- Reaction score
- 35
- Points
- 560
Your analogy works partially WRT the various foreign fighters that the Gulf States have/had been funding (or going farther back, in Afghanistan foreign fighters known to the locals as "the Arabs" who were generally hated and feared by Afghans), but I think we are still early enough into this "30 years war" that religious and ideological dynamics still motivate a lot of people.
When States like Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq lie in ruins (similar to the wreckage in Germany towards the end of the 30 years war) then most of the fighting will be brigandage rather than ideological fighting.
Of course given the larger pool of manpower and resources, it is quite possible that this is going to be a "100 years war", with much of the fighting resembling a chevauchee as one side or the other gains a temporary advantage and despoils the countryside to deprive the others of resources (notice the use of the plural).
When States like Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq lie in ruins (similar to the wreckage in Germany towards the end of the 30 years war) then most of the fighting will be brigandage rather than ideological fighting.
Of course given the larger pool of manpower and resources, it is quite possible that this is going to be a "100 years war", with much of the fighting resembling a chevauchee as one side or the other gains a temporary advantage and despoils the countryside to deprive the others of resources (notice the use of the plural).