Even the Pope Wants to Stop ISIS; Shouldn’t Obama?

To bomb or not to bomb? That is the debate as we watch the extremist militants of ISIS rampage through Syria and Iraq with the intent of establishing a caliphate that erases the borders between the two.

Many members of Congress are fully committed to a bombing campaign. “The threat ISIS poses only grows over time,” Senators McCain and Graham wrote in Sunday’s New York Times. “It cannot be contained. It must be confronted…. Such a strategy would require our commander in chief to explain to war-weary Americans why we cannot ignore this threat.”

President Obama, who has always stood among the war-weary, wavers per usual. Pope Francis just came out in favor, saying a counter-attack on ISIS falls under the “just war” doctrine.

Related: Obama Hammered on Ukraine, ISIS Delays

New York Times columnist David Brooks said on NPR Friday that we had better accept that going in with bombs—which he favors, and on both sides of the Iraq-Syria border—will eventually require sending special-operations forces, if not ground troops. “The irony of the Obama administration, it’s going to get a lot more militarized in the last two years,” Brooks told the hosts of All Things Considered.

Policy wonks generally favor bombing, but cautiously so and there are straight-out objectors on the left. John Feffer argues in Foreign Policy in Focus, “If the United States doesn’t do something stupid—like bombing this newly declared caliphate and its army—ISIS will likely be consumed by the fires of its own extremism. It’s best to remind the administration that ISIS is like one of those creatures in a horror movie that only grows stronger the more drone strikes or artillery shells that it absorbs.”

There is a lot to support this position. We have a nine-year war in Iraq behind us and a 13-year war in Afghanistan still to wind down. In front of us, we have the Afghan would-be nation that may or may not end up incorporating the Taliban in its government, and Iraq in sectarian smithereens sprouting the most grotesque flower of evil yet to come out of the region’s arc of crisis.

Related: The Key to Solving Both ISIS and Russian Aggression

We all remember the high-school chemistry experiments with mercury. Are we about to take a hammer to a spoonful of it and, paradoxically, shatter the element in a thousand pieces even as it remains intact? Thirteen years after the September 11 attacks, we cannot ignore this question.

With these thoughts in mind, this column is a modest contribution to the conversation, and excellent it is we are having it. Yes, we have to bomb. But there is way more to this than a short answer.