OK, but ISIS isn't in 7 countries.
But surely even YOU know that all those countries that have been bombed weren't all to do with ISIS. Why you are linking all seven of those countries with ISIS only God knows.
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British MPs yesterday voted overwhelmingly for Britain to get involved in airstrikes on ISIS in Iraq.
Of the 650 MPs, 524 voted for airstrikes and just 43 voted against, a majority of 481. Eighty-three abstained from voting.
The vote came after Prime Minister David Cameron said IS forces are "psychopathic terrorists trying to kill us".
It means that Britain has joined a growing coalition of countries partaking in airstrikes against Iraq and/or Syria, which includes the US, Australia, France, Denmark, Belgium, Netherlands and several Arab countries.
Yet Canada, as usual, sits on the sidelines and does nothing.
It is thought that RAF airstrikes will begin today.
Rushanara Ali, the Labour MP for Bethnal Green and Bow, immediately resigned from the party's front bench after the result was announced. It means she is now no longer Shadow Education Minister.
Labour leader Ed Miliband told her afterwards: "I know that you have thought long and hard about this. I respect and accept your resignation."
Ian McKenzie, the Labour MP for Inverclyde, was sacked as a parliamentary aide to Shadow Defence Secretary Vernon Coaker for voting against military action.
Britain has six Tornado GR4 fighter bombers in Cyprus ready to strike northern Iraq, a figure which Cabinet minister Kenneth Clarke said would make the UK's military contribution "almost symbolic".
The planes, which have been in RAF Akrotiri for the past six weeks carrying out surveillance missions in the Middle East, could begin airstrikes over the weekend.
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon told Sky News: "You're not going to see immediate military action - a wave of shock and awe or anything like that ... not tonight no, absolutely not.
"We have to select our targets in accordance with the American and international effort that's going on in Iraq.
"There's fighting around these towns - we have to fit in to the day-to-day fighting and see where we can help best."
Bethnal Green and Bow Labour MP Rushanara Ali, who was the Shadow Education Minister, immediately resigned after the result was announced
It came as the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said US-led airstrikes had already worsened a dire humanitarian crisis in Iraq and Syria.
Mr Cameron told the Commons debate that Islamist militants "have already murdered one British hostage" and are "threatening the lives of two more".
He described IS, which has invaded large areas of Syria and Iraq, as "a terrorist organisation unlike those we have dealt with before".
He said: "The brutality is staggering - beheadings, crucifixions, the gouging out of eyes, the use of rape as a weapon, the slaughter of children. All of these things belong to the dark ages."
During the six-and-a-half-hour debate, Mr Miliband said he understood the deep unease about taking military action, but said the UK could not stand by in the face of the threat from IS, also known as ISIL.
"ISIL is not simply a murderous organisation; it has ambitions for a state of its own - a caliphate across the Middle East, run according to their horrific norms and values," he said.
But in a typically firebrand intervention, outspoken Respect MP George Galloway said bombing would not work, and stressed the need to strengthen ground forces in the region.
He said: "ISIL is a death cult, it's a gang of terrorist murderers. It's not an army and it's certainly not an army that's going to be destroyed by aerial bombardment."
An RAF Tornado GR4 carrying Storm Shadow missiles
The Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Rev Justin Welby, backed UK airstrikes, telling the House of Lords: "The action proposed today is right."
But he warned "we must not rely on a short-term solution" and a wider effort was needed to turn extremists away from the "evil of ISIL".
On Thursday, the Cabinet unanimously backed military action against IS, which could last up to three years.
The PM was desperate to avoid the embarrassment of the Commons defeat on Syria airstrikes last year, and tabled a cautiously-worded motion intended to win support from all parties for action in Iraq.
Some of the locations in Syria hit by US airstrikes
Overnight, the US continued to hit suspected IS positions in Syria for a fifth consecutive day of attacks.
The Pentagon said the raids had disrupted lucrative oil-pumping operations that have helped fund IS militants, but that a final victory would need an on-the-ground campaign.
RAF Jets Poised To Strike Jihadists In Iraq
Operation Shader is ready to go: Britain buys 20 Tomahawk missiles ready to strike IS today as SAS on ground and Tornadoes in air prepare to take country back to war
The Tomahawk missiles have already been fired in the Gulf by the US and are likely to be among the first weapons used by the British military in the fight against Islamic State terrorists. A Royal Navy hunter-killer nuclear submarine carrying Tomahawks is already in place in the region awaiting targets for attack. The submarines loiter offshore before going to depth to fire the missiles, which can cover more than 850 miles, can be retargeted in flight and can loiter above a target for more than two hours.
A Royal Navy hunter-killer nuclear submarine carrying Tomahawks is already in place in the region awaiting targets for attack.
Britain buys 20 Tomahawk missiles ready to strike IS: £1million bombs are fired from submarines and can be programmed to turn corners* | Daily Mail Online