This is what most don't understand and can't begin to comprehend. THE culture is raised to die for what they think is right, that ideology is what great empires were built upon, including ours. Most Americans today always talk about boating accidents and what was lost jokingly. One day it may not be a joke.
Exactly—most Americans can’t really comprehend the raw power of faith and belief when it’s taken to that level. It might be a twisted ideology from our perspective, but underestimating the kind of sacrifice people will make in the name of belief is a serious mistake.
Even in Christianity, there’s the idea that judgment involves the condition of the heart and intent, not just outward action. So the question becomes—what’s in the heart of someone willing to become a suicide bomber? Light or dark? From their perspective, they’re martyrs in a holy war—they believe they’re carrying out what is right. That’s what makes ideological warfare so dangerous: it closes the gap between conviction and action.
And people also tend to overlook the real-world impact of modern warfare. When infrastructure gets hit, even when it’s tied to military logistics or dual-use systems, the people who feel it most are often civilians just trying to live normal lives working there. Not everyone affected is part of the fight, but they still end up carrying the weight of it. Losing their livelihood.
At that point, it becomes simple reality—when a country is under attack, a significant portion of the population will see it as their duty to resist and defend their homeland.
You’ll absolutely have segments of the population that would welcome us, that’s true in almost every conflict. But you’ll also have a meaningful number of civilians willing to fight to the end if boots hit the ground—regular insurgents, organized militant groups, and ideological fighters-
mujahideen, alongside broader sectarian factions that emerge or intensify once the conflict takes hold on the ground level.
Then you layer in existing military forces, insurgent networks, and outside fighters drawn into the conflict, and it quickly escalates into something far more complex than conventional war on paper suggests.
Could our side inflict more damage militarily? Of course,. but the cost on both sides’ compounds over time, and the endurance of that kind of conflict is what people consistently underestimate. I don’t think the history of American’s will has the stomach to see a fight like that to the end, at least not on our homeland.