The Region: A disgrace in the making
05/06/2012 22:12
US policy toward Syria is turning into a scandal on both strategic and humanitarian grounds.
Damaged houses, vehicles in Homs, Syria Photo: Reuters
US policy toward Syria is turning into a scandal on both strategic and
humanitarian grounds. The next three months will be wasted in a toothless
observer effort during which time the Syrian regime will go on massacring people
and mopping up the rebellion. In addition, US policymakers admit that they have
no real back-up policy or idea what they should do next.
And then, to
show how ridiculous the whole thing is, Syrian troops opened fire at
oppositionists trying to talk to the UN monitors, forcing the observers to flee
for their lives and injuring eight demonstrators. The UN responds by proposing a
few dozen more equally helpless observers.
This is the same UN that in
2006 promised Israel that it would intercept Syrian weapons being smuggled to
Hezbollah in Lebanon and stop that radical group from reoccupying its pre-war
positions in the south of the country. In six years, not a single weapon has
been intercepted and not a single Hezbollah terrorist stopped. On the
contrary, with Syrian backing, Hezbollah has terrorized the thousands of
soldiers in the UN forces in Lebanon.
There should be no question as to
what should be done. Along with Iran, North Korea and Cuba, the Syrian regime is
the most anti-American government in the world. It has done everything possible
to sabotage US interests, to sponsor terrorism and to block peace. The Syrian
regime is also Iran’s main ally.
Any conceivable president who cared
about or understood US interests would make the overthrow of the Syrian regime a
top priority for the United States. I’m not talking about sending troops or
going to war but about every conceivable other means. This should be
blindingly obvious.
In addition, any competent president would work hard
to help the moderate pro-democratic forces in the Syrian opposition so that they
can gain power in the country. Instead, the Obama administration that
subcontracted dealing with the Syrian regime to the UN has subcontracted dealing
with the Syrian opposition to the Islamist regime in Turkey. Not surprisingly,
the Turkish regime has pushed Muslim Brothers and other Islamists and their
clients into the “official” leadership of the Syrian opposition, the Syrian
National Council. This has led to a fracturing of opposition
leadership.
And the Syrian regime is being rewarded with no more pressure
and being given the ability to stall for time even though it has already
violated the cease-fire. This is not merely a bad US and Western policy; it is
the worst possible policy, lacking any strategy to undermine the radicals and
help the moderates.
After two-and-a-half years of the Obama
administration treating this enemy as a friend we have seen almost a year of
dithering over the opportunity to get rid of the regime. It is like when the
administration ignored the stealing of the election in Iran and the opposition
movement there, as if it wanted to coddle, not confound, the Tehran regime. It
also came to the rescue of the Hamas regime in the Gaza Strip, pressing Israel
to minimize sanctions.
In contrast, the administration has not hesitated
to overthrow an ally in Egypt, and came close to doing that in
Bahrain. The pattern is that the radical side breaks every agreement,
rejects compromise and escalates aggression and the Obama administration takes
it all with a smile on its face and a song in its heart.
But back to
Syria. Even the pro-Obama CNN network is amazed by US policy. It admits the UN
mission will fail, agrees that the Syrian government is the aggressor in
shredding the ceasefire – using heavy weapons aimed at civilian targets, and
adds:
“Monitoring missions can only work when the parties to a conflict have had
enough of fighting or can be coerced into negotiation by outside powers. The
Arab League mission members in Syria earlier this year were little more than
bystanders, unable or unwilling to operate amid the government
crackdown... the [Syrian] government has made it clear that the observers
won’t have free rein.”
Ahmad Fawzi, spokesman for the UN envoy Kofi
Annan, whose past record hardly inspires confidence, says two truly shocking
things: “The United States is leaving it in the hands of Kofi Annan, as is the
rest of the world... We’re the only path in town. There is no
alternative.”
But why should the United States turn over its policy to
the UN, especially since a number of members are pro-Syrian regime and blocking
any serious action? And have we really reached a point in time when the UN can
present itself as the only channel for international action?
In other words, it
is assumed that the United States can have no independent policy. CNN accepts
that view, adding, “That in itself illustrates how few options there are for the
West to influence events in Syria.”
That’s nonsense. There are many other
options. But how can there be hope for any alternative when a US official
actually admits:
“Our allies were coming back to us and saying, ‘What’s your
next move?,’ and we were forced to admit we didn’t have one.”
The US
economy is merely hopelessly in debt, but US foreign policy, especially in the
Middle East, is hopelessly bankrupt.
The writer’s book, Israel: An
Introduction, has just been published by Yale University Press. He is director
of global research in the International Affairs (GLORIA) Center and a featured
columnist at PJM and editor of the Middle East Review of International Affairs
(MERIA) Journal.