Bunyip
pro scapegoat
I would advocate for attacking the causes, rather than the symptom.
Attack in this form of assymetric warfare tends to strengthen the enemy, it is an enemy born of radicalism and extremism - a military approach tends to be counter productive.
It can only drive the potential recruits to ever greater heights of extremity.
Attack extremism at its root cause - dissafection, frustration, alienation and solve the imbalances from which they spring rather than the inevitable consequences of dissafection.
As to ISIS specifically, the transition from terrorist cell structure to Government will be all but impossible to acheive. An amorphous terrorist movement has little or no infrastructure to attack - a Government sure as hell does.
Attack in this form of assymetric warfare tends to strengthen the enemy, it is an enemy born of radicalism and extremism - a military approach tends to be counter productive.
It can only drive the potential recruits to ever greater heights of extremity.
Attack extremism at its root cause - dissafection, frustration, alienation and solve the imbalances from which they spring rather than the inevitable consequences of dissafection.
As to ISIS specifically, the transition from terrorist cell structure to Government will be all but impossible to acheive. An amorphous terrorist movement has little or no infrastructure to attack - a Government sure as hell does.