You ever get tired of defending Western imperialism with garbage logic?
"Let's kill 100 civilians for two snipers. It's just pragmatic collateral damage you stupid bleeding hearts!"
Ever actually read what my post says and thought about responding with logic?
The post you quoted is all factually correct. As I said before, a person can and should criticize U.S for these acts that cause the deaths of innocent people, but once you start comparing the now U.S to Russia, Syria, or ISIS then you lose all respect and basis for your argument to me.
You're minimising the effects that foreign policy has had on the region as a whole. I also object to you saying that it will continue to be that way "until those places become developed countries... when they start thinking of themselves as a country and benefit one another rather than just one group of people in the country."
It's a rather narrow-minded way of looking at it, especially when we're considering a number of nations here. If we consider Syria or even Libya just a decade ago, whilst these countries had deep issues, especially the case of Libya, the problems here weren't the same problems places that places like Afghanistan had. Iraq too had its own set of problems, a common theme no doubt but countries with larger tribal areas are a little hard to bring into a 'developed' world.
It's rather dismissive to point out that secularism is the answer for governments when we know how the US tried to shape Iran with Pahlavi. Or even before with other governments in the region. Afghanistan has been completely decimated and it's a country that has had real trouble developing since the decade-long war against the Mujahideen. Here we had the Soviet invasion of the country. Then, just 12 years later was the US invasion of Afghanistan. There are entire generations who have only known war and loss. These are countries that actually haven't had the opportunity to develop.
The fact is, all of these countries play a strategic role and have access to a lot of natural resources. Oil specifically, and you're not in the wrong for identifying that. But because of this very fact, and outside pressures and influence such as the West have truly put the region into turmoil. Afghanistan and Iraq in particular. Syria and Libya are different animals, but all of them are suffering in part due to Western Intervention. At least, the kind that tries to solve the issues with a hammer. Smashing things up and hoping you've got something working at the end isn't a good strategy. Consider Libya and the transitional phase thrown out during the protests. Consider the rejection of the Russian-led peace deal in 2012 for Syria. It's failure after failure, and what we end up with is a monster like ISIS festering and seizing the opportunity to extend its hand.
These places will not stop being terrorist havens until they stop seeing each other as different groups in the pool to the extent that they do. I am also aware that foreign influence (particularly from the west) is a very large factor in the turmoil of the Middle-East, same goes for Africa, that is partly why we should go full on into moving to different resources. Unfortunately Africa will become the next spot due to minerals.
I am with you in that military intervention isn't always the key. The only nations I believe need military intervention in the Middle-East is Syria and Afghanistan, the rest could be helped along in other ways. As the world becomes more intertwined it is possible that nations would act like U.S states in helping the weaker nations out via economic and social programs and militarily only when necessary.
That post definitely minimizes the greater issue and I do apologize for that, though when I mentioned terrorism, I wasn't talking about just "Islamic terrorism". It won't end because it is seen as the most "efficient" way of getting their way when the other side have too much power. The only other way is the slow way of getting into politics and pushing it through, a path terrorist finds too slow and unrewarding because it typically means compromise. Until the solutions are put through, which I do not see happening for a long time, because U.S and other countries want to keep or even increase their status as world powers to the detriment of smaller nations.