The Week: "Marco Rubio has no clue how to defeat ISIS"
link; excerpt:
A couple of weeks ago, ISIS was a serious challenge the next president will have to deal with, but in the wake of the attacks in Paris, candidates are now expected to have an ISIS plan, a specific set of actions they'll take that will eliminate the terrorist group once and for all. Not everyone has come up with one yet, but what we've seen so far is not going to inspire a whole lot of faith that ISIS's days are numbered come January 2017.
Consider, for example, Marco Rubio, the establishment's golden boy and one of the "serious" GOP candidates. When it comes to foreign policy in particular, people will look to Rubio, since by virtue of his seat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee he's better informed than most of his primary competitors. Rubio delivered his plan to defeat ISIS last week, and it's a remarkable document. Let's walk through its main points.
Rubio begins with the requisite statement of steely resolve: "When I am president, what I will do to defeat ISIL is very simple: whatever it takes." Inspiring! Then he dives into the details. "First, I would protect the homeland by immediately stopping the flow of Syrian refugees into the United States," he says. I won't bother going over again how wrong it is to think that stopping Syrian refugees will protect us from an attack, but we can at least all agree that doing so certainly won't help "defeat" ISIS.
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The problem isn't that Marco Rubio is some kind of idiot, even if you'd be tempted to conclude that upon reading his "plan." The problem is that ISIS presents an unusually difficult challenge, where every possible course of action is either foreclosed before it begins or brings huge complications along with it. That's why when Hillary Clinton who has more foreign policy experience than all the Republican candidates put together gave a speech last week outlining the course she'd like to follow on ISIS, it was terribly frustrating, in many ways more hope than plan. Clinton at least acknowledges the complexity of the situation for instance, our ally Saudi Arabia isn't helping us fight ISIS, while our adversary Iran is, all while the two countries wage proxy battles against each other. If the next president can untie that knot, it would be a wonder.