll solve the problem...
Here's Dick Cheney laying out, in 1994, just how stupid a decision it would have been to remove Saddam Hussein's dictatorship that was keeping the peace over the three-way ethnic/religious fault line that is Iraq, nine years before he want ahead and ignored his own advice:
<iframe width="420" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/6BEsZMvrq-I" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Understanding that Bush and Co handed Iraq to that aforementioned
Shia portion of Iraq should be a pretty big clue on why the Sunni Arabs aren't willing to put it back together...how is this so difficult to understand?
Part 2...No one wants ISIS gone, or is at least not willing to do something about it.
My response to Part 2...I disagree, and think your logic is dated...and does not consider the desire of common people...ISIS has killed indiscriminately...something AlQaeda did not do...as a result ISIS has no friends outside themselves and twisted one off fucksticks around the world...
ISIS has no friends, huh? What about all of the oil sneaking through Turkish hands and soft money coming in from Saudi Arabians who support Wahhabism?
Geopolitics--that's what gets militaries involved--isn't about friends and enemies. It's about nations looking at their own self interests and our allies are currently of the opinion that removing ISIS is a net negative for them
right now.
The list of ISIS enemies is long and generally well funded...and inclusive of "ARABS" as well as Syria, Iran and Iraq...
Officially opposing the actions of ISIS does not mean they want to help remove them. Let's talk about what the removal of ISIS means for each possible ally that has a military to help:
Turkey: Iraqi Kurdistan gains strength, which emboldens the large Kurdish minority in their country. Iran gains control of a stabler Iraq, that's bad news. Russian puppet al-Assad gets his country back, this is awful news for Turkey considering Russia has been a historic foe for the Turks for centuries. (bonus fact: Turkey desired NATO admission (read: protection from Russia) so bad that they were the fourth largest contributor to the UN force that fought in the Korean War, just so they'd look like a good boy for Uncle Sam) Asking Turkey to join a coalition that would help Russian interests is laughable. There's a reason they are the ones helping ISIS the most.
Saudi Arabia: Iraqi Shia (read: Iran) gain control of Iraq. Bad for Saudi Arabian goals considering they've been fighting Iran in multiple theaters for years and giving them Iraq and Syria back
could put Iran in its most powerful position in centuries. Centuries. An Iranaian-Russian belt of client states from Iran to Lebanon would not be something they want to see. That's why they funded all kinds of proto-ISIS fighters in Syria in the first place. Saudi Arabia also has a sizeable chunk of Shia Arabs within its own border, and they are terrified of what would happen if they got any ideas; think Domino Effect from the Cold War.
UAE: See Saudi Arabia.
Iraqi Kurdistan: Removing ISIS gives greater authority to a centralized Baghdad government, which makes their chances at greater autonomy, and achieving independence, less likely. Their biggest issue right now, considering they've basically driven ISIS off Iraqi Kurdish land, is that the Kurds on the other side of the border are within a NATO member..
and by their own claim ISIS considers themselves alafist Jihadists...However, most alafist Jihadists are non violent...except that tafir gives them moral authority to kill apostate muslims...which they all see ISIS as apostate Muslims...thats a lot of people who are ok with whacking ISIS. Now we have European participants who all of the sudden have impetus to drop the hammer as their people are ready...A coalition is attainable IMO. Won't know until January 2017 I guess....because a) you have to ask; and b) you have to be credible when you ask
Name me one European country that is willing to occupy Iraq/Syria. You can't. And considering their abilities in Libya in 2011, I'll take the Europeans saying they want to help drop bombs on ISIS as an IE member saying he wants to help catch passes for Brian Kelly.
Part 3 Everyone who wants boots on the ground is an idiot
Yeah I'd say trying to occupy Iraq/Syria without a way out is idiotic. It's the difference between the Gulf War and the Iraq War, and why the line "never get involved in a land war in Asia" is a thing.
My response...K. They are if they put themselves in the box of the past. There are certainly ways of severely stunting ISIS by overwhelming force, and then going away with a plan to have locals keep whacking them...the issue is...the only reason a coalition isn't attainable is Mr. Obama's reputation of indecisive "leadership"...not for a lack of willing participants...like I said...this will get cleaned up in a year...
You strike me as laughably uninformed on relations in the Middle East.
Until then, hoping the homeland doesn't have to pay for having someone who's foreign policy is to snivel about why we got here in the first place...at least you and he have that in common.
ISIS holdings in Syria/Iraq are not a prerequisite for fuckheads committing terrorist acts around the world. They are two different ballgames. There is an argument to be made that ISIS' success in Syria/Iraq emboldens those impressionable Muslims, but ISIS hasn't gained noteworthy ground in a year and the Russians are even of the opinion that ISIS allows them to "shoot fish in a barrel." They are more than happy to see their would-be Chechen terrorists travel to Syria to die for their cause.
The fact that there are thousands of terrorist wannabes with Western passports is troubling. But thankfully we have whole departments working on combating that threat. But, there will be more attacks with or without ISIS. Anyone who disagrees with that is delusional. The question is, how do we respond? Do we give ourselves the greenlight to fuck everything up in the Middle East again? Do we spend 4-6 trillion dollars trying to occupy and democratize a place that doesn't want us there?
The people advocating occupying Syria and Iraq to eliminate ISIS aren't advocating from a position of strength but out of weakness and the desire to use fear tactics to win votes. ISIS is not an existential threat to this country, but a policy of perpetual wars to try to achieve unattainable goals would actually weaken our ability to respond to those types of threats.