On his
The use of mercenaries is as old as warfare itself. Alexander the Great used them.
The president is to be commended for assembling a coalition that includes Arab states, but why are our European allies not part of it?
Under O'Reilly's scenario, mercenaries would be well paid and live under American rules of war and the
"The more familiar but difficult medium- to long-term task of degrading ISIS's operational leaders and eventually its high leadership will take well-disciplined, organized ground forces to push out ISIS guerrillas entrenched among population centers where airpower cannot remove them. It also will take major improvements of the quality of intelligence, especially in
What's needed most is a change in American and Western thinking. This war against a constantly shifting force of what is, despite denials by the president and Secretary of State
When American leaders stop trying to turn the motivations of fanatics into something other than what they are, only then will we start treating this war for what it is. All of the non sequiturs about Islam being a "peaceful religion" that has been "hijacked" by extremists is meaningless if members of the "peaceful religion" don't rise up and defeat those fanatics they claim have misrepresented their faith.
Though Arab states joining the coalition is a start, the fact that these nations are not yet providing ground forces to defeat these "apostates" and "heretics" tells us something. Are they afraid of ISIS and other Islamist groups? Do they share some of their goals?
Either way, if Western civilization and its values of tolerance, freedom and religious pluralism are to survive, we have to make sure that ISIS does not. There can be no co-existence between good and evil. If good doesn't triumph, evil will.
Mercenaries might be an effective tool in defeating evil.
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Cal Thomas, America's most-syndicated columnist, is the author of 10 books.
