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Date: Sat, Aug 31, 2013 at 11:06 PM
Subject: Obama Increasingly Isolated on Syria as Opposition Mounts at Home
and Abroad
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 Obama Increasingly Isolated on Syria as Opposition Mounts at Home and
Abroad 
<http://portside.org/2013-08-31/obama-increasingly-isolated-syria-opposition-mounts-home-and-abroad>


 Mark Weisbrot
August 31, 2013
Guardian 
(UK)<http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/aug/30/obama-opposition-mounting-syria-strike>

*Does anyone still believe that the massive surveillance operations
revealed by Edward Snowden were really geared toward protecting us from
terrorists?*


Demonstrators walk past the Houses of Parliament in London, ITV News/Adam
Smith <http://www.itv.com/news/story/2013-08-30/cameron-syria/>,


President Obama’s proposed “humanitarian” bombing of Syria, which seemed
like a done deal just a few days ago, is now running into serious trouble
both at home and abroad.  This is a great thing for those who care about
human life and increases the chances that Washington and its allies may
eventually be forced to support a negotiated solution to Syria’s bloody
civil war.

In a major blow to both Prime Minister David Cameron and President Obama,
the U.K. parliament voted on Thursday to reject a military attack on Syria,
and Cameron pledged to respect their decision.

Now we can see why the Obama administration has been in such a hurry to lob
cruise missiles at Syria, that it didn’t want to wait even a couple of days
for the U.N. inspectors to do their job.   No one had put forth any
military or security reason for the rush to attack; no one claimed that
speed was essential or even relevant to saving any lives.  Rather, it now
seems, the urge to shoot first and ask questions later was driven by the
need to carry out this illegal attack before the public, and their
representatives in national and international bodies, could weigh in.

The U.S. public has been deeply suspicious because of what the New York
Times politely calls the “botched intelligence” leading up to the Iraq war,
which most Americans would more plainly refer to as “lies.”  Then yesterday
the Associated Press reported that “the intelligence linking Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad or his inner circle to an alleged chemical
weapons attack that killed at least 100 people is no 'slam dunk,'" and that
this “uncertainty calls into question the statements by Kerry and Vice
President Joe Biden."

Time is not on the side of the “humanitarian” would-be bombers. Here in
Washington, at least 162 members of the U.S. House of Representatives have
publicly demanded a congressional debate and vote before the U.S. takes any
military action against Syria. This is of course a legal requirement in the
United States, under our Constitution and the 1973 War Powers Resolution.
The Republicans lost their majority in Congress in 2006 because of the Iraq
war, so there are political risks here that will be more noticed as the
debate widens.

Even before the British parliamentary vote, the Obama team had less
legitimacy and popular support for its proposed bombing than almost any
U.S. military action has had in recent history. There was no U.N. Security
Council resolution, which would be the requirement for legality under
international law;  no support from the Arab League, nor even one Arab
government, which Washington had for the bombing of Libya; not even NATO,
which Washington can generally count on for almost any war. And now the UK
has refused to join Obama’s “coalition of the willing,” leaving him with an
unprecedented level of international isolation if he chooses to carry out
his threat to bomb Syria.

Americans are against the intervention by a 60 percent majority; similar or
larger majorities in Germany, France, the U.K., Turkey, Egypt, and what
looks like most of the world are also against it.

Then there is the problem of even defining what the objectives are.  Obama
has insisted that his goal is “not regime change,” and that is probably the
most believable part of his story.  Unfortunately the implications of this
pledge turn out to be even uglier than an attempted overthrow. Much uglier.
War advocate Edward Luttwak described in the New York Times what is very
likely official policy:  bleed both sides indefinitely, and then maybe pick
up the pieces when there is not much left of either.  This makes “sense”
from a ruthless, imperial point of view, since the strategic objective for
years has been to weaken Assad, but now that Al-Qaida-type forces are the
bulk of the military opposition, their victory is not very appealing.

The strategy is reminiscent of (then Senator) Harry Truman’s statement
about WWII on June 23, 1941:

    If we see that Germany is winning we ought to help Russia and if Russia
is winning we ought to help Germany, and that way let them kill as many as
possible.

So there you have it: A government that has long lost the moral high ground
through military interventions that have slaughtered vastly more civilians
than Assad’s forces could ever kill, seeking support for an effort to
prolong a hideous civil war.  No wonder Obama’s PR campaign is not working.
And no wonder there are
worries<http://democrats.foreignaffairs.house.gov/113/Letter_for_Rep_Engel_19_Aug_13.pdf>
about greater involvement from military officials like U.S. Army Chief of
Staff Martin Dempsey – the military, for its part, likes to have a clearer
objective than trying to prolong a war.

And Americans, take note: What does it tell you about our leaders’ real
concern about protecting us from terrorism, when they have been willing to
create a situation that has brought fanatical terrorists (some actually
affiliated with Al-Qaida) to the brink of state power, just to possibly
advance Washington’s influence in the Middle East?  Does anyone still
believe that the massive surveillance operations revealed by Edward Snowden
were really geared toward protecting us from terrorists?

The Russians, who are widely condemned for supplying arms to the Syrian
government, look reasonable by comparison to the U.S.  Unlike Washington
and its allies, who have insisted on Assad’s resignation as a starting
point for talks, the Russians have at least pushed for a negotiated
solution to the civil war.  This could possibly have saved tens of
thousands of lives if Washington and its allies had only been interested in
negotiating.  And despite the ugly mess that Western intervention has
helped create, it is still the only solution to the conflict going forward.
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-- 

You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up
a nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on
the foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



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