First, as the authors note, pulling all U.S. troops and intelligence assets from fragile conflict zones is a boon to globalized terror movements.
Second, we must reckon with the underlying grievances that make violent anti-Western ideologies, including militant jihadism, attractive to so many in the first place.
These include the ill effects of globalization, and a “rules-based” world order increasingly insensitive to the needs of developing countries and regions.
Simply maintaining a military or intelligence presence in terror hot spots does nothing to reduce the sticky recruiting power of militant movements.
Stuart GottliebNew YorkThe writer teaches American foreign policy and international security at Columbia University.
Persons:
Hasn’t, Christopher P, Costa, Colin P, Clarke, Stuart Gottlieb
Organizations:
ISIS, Columbia University
Locations:
Iraq, Afghanistan, United States