It’s very interesting where we choose to put boots on the
ground. Without what seems to be much hesitation, President Obama has called
for sending 3,000 troops to West Africa to
build local treatment centers in the fight against the deadly Ebola virus. Even
though it seems we are responding quickly, the experts are saying we are only
leaping into the firefight when the house has almost burned down – and with the
number of those infected doubling every few weeks, the urgency seems warranted.
Will Ebola make it to the United
States ? Probably not, those same experts
say, but if the population infected is allowed to explode, that likelihood
increases. Without flinching, one expert said this disease had the potential to
rival a Black Death that ravaged Italy in the 1300s.
I am probably by no means the first to draw a parallel to
the situation in Iraq and Syria , with the spreading virus of ISIS . We have no prickly political issues at the moment
keeping boots off of West African ground, it seems, but the weariness created
by two less-than-popular wars kept us from involvement in Syria while its unrest morphed into civil war,
and we couldn’t seem to get out of Iraq fast enough. Is there
something the West could have done to prevent the loss of some 200,000 lives
and the displacement of millions? We of course will never know – and what good
would it do us at this moment if we did?
Now the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin
Dempsey, says we may indeed have to put boots on the desert sand again in the
form of advisors embedded with local forces taking on ISIS .
This road should seem very familiar, as we’ve been on and off it for the past
50 years. In 2003, the reasons for entering Iraq may have been manufactured.
But are they this time? It’s unlikely that ISIS would strike the United States
in our homeland – perhaps equally as unlikely as Ebola spreading here, for the
moment at least. But will that remain the case if we do nothing?
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