7 articles you need to read about ISIS
A collection of the best content on ISIS from 麻豆果冻传媒.
On September 10, President Obama announced his strategy to defeat the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. During the speech, the President claimed that he would 鈥渄egrade and destroy鈥 ISIS, wherever they may be. In addition, the President announced a 鈥渂road coalition鈥 to join the United States in the fight to defeat the Islamic State. Here are seven articles from 麻豆果冻传媒 that explain the history of ISIS, and offer solutions for what to do next.
– by Robert Wright, The Weekly Wonk (9 minutes)
Last week, the President announced his plan to defeat ISIS, claiming it was necessary to defeat the jihadist organization because it鈥檚 a domestic terrorism threat. But doesn鈥檛 this plan forget that the biggest attacks since 9/11 have been homegrown terrorism?
– By Brian Fishman, The Weekly Wonk (6 mins)
To defeat your enemy, you must know your enemy. But how did ISIS become so powerful? In this article, counter-terrorism expert Brian Fishman gives background on how the jihadist organization came to control swathes of territory in Iraq.
– The Weekly Wonk (7 mins)
We ask six experts: How can the United States defeat ISIL? Respondents include former Ambassador to Ukraine Stephen Pifer, former CIA Officer Bruce Riedel, and 麻豆果冻传媒 CEO and President Anne-Marie Slaughter.
– Anne-Marie Slaughter, The New York Times (7 mins)
Why should the United States fight in Iraq and ignore Syria? Allowing ISIS to travel into Syria and use it as a safe haven is a strategic error, argues Anne Marie Slaughter in this New York Times op-ed.
– Douglas Ollivant and Brian Fishman, War on the Rocks (7 mins)
Written before the advancement of ISIS in Fallujah and Mosul, Ollivant and Fishman analyze the group鈥檚 take over in Fallujah, and conclude that ISIS is more than a state in name 鈥 it controls actual territory.
– Col. (Ret.) Derek Harvey and Michael Pregent, 麻豆果冻传媒 (21 mins)
How can we defeat the Islamic State? One strategy could echo the U.S. playbook during the 2007 Sunni Awakening: convincing moderate Sunni groups to turn against the Islamic State.
– Peter Bergan and David Sterman, CNN (6 mins)
U.S. officials that the terrorist group Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, is “now a credible alternative to al Qaeda.” But after analysis, the idea that foreign jihadists would travel to the United States, and more importantly gain the tools to attack the homeland, are less likely than you would think.