The latest Belmont Club post has a link to a 2010 essay of Wrechard’s called “The Ten Ships.” I really puts the whole situation into historical perspective as well.
http://pjmedia.com/richardfernandez/2010/05/14/the-ten-ships/
Jihadi Competition After al Qaeda Hegemony The ‘Old Guard’, Team ISIS & The Battle For Jihadi Hearts & Minds
If forced to choose between “Old Guard” al Qaedas direction or that of al-Baghdadi and ISIS, who would a fighter on the primary battlefields of Syria and Iraq choose:
an elder Zawahiri in Pakistan whom he has never met and rarely hears from, or
the local al-Baghdadi who suffered in prison with him and fights in the trenches with him everyday?
The decision rests on each individual jihadi. Those most devout to jihadi ideology and inspired by Bin Laden Id suspect pick Zawahiri and “Old Guard” al Qaeda. Those more committed to their brothers they fought with in Iraq or Syria and inspired by abu Musab al Zarqawi, I believe, will side with al-Baghdadi and ISIS. On the whole, I estimate today more young jihadis side with their brothers from the battlefield (ISIS) than with the less personally known “Old Guard” al Qaeda.
“The latest Belmont Club post has a link to a 2010 essay of Wrechards called The Ten Ships. I really puts the whole situation into historical perspective as well.
http://pjmedia.com/richardfernandez/2010/05/14/the-ten-ships/ “
This was a great article - Thanks
For those who want the gist - it is about focusing on the enemies real center of gravity.
In the Pacific against Japan, it was their ten carriers - sink those and win the war.
In the war on Terrorism it is three things - the ideology of Islam, the regimes that sponsor terrorism (especially Saudi Arabia), and the money from oil. Win those three and win the war.
Fiddle around and chase other objectives, and it will never end in your favor.