Ok, this brings me to my #1 pet peeve about the mindless far-right-wing Rush worshippers...
Why exactly do you think the United States is perceived differently from Western European nations in the Arab world? Eh? Do you think, possibly, it has anything to do with decades worth of US intervention in the Middle East?
Somewhere along the line, we unfortunately came up with this rhetoric of a "war on terror." Even though most of the educated policy-makers know that it isn't a viable long-term plan, it appeals to lots of American voters, and both parties - but to a far greater extent the Republicans - have been playing it up. I would have thought by now more people would catch on. Fighting terrorism is like fighting a hydra. You want to go after what you see attacking you, but every time you cut off a head, 2 more pop up. Have you people all failed to notice that repeated US military actions in the Middle East are NOT helping? We took out almost all of the Al Qa'ida leadership structure. Guess what? It came back. And now we have ISIS, along with literally dozens of new state-recognized terror organizations. More have been recognized in the 15 years since we started the war on terror than the entirety of US history before that point. You think this is a coincidence?
Listen, there will always be some people who hate other people. There will always be some crazy people. But you can't fight terrorism by fighting the individuals. That just creates the exact image of the United States that terrorist leaders are already trying to project to the general Islamic population. They claim the United States is trying to interfere in their lives, interfere in their religion, and stop them from practicing the way they want. So what do we do about it? We invade their countries, and now we're talking about singling out Muslims living in the United States and potential Muslim immigrants. That's playing right into the terrorist agenda.
Every time we kill 100 terrorists, it creates the PR for terrorist leaders to recruit hundreds of new recruits. You can't kill a hydra by cutting off the heads. You have to cauterize the wounds, or go after the heart. The heart of this particular problem is the increasingly popular anti-American sentiment throughout the Middle East. You combat that with non-interference except when requested, by having US intervention in the Middle East center on humanitarian efforts, and possibly by placing anti-offensive requirements for US aid to Israel. It's gonna take a long time to improve our image in the Middle East at this point. We've had 15 years of making it increasingly negative. But you'd think, after 15 years, more of the general population would start to recognize that the situation is not improving. Obviously pulling US troops out of Iraq was a mistake. You'll find, in 2008 election posts from these forums, my predictions that Al Qa'ida would move into Iraq in the event of a full US withdrawal and take advantage of the power vacuum to seize control. That wasn't exactly what happened, but it was pretty close. That said, further offensive actions in the region are still incredibly ill-advised.
If you want to fight ISIS, you do it under the table. Who knows, maybe we already are? Get Putin in a room alone and tell him we can quietly, under the table, provide funding over time to help compensate for a ground war carried out by Russian troops. Some terrorist leaders will likely accuse us of doing just that. But they'll do so whether we actually do it or not, and it won't resonate with people who aren't already sympathetic to their cause. Since anti-Russian sentiments are much less widespread, this is probably the most harmful course of action to terrorist causes. But sending US troops in is worse than doing nothing. If we destroy ISIS, all the survivors - and there would be many - will just go hide somewhere else and recruit new support. I know MikeT and Moy said they'd rather do the wrong thing than do nothing. That's just bad governance. The wrong thing is cutting off your nose to spite your face. Spending US money to increase the long-term anti-American sentiment is hurting us on multiple fronts. Wasting resources singling out Muslims in the United States or immigrating to the United States does the same, albeit on a smaller scale. If you want to throw resources at the problem, do it by supporting refugees, even if it's not on US soil. If we feed and house them, then they won't turn to well-funded extremist groups to do the same.