I'm against putting our troops there, because for one thing, it's never a quick in and out. Look at how long the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have lasted. Also, too many never make it out alive. Not to mention our troops coming back with physical, mental and emotional issues that very few people care to address. They are doped up, nobody wants to hire them, broken marriages, and they're basically kicked to the curb, if they commit suicide...oh well.
Besides that, war is a very expensive proposition financially:
"The number of American troops who have died fighting the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan totaled 6,802 as of April 2014. Those individuals came from every part of the United States and its territories, and the great majority were young men. Many were married, with children, and all left families with a lifetime of pain.
They died in a host of horrific ways. They were killed by insurgents’ deadly targeting or mangled in the dangerous equipment with which they worked. The causes of death include hostile rocket-propelled grenade fire and the improvised explosive devices that have been responsible for roughly half of all deaths and injuries in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Their deaths were also the result of truck rollovers and other vehicle crashes, electrocutions, heatstroke deaths, friendly fire, and suicides in theater.
Official Pentagon numbers recognize only some of the war dead, however. Uncounted are the many troops who return home and kill themselves as a result of war wounds such as PTSD. The military does not report suicides among non-active duty reservists, and the Department of Veterans Affairs still does not report suicides among all veterans, resulting in dramatic under-reporting of the scale of the problem.
While the mortally wounded US soldier is the “gold standard” of war deaths for many Americans, the military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan have produced fatalities among large and unrecognized numbers of private contract workers. In April 2014, the over 61,000 contractors in Afghanistan outnumbered the uniformed US troops there. [1] While contractors have been killed in large numbers, a full and accurate accounting has not yet been done by the Pentagon.
An estimated 6,800 contractors working for the US have been killed in the two war zones; the true number is likely much larger. This is the consequence of the fact that the majority of US contractors are the citizens of other countries, many of whom appear not to have had their deaths or injuries reported. (Page updated as of May 2014)"
http://costsofwar.org/article/us-killed-0
http://antiwar.com/casualties/
As AZJim already pointed out, Pearl Harbor was an attack on the United States.
I agree that America is greatly divided, and I think that the 24 hour "news" cycle, and the biases of the main-stream media contribute to that greatly. Rather than report facts, and discuss resolutions to the issues, they take sides, repeat sound bites over and over, and basically get everyone in an uproar. Although we are all Americans who want what's best for ourselves and our country, we have different ideas on how to accomplish that. Bickering between the parties will likely never end.
By the way, I have great respect for you and your opinions, and I thank you for your service to our country. I think those who have served have a greater understanding of what war entails, and the true costs of war, regardless of their political affiliation. Many of us who have never served in the military, or been closely affected by war, can learn a lot by just listening to facts and opinions.