What are we doing here?
US Policy in Syria or Lack Thereof
When
researching this post, I had some trouble finding a clear explanation of what
America is doing in Syria. The simplest and perhaps morally clearest answer is
that we are in Syria to save lives. Thus far, however, we have signally failed
to do so. Bashar Assad launches artillery and air strikes on cities and towns
without even a pretense of aiming at military targets. Jihadist rebels behead
civilians and innocents with impunity, including one of their own on at least
one occasion (http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/16/world/middleeast/beheading-in-syria-is-called-a-mistake.html?_r=0).
America does nothing. Only when chemical weapons are used to
murder hundreds of civilians does America threaten to intervene. Aha- perhaps
America’s goal is to prevent the proliferation and use of these hideous
weapons? But in that case, why have we failed to prevent the numerous small-scale
chemical weapons uses over the course of the war? Even more telling, why are we
training and arming groups of rebels in Jordan whose only stated goal is to
topple Assad and have no interest in containing chemical weapons? However, if
we are actually attempting to topple Assad, as our support of these groups
would suggest, why haven’t we intervened more directly? The aforementioned
chemical attacks and humanitarian abuses provide a ready excuse to establish a
no-fly zone, at the very least; that is, if the American people were willing to
make that commitment.
And
that, I believe, is the source of the contradictory objectives in Syria. The
people would like to see the humanitarian abuses but are unwilling to expend
American lives on doing so. They want Assad gone but are unwilling to become
embroiled in another Iraq or Afghanistan. But the current conflicting
approaches provide the worst of both worlds. By lending our name to the Syrian
opposition we allow our enemies to paint every Assad victory and indeed the
very survival of the regime as a victory against the overwhelming might of the
United States. The longer we stand with our toes in the water, the more brutal
Assad will be and the less palatable the opposition will become. Yet the humanitarian
crisis will only deepen, making it harder to back out entirely.
And the American people
will complain innocently about our loss of prestige and respect abroad.
Either get in or get out.
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