Prize for #1 dumb statement. Of course it's about terrorists.
All that yesterday's decision did in reality is decide that we no longer need to stop our attacks on IS simply because they cross an arbitrary border that they have never recognised. We are not using any more force or different tactics against them than we have been doing in Iraq for over a year. The only thing that has changed is that now their actions and influence in Iraq has been reduced through airstrikes and local ground forces, they have moved into Syria, and we now have the UN mandate to join with the other coalition nations in keeping up the chase.
There's a couple of analogies here.
Prior to this, we were like The Dukes Of Hazzard. only we were'n't Bo and Luke, we were Sheriff Roscoe P Coltrane. Once they crossed the county line, we simply had to stop.
Now, we're like those cops who can cross county and national borders if they declare themselves in 'active pursuit'. We are following our targets where they go when they run for cover.
We're no more and no less at risk than we were before the decision. and diminishing IS's resources and ability to grow and stabilise their power base is an important step in the overall process. Air strikes are not going to defeat them on their own, but it's important not to sit on our hands and let them grow whilst we work on the strategies that will.
I just think DTs analysis is rather deeper than yours. Terrorism is the symptom of what this is about. We are taking steps to manage the symptoms, which I support, but they won't cure the illness. Painkillers don't cure a broken leg.
We also need treatments for
- poverty
- ignorance
- religious bigotry
- borders which mean nothing to the people who live within them
- populations who have no say in the way they are governed
- international game playing between Russia, Turkey, the West, the Saudis, Iran etc and probably China too.
- Assad, who is the biggest mass muderer involved in this
- the complete lack of credibility and support for the western powers in much of the region based on history and economic exploitation, real or imagined it doesn't matter
- the whole Israel/Palestine thing
Unfortunately Daesh is an idiotic religious totalitarian ideology rather than a geographical state. It's more like a particularly aggressive cancer than a broken leg. Destroy it in Iraq/Syria and we still have it in every country where there are radicalised Muslims, which is just about everywhere (does anyone think that those swine - a word chosen to cause maximum offence - in California were controlled from Syria?) It will die out, because by definition death cults have limited life spans. But as long as the (incomplete) list above remains untreated, stuff like this will keep happening, sometimes locally specific, sometimes global.
Looking at that list it's pretty obvious that we don't have the leadership to even start tackling the causes of this particular disease. The desire, vision, intellect and drive are absent. Reactive rather than active.