I think reconsidering a new strategy is important because how many Armies based upon a suicide Cult that take over land and kill everyone not their specific cult's religion has the world faced in the last 200 years? Not considering what we are facing jeopardizes the whole free world at this point. For example, using neutron bombs to exterminate whole ISIS armies might be one alternative that needs to be considered before the whole middle east is taken over by them one city at a time.
Sending western armies to face them is what they want anyhow. All they need is a few western soldiers that they cut arms legs or manhood off on Youtube or another source to gain many converts to their death cult. So, sending western armies in really isn't an option. So, either sending in robotic armies or neutron bombs might be the ONLY useful option in this situation.
Unless you are going to train western soldiers to either shoot themselves in the head or munch down on cyanide capsules if they get captured or wounded by ISIS this just isn't going to work.
The
strategy to adopt towards the Islamic State's advances in Iraq and
Syria will be the focus of a meeting in Paris on Tuesday of the
countries of the international coalition led by the United States, whose
nearly 4,000 raids in ten months have failed to stop the ...
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Paris meeting of the interntional coalition to reconsider strategy towards ISIS
AFP
The strategy to adopt
towards the Islamic State's advances in Iraq and Syria will be the focus
of a meeting in Paris on Tuesday of the countries of the international
coalition led by the United States, whose nearly 4,000 raids in ten
months have failed to stop the jihadists.
The meeting, to be attended by Iraqi Prime Minister Haider
al-Abadi, ministers and representatives of international organizations,
should, according to French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, allow a
"discussion of the coalition's strategy" that currently consists of
conducting raids and training Iraqi soldiers or moderate Syrian rebels
for action on the ground.
But the raids have had little effect on ISIS' "truck bombs" and
the military training has not prevented the defeat of the Iraqi Army in
Ramadi.
end quote from word button above:
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