Obama
<http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/09/21/obamas-syria-strategy-is-the-definition
-of-insanity/> ’s Syria Strategy Is the Definition of Insanity


Another ceasefire is in tatters. But America keeps reaching out to Russia
while expecting a different result.

*       By Charles Lister <http://foreignpolicy.com/author/charles-lister>
Charles Lister is a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute and a senior
consultant to The Shaikh Group’s Track II Syria Dialogue Initiative

The latest diplomatic attempt to bring calm to Syria and pave a pathway
toward peace appears to have failed. After a week of blocked aid deliveries
and cease-fire violations, Russian aircraft on Monday reportedly
<http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-idUSKCN11Q1NR>
bombed a joint U.N.-Syrian Arab Red Crescent (SARC) aid convoy and warehouse
outside Aleppo, killing nearly half of its staff, including
<https://twitter.com/Charles_Lister/status/777946159750979584>  a SARC
regional aid director.

The attack came just minutes after Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime
declared
<http://www.dw.com/en/syrian-army-declares-end-of-ceasefire/a-19562194>  the
cease-fire dead. Several dozen more people were then killed and wounded in
heavy air and artillery strikes on the besieged rebel-held districts of
Aleppo city. 

The remains <https://twitter.com/Charles_Lister/status/778313520450506752>
of a Russian air-dropped OFAB-type fragmentation bomb have been discovered
in the wreckage of the SARC warehouse, and U.S. investigations have
concluded that Russian Sukhoi Su-24 jets were responsible. Speaking after
the incident, U.N. humanitarian chief Stephen O’Brien said
<http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=54969#.V-LB1iErIdU>  the
bombing — which lasted nearly two hours — could be a “war crime.”

None of this should come as a surprise, even as the consequences are
potentially devastating. The Russian government, much less the Assad regime,
has never been a reliable partner for peace in Syria. But even after
Russia’s alleged bombing of the aid convoy, U.S. President Barack Obama’s
administration is still plowing its energies into a deal that aims to work
with the Russian government.

Despite the flagrant violation of international humanitarian law, U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry stood in New York on Tuesday and maintained
<http://www.wsj.com/articles/syria-cease-fire-in-trouble-as-international-sy
ria-support-group-meets-1474354934>  that the “cease-fire is not dead.” The
Obama administration appears to believe that the escalating fighting
elsewhere in Syria — including the targeted airstrike on a medical facility
in the town of Khan Touman late Tuesday, which killed 13 people
<https://twitter.com/StefanieDekker/status/778487750207168512>  — is just a
figment of the world’s imagination.

On Wednesday, Kerry told the U.N. Security Council that Russia’s denial of
responsibility for targeting the aid convoy was evidence that it lived in a
“parallel universe
<https://www.buzzfeed.com/hayesbrown/kerry-russia-living-in-parallel-univers
e-on-syria?utm_term=.ixazbYDajq#.wmb4zNWLV2> ,” but, even so, he proceeded
to call for another go at the very same deal that failed only a week prior.

The Obama administration has viewed the Syrian crisis through the lens of
counterterrorism.

The Obama administration has viewed the Syrian crisis through the lens of
counterterrorism. But diplomatic failures such as this one continue to
embolden extremist actors like al Qaeda, which has purposely presented
itself as a reliable and necessary opposition ally, seemingly dedicated only
to the cause of ridding Syria of the Assad regime. By so deeply embedding
within Syrian revolutionary dynamics and claiming to fill the vacuum left
behind by insufficient foreign support or protection, al Qaeda’s narrative
is constantly strengthened by perceptions of American inadequacy. Thus, U.S.
failures do not exist in a vacuum — our adversaries quickly translate them
into their own victories.

It is long past time for the United States to reassess its shameful approach
to the Syrian crisis. Both the Islamic State and al Qaeda are symptoms of
the conflict, and the conflict itself is a symptom of fundamentally failed
governance. In choosing to treat the symptoms, Washington continues to
reduce its chances of resolving the larger issues at play in Syria.

It should now be patently clear that contrary to the hopes of some, the
Russian government is not the key to controlling the Assad regime’s heinous
behaviors. For a week straight, the Syrian government consistently ignored
Moscow’s demands and destroyed a cease-fire deal that had been largely of
Russia’s making. The regime also reinforced its troop positions around
Aleppo and amassed forces opposite the strategic northern town of Jisr
al-Shughour, and its aircraft were blamed for bombings around Aleppo, north
of the city of Homs, and in parts of southern Daraa governorate. And after
the Assad government declared the cease-fire over, Russia ferociously
destroyed an aid convoy intended for 78,000 civilians.

The Syrian regime’s decision to scuttle the latest diplomatic effort should
drive home one simple point: Bashar al-Assad does not intend to step down
from power, and he will use any means at his disposal to prevent that from
happening. From industrialized arrest, torture, chemical weapons, barrel
bombs, and incendiary and cluster weapons to medieval-style sieges — no
method is too severe if it helps him pursue his goal. Beyond feeble public
appeals and a 2013 agreement to destroy Syria’s chemical weapons, which
appears to have left some behind
<https://foreignpolicy.com/2016/09/16/chemical-weapons-watchdog-continues-hu
nt-for-syrias-elusive-nerve-agent/>  and ignored the regime’s chlorine gas
attacks, the United States has never chosen to challenge such brazen
brutality. And that’s why these tactics remain decidedly in use by the Assad
regime.

The United States can no longer continue its meek attempts to contain the
Syrian crisis’s effects.

The United States can no longer continue its meek attempts to contain the
Syrian crisis’s effects. Five years ago, Syria was a local problem; today it
is an international one. U.S. indecision, risk aversion, a total divergence
between rhetoric and policy, and a failure to uphold clearly stated “red
lines” have all combined into what can best be described as a cold-hearted,
hypocritical approach. At worst, Washington has indirectly abetted the
wholesale destruction of a nation-state, in direct contradiction to its
fundamental national security interests and its most tightly held values.

These failures began in the early days of the Syrian uprising. Though the
Obama administration first proclaimed that Assad had lost his legitimacy in
July 2011, it took more than a year after that to develop a meaningful
policy to assist the opposition. Even then, U.S. support consisted only of
providing food and nonlethal equipment. Later, the CIA’s vet, train, and
equip program to the Free Syrian Army found some minimal success, but U.S.
commitment remained negligible when compared with our often uncoordinated
regional allies, such as Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar. It seems U.S.
officials wanted Assad out but wanted others — whom administration officials
would say in private they did not trust — to do it for them.

The result? Nearly half a million people dead, more than 1 million people
living under siege, and 11 million people displaced. Catastrophic refugee
flows have led to an anti-immigrant backlash in Europe and the rise of
far-right politics while Syria is now home to perhaps the greatest
concentration of jihadi militants in any single country ever. Put aside the
threat posed by the Islamic State for a second: Syria now hosts a thriving
de facto al Qaeda affiliate, Jabhat Fateh al-Sham — formerly the Nusra Front
— the most capable, politically savvy, and militarily powerful al Qaeda
movement in history. Al Qaeda’s central leadership has also revitalized
itself inside Syria, with the international terrorist organization’s newly
named deputy leader almost certainly residing
<http://foreignpolicy.com/2016/05/04/al-qaeda-is-about-to-establish-an-emira
te-in-northern-syria/>  in the country. The correlation is simple: U.S.
shortcomings equal al Qaeda’s success in Syria.

After several years of ignoring this threat, U.S. policymakers finally
turned their attention to al Qaeda this year. It was too late. Washington’s
repeated failures had already given the jihadis the time and space to shape
the dynamics of the war such that any attack by the United States or Russia
would only further undermine U.S. influence and empower al Qaeda.
Unfortunately, it is indisputably true that most Syrians living in
opposition areas now view al Qaeda as a more trustworthy and capable
protector of their lives than the United States. If there were ever a sign
of policy failure, this would be it.

Faced with this situation, the United States must consider addressing its
Syria policy shortcomings, beginning with five key points. First, Assad is
not and can never be the solution for Syria. There is simply no scenario in
which any meaningful portion of opposition society will ever give in to his
rule. The longer Assad remains in power, the more extremists will benefit.

Second, there will be no purely military solution to Syria’s conflict — a
negotiated settlement is the only feasible path toward stability. However,
Assad will never treat a political process with any level of seriousness
until placed under meaningful pressure, which the United States has thus far
done everything in its power not to do.

When it comes time to design that negotiated settlement, diplomats should
keep in mind a third key point: 

A partition would not only fail to solve Syria’s conflict, but it would also
likely exacerbate the existing drivers and create new ones.

A partition would not only fail to solve Syria’s conflict, but it would also
likely exacerbate the existing drivers and create new ones. Opposition to
partition is arguably the single issue that unites communities supportive of
and opposed to Assad.

Fourth, combating al Qaeda in Syria cannot be done solely with bullets and
bombs. Defeating it is instead an issue of providing a more attractive and
sustainable alternative to the jihadi group’s narrative. Given its
successful efforts to embed within the opposition and build popular
acceptance as a military (not a political) ally, al Qaeda does not represent
a conventional counterterrorist problem. Adopting conventional means such as
airstrikes will fail to defeat the group, and instead we must out-compete
it.

Finally, although the Islamic State may be an adversary the United States
can fight largely in isolation from the broader Syrian crisis, it remains an
asymmetric and opportunistic terrorist movement. By its very nature, it can
be counted on to exploit the continued conflict in Syria for its own ends.
If Assad remains in place indefinitely and the conflict continues or
worsens, the Islamic State will undoubtedly live to fight another day.

When questioned on the failure of the current U.S. policy in Syria, senior
members of the Obama administration — and indeed the president himself —
have repeatedly and cynically proclaimed: “What’s the alternative?” as if to
say there are none. In fact, there are alternatives, and they all require a
more determined use of U.S. hard and soft power.

Civilian protection should remain the core focus of any broad-based
strategy, but it must be backed up by real and discernible consequences for
violators. Given the five-year U.S. track record, the Assad regime knows all
too well Washington’s hesitancy to threaten the use of anything close to
force, and Damascus has repeatedly reaped the rewards of that impotent
stance. If the United States hopes to develop an effective Syria policy,
that has to change quickly.

Many Syria experts and commentators claim that it is either too late to
rescue the country or that we must now wait for a new president in
Washington. The first claim is not yet true, but the latter may end up
ensuring that it eventually becomes so. Skeptics of a more assertive
approach to the Syrian crisis can deride their critics as much as they want
— but one would hope that after five years of failures, they would at least
admit that they have got something wrong. In the meantime, we will have to
watch the results of the shameful U.S. approach play out on our television
screens — until the day when those results might hit us at home.

 

 

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko" 

 

 

 

 

_______________________________________________
Ugandanet mailing list
[email protected]
http://kym.net/mailman/listinfo/ugandanet

UGANDANET is generously hosted by INFOCOM http://www.infocom.co.ug/

All Archives can be found at http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

The above comments and data are owned by whoever posted them (including 
attachments if any). The List's Host is not responsible for them in any way.
---------------------------------------

Reply via email to