Posted on Aug 20, 2014
MAJ Derrick J.
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Its a good thing, for ISIS and friends, that I am not POTUS - I would send in troops to root out these barbarians and wipe them out.

No nice guy. No punches held. They would die and that's that.

And, we would protect those civilians they have targeted. This ISIS "program" would be over, and I'd likely take it to Syria in some form.

This is ridiculous to the extent that it is now obscene and offensive to the extreme.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2729287/ISIS-beheads-journalist-James-Wright-Foley-warning-US.html
Posted in these groups: Isis logo ISISMiddle east logo Middle EastMultinational force iraq emblem  mnf i   1 5 Iraq
Edited 10 y ago
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SFC Intelligence Analyst
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MAJ Derrick J.

Sir, no disrespect but I am glad that you are not the POTUS. As much as I despise what ISIS is doing, I am tired of us trying to fix other country's problems. The moment ISIS threatens us directly, yes we should go and exterminate them. In the meanwhile, I am sure that there are other pressing issues here that our politicians should be taking care of.
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MAJ Derrick J.
MAJ Derrick J.
10 y
SFC -

I have learned from history that there is no negotiating with these people. There is no deal that they will honor, no promise they will keep - except to "wipe the West off the face of the earth."

Those are their words, not mine.

My response is an adult response to childish barbaric 7th Century behaviors.

The lesson of WW2, especially, is that appeasement and delay in the face of such evil will only guarantee that we must fight them, eventually on our own shores.

So, I say drop a 100 ton hammer on them and end this crap for another 50 or 100 years.

And, if I were POTUS they would know better than to do what they are doing, hence much of the international problems and terrorist threats would not be happening in the first place. Thats the effect of decisive strong leadership - it stops evil doers from doing their worst.
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SFC Intelligence Analyst
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10 y
Sir, I agree with you, animals like those should not be allowed to exist, but sending our troops to do what the Iraqi government should be doing, that's where I don't really think is a great idea.
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MAJ Derrick J.
MAJ Derrick J.
10 y
I get what you're saying and it would seem reasonable, except that this isn't about what the Iraqi government can or cannot do. It's about crushing and exterminating a virulent philosophical contagion and eventual direct threat to this nation and the world.
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MAJ Robert (Bob) Petrarca
MAJ Robert (Bob) Petrarca
10 y
They've held against his will an now executed a US citizen. It doesn't get any more in your face than that. Let's not fix anything, lets just rescue our people.
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Maj Chris Nelson
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I personally think that this is a 2 fold problem....1. we are dealing with radicals....they don't ever think straight. 2. we caused this problem in two different ways. The first way was to take Saddam out of the picture. I date back to Desert Storm, so I suspected in 1991 that we would be back to finish the job...and I feel it was the right thing to do. The SECOND way we failed/facilitated this is our withdrawl. Look at history. WW2: Stablization forces in Europe for 50+ years...keeping the peace and monitoring the rebuilding; also Stablization forces in Japan...again, providing oversight. we were there for 13 years (give or take a year or 2.....) what stablization is that? The country is STILL populated by an uneducated population. With this, it only takes a few "educated bad guys" to enforce what the law is regardless of what it truely says, or how it says it...nobody can go read it themselves or inturrpret it. they MUST rely on someone that can read. I suspected that this type of thing would occur with the short occupation and pull out. Truly, about the only way to succeed would be to ensure all children for the next 2-3 generations are educated (both male and female). Once a majority of the population is educated, they have less risk of being fed a line of bull from some terrorist interpretation. We either need to sit back and let them deal with this mess 100% regardless of how it turns out for Iraq, OR we need to be dedicated for the next 50-70 years......and support them as we did in Germany/Europe and Japan.
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Edited 10 y ago
There are severa inflated partisan responses in these comments for that I am disappointed for those who wear the uniforms yet speaks, regurgitates talk radio talking heads nonsense.

First, it appeared that we have not learnt from our mistakes, we cannot continue to send our young men to that desert to fight for those who would not lift a finger themselves.

Two, for the liberal comments that have to be for the president, what is so positive about the previous administration handling things in Iraq that you are eager to see duplicated.

Three, many of you are so twisted into parties politics not to see that are more than the US in the world and until Germany, France, England and all those Arabs countries are willing to have their kids dead or coming missing limbs, we should no longer carry the world problem on our back.

Last, there are many countries who stands on the sidewalk watching America fighting wars after wars like the Romans did and expecting the same result / outcome.
Sadly, this president has undertaken more bold military actions than the previous one except he does not go on national TV to talk tough.
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MAJ Derrick J.
MAJ Derrick J.
10 y
MSG - there is a power vacuum in the world and that exists because the current POTUS has refused to lead.

The jury is in, just on historical principle, that such a withdrawal creates conditions for bad people to do bad things. Eventually, that will reach our shores in terms of violence and economics.

Then there is the principle of DOING THE RIGHT THING, and after this latest barbarism and resulting murder, its time to literally wipe these people out. There is no other alternative.

Keep trying to look away all you want, but eventually whats happening "over there" will be happening here. And we will pay an economic price and lose our standard of living as a result. Then who will be there for the abused and murdered? Who will be as generous as we have been?

We are, or should be, a force for good - yes, I said it - not an ostrich nation that cant seem to figure out its own national moral compass anymore.
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MSG (Join to see)
10 y
Sir, where I disagree with you and many others who subscribe to that power vacuum notion is simple, it defines logic. To engage in war for more than 12 years in Iraq and Afghanistan and yet we have not learn a lesson that this thing will be fixed only when those in the regions understand that they also have to fight, this is not President Obama saying but it is common sense.
I am disappointed simply because smart people like you and many on this site should have a clear rational point of view about this, We Cannot stretch our military all over the world fighting wars while thee Chinese are watching us smiling. We spent trillions of dollars in Iraq, training Iraqis, for what, for them to walk away from the fight while leaving high tech weapons behind for Isis.
What on earth say that we should have left 10,000 to 15,000 behind to fight Isis while these Iraqis soldiers sat down on the side walk and watch.
What on earth gave us assurance that whomever we allied with in Syria wouldn't do the same.
It is new paradigm that many on the right and left have yet to embrace, we will no longer be subscribed to that usual mind set of going to war fighting for others interests while they sit on the sidewalk and watch.
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