In the face of an uprising that has catalyzed and channeled anger, frustrations and resentments of a significant part of the Sunni world, a uniquely military response will never suffice, however impressive its gains on the ground, according to terror experts.
And yet the underlying problems in many parts of the Arab world -- starting with chaos, poor governance and poverty -- run deep. With places like the besieged Syrian city of Aleppo descending into chaos, no easy solutions are in sight.
"With the new US administration coming, there is an instinctive, 'We got to be tougher,'" former CIA chief Michael Hayden said at the conference, sponsored by the Jamestown Foundation think tank. "But if it was about our ability to kill people, we'd have been done 14 years ago."
"We can't kill our way out of this," he said. "If we do nothing except get tougher, we'll have to get tougher multiple times in the future," he added.
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Bruce Riedel, a former CIA analyst and counterterrorism expert now with the prestigious Brookings Institution, stressed the limits of what he called a "decapitation strategy" aimed mainly at the leadership of groups like IS or Al-Qaeda.
"It's not a strategy to address the underlying problems that created Al-Qaeda, or the Islamic State, or Boko Haram," he said.
The first challenge, he said, "is the Arab world: today, it is in chaos. It is descending into an abyss of hell that we are only beginning to see the outlines of.
"As bad as Aleppo is, as bad as Mosul is, I think it's almost certainly going to get much worse."
He said he saw "no sign" that the chaos that has appeared since the Arab Spring uprisings of 2011 was coming to an end.