![]() Insurgency has a subtle meaning in the sense that insurgents, who usually fight against an established government, might be perceived in different ways. The second example is about the War Against Insurgency. In short, for an optimum solution against migration, terrorism and radicalism, nations should invest in removing root causes in the long term while fighting against the symptoms simultaneously. Current efforts employed against symptoms might change depending on the nations’ capabilities at hand, or technologies that they have at the moment however, they don’t present a permanent solution. It doesn’t mean that we don’t need to fight against the symptoms, but it is indispensable to create an international system that allows to coordinate the efforts on multiple facets, including migration, sharing information about terrorism etc. As long as the developed countries do not fight against the root causes, which are mainly illiteracy, poverty and security in the origin countries, nor they regulate the international system, assumed to be under their control, in a way that allows all countries to live peacefully -I am aware that it is easier said than done- they continuously have to struggle with increasing number of immigrants. All of them are the fights against the symptoms. EU might do agreements with Turkey to the detriment of her founding values, NATO might sail her forces in the Aegean Sea to regulate the transitions of immigrants or US might build the wall on its southern border against Mexicans. Everybody knows that migration, terrorism or radicalism cannot be fought against effectively unless the root causes are not addressed. Migration, Terrorism and Radicalism are three international problems which frequently occupy the agendas of developed countries. First part includes three prominent examples to those problems whose solutions are known in essence and second part seeks answers to the question of “why solutions are not adopted by the nations.” This paper is composed of two main parts. However, they are either ignored by nations or cannot be executed due to the difficulties in translating the essence into the contemporary circumstances. In this sense, I claim that the solutions to the many fundamental problems of international relations are known in essence. Similarly, wisdom of Thucydides (c.460 B.C.–c.400 B.C.), Athenian historian and general, on the causes of war, as he suggests three causes of war- “fear, honour and interest”- are still widely accepted today. ![]() The things that make the human satisfied may change, however, one thing never changes human being always wants to be satisfied. However, there has been an essence of life, which is constant as it has been for ages human being becomes sad when his close ones die, human laughs when he hears funny stories, human gets angry when his interest is in jeopardy. We cannot ignore the inventions in technology or the advances in various lines of social life. ![]() “There is nothing new under the sun” is a biblical idiom refers to the thinking that the essence of human life remains unchanged. ![]()
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