No but we can lean from it; that and the 'highly successful' intervention in Libya where things are not a great deal better today.
People can argue as much as they want about our "obligations" and if a humanitarian crisis exists or not but there are some really fundamental questions that need answering before we make any moves.
1) Assuming we can use air superiority followed by a somewhat traditional ground force to beat down the "state-like" macro organization that is ISIS; how will we deal with what is left? The Taliban still exists! Al-qaeda still exists. If we don't get them all these groups reorganize or survivors form new groups (ISIS). How do we tell the good guys from the bad after the more 'regular' forces are dispersed? Are we going to raise an army of 500K people again and go house to house? Why will that work better than last time? Why won't we find ourselves right back here in another ten yours a little older and little poorer.
2) Can we politically do this right now. The current president is on his way out in two short years. Much of his core electorate is made up of anti-war types. There is no reason to think his chosen successor whoever that turns out to be is a lock for the election. Our enemies are no stupid they know this. They know if they make the right moves at the right time they might well break our resolve. How do we handle that exactly, We don't even have a solid pro-intervention/anti-intervention trend down our major party lines right now?
3) Could we find the troops required. I doubt there is political will for a draft. The worst of the economic crisis is over. People remember stop loss abuses and heavy leanings on gaurdsmen. There has been a force size reduction in progress now for some time. If we try to muster a serge will folks volunteer?
4) Putin and Assads relationship is a wildcard, given our already tense situation with Russia, is going into Syria (which most seem to agree is needed to really deal with ISIS) kicking a hornets nest, are we prepared to deal with the consequences. We don't seem to be where Ukraine is concerned, not where the rubber meets the road anyway. Nobody is drawing up papers to join them with NATO. The EU is not prepared to stop buying Russian gas, etc.
Honestly I don't think we are doing ourselves any favors with this tuff talk. The best thing to do right now in my mind is sit back and watch, hopefully develop some quality intelligence resources.