P.S. Does anyone else here remember the "Pottery Barn Rule" as enunciated by General Colin Powell? ("You break it, you own it.")
There's certainly something to
that...
I will agree that the feckless do-nothing policies that this administration pursued for years towards Syria have contributed mightily to the "breaking" of the country and the current refuge crisis. Our failure to intervene to recruit, train and support an effective secular opposition force at the outset, (as well as to establish in-country safe zones for refugees) created the vacuum that led to the rise of ISIS and turned the refugee flow (that was started by Assad's oppressive response to Syrian demands for political reform) into the current deluge. We
certainly have a responsibility to play a leading role in solving this problem, since our inaction played a leading role in creating it.
So where are you going to put them?
I thought I answered that earlier...
First, we...and by "we" I mean the US, our allies in the region who are already engaged with us in the fight in Syria and our major Western allies...(with the US taking the lead; contrary to what the current President believes, in situations like this US leadership is essential) need to provide more material support for the countries bordering Syria who are hosting the bulk of the refugees, to improve conditions and relieve pressure on those countries.
Second, we need to establish and supply in-country safe zones within Syria to accommodate additional displaced.
And third, we then need to do what we should have done four years ago; recruit, train and support (with advisers, trainers, intel and air power) an effective secular opposition force.
Four years ago the task of this force would have been "just" to go up against Assad and either pressure him into a political settlement or displace him by force. Now of course, thanks to four years of US thumb-sucker policy, the task is much larger. In addition to accomplishing that, we and this force must first crush ISIS and the other Islamo fascists that our failure to act sooner enabled to take over large sections of the country.
Then, when the Islamists have been routed, and Assad has been pushed from power either militarily or through a combination of military pressure and a political settlement, the fighting will end and the refugee problem will have its ultimate solution; the return of the Syrian people to their homes.
Then of course, there will need to be a massive, internationally financed, (because the Syrians don't have much in the way of resources to pay for it) reconstruction program for the country.
And once again I repeat, all of this could have been accomplished much earlier, and at
far less cost in lives and treasure for all concerned, if only the US had acted sooner...
Every time I see that horrific photo of the child on the beach, I am reminded again of the terrible human cost that American inaction has wrought....
,