General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: History question - Did we call the Irish Republican Army "Roman Catholic Terrorists"? [View all]Savannahmann
(3,891 posts)ISIS/ISIL/IS have as a stated purpose the conversion of everyone to their particular brand of Islam. So the motivating factor behind their activities is not the elimination of the occupying forces, but the conversion to a sect of a religion. So calling them Islamic Terrorists is an accurate use of the language.
They are not fighting to get rid of American influence in Iraq, Syria, or anywhere else. They are fighting to inflict their religious beliefs on others.
What was the stated purpose of the IRA? To drive the English from their lands so they could have Independence. Some considered it a religiously driven war, but mostly it was an independence movement. The stated purpose was freedom for Northern Ireland.
Now, your assertion would work better if the IRA had as a stated purpose to convert everyone to Catholicism, but in this format it not only fails, but does so spectacularly. If anything, it demonstrates the huge gulf of difference to anyone who reads it. Perhaps you could try again. Perhaps you could compare IS/ISIL/ISIS to the Imperial Japanese forces leading up to and during World War II. The Japanese believed they had a divine right to rule, and a divinely selected Emperor to follow. The motivations of the Japanese would be much easier to pervert to support your assertions.