Should we negotiate with ISIS?
The picture of a drowned boy who washed up on a Turkish beach on Wednesday has sparked an international outcry. Three-year-old Aylan, who drowned along with his five-year-old brother Galip, has resulted in European leaders asking if more can be done. More refugees continue to flee battle-torn Syria, with ISIS waging war on many fronts across the nation.
Making a stable home for Syrians so they do not have to flee seems beyond reach, but can it be done by negotiating with ISIS? Many think it's a barbarous group beyond negotiation, and that trying to open dialogue with them would be futile and fly in the face of public opinion. But does history show us that governments do eventually talk to their enemies? Is it time to talk to ISIS? We also hear from Harry, who left his job as a currency trader in London to take up arms with the Kurds in the fight against ISIS in Syria. Now back in Britain, he tells Sunday Morning Live what motivated him to go and whether talking to them would change anything. Joining Sian Williams on the panel are retired British army officer Major General Tim Cross, associate editor with the Daily Mirror Kevin Maguire, historian and author Dr Amanda Foreman and managing director of the Quilliam Foundation, a counter extremist organisation, Haras Rafiq.
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