The End of
Syria as We Know It?
Why Obama is Declaring War on Syria
By Franklin Lamb
(Beirut) – The short answer is Iran and Hezbollah according to Congressional sources. “The Syrian army’s victory at al-Qusayr was more than the administration could accept given that town’s strategic position in the region. Its capture by the Assad forces has essentially added Syria to Iran’s list of victories starting with Afghanistan, Lebanon, Iraq, as well as its growing influence in the Gulf.”
Why Obama is Declaring War on Syria
By Franklin Lamb
(Beirut) – The short answer is Iran and Hezbollah according to Congressional sources. “The Syrian army’s victory at al-Qusayr was more than the administration could accept given that town’s strategic position in the region. Its capture by the Assad forces has essentially added Syria to Iran’s list of victories starting with Afghanistan, Lebanon, Iraq, as well as its growing influence in the Gulf.”
Other
sources are asserting that Obama actually did not want to invoke
direct military aid the rebels fighting to topple the Assad
government or even to make use of American military power in
Syria for several reasons. Among these are the lack of American
public support for yet another American war in the Middle East,
the fact that there appears to be no acceptable alternative to
the Assad government on the horizon, the position of the US
intelligence community and the State Department and Pentagon
that intervention in Syria would potentially turn out very badly
for the US and gut what’s left of its influence in the region.
It short, that the US getting involved in Syria could turn out
even worse than Iraq, by intensifying a regional sectarian war
without any positive outcome in sight.
Obama was
apparently serious earlier about a negotiated diplomatic
settlement pre-Qusayr and there were even some positives signs
coming from Damascus, Moscow, and even Tehran John Kerry
claimed. But that has changed partly because Russia and the US
have both hardened their demands. Consequently, the Obama
administration has now essentially thrown in the towel on the
diplomatic track. This observer was advised by more than one
Congressional staffer that Obama’s team has concluded that the
Assad government was not getting their message or taking them
seriously and that Assad’s recent military gains and rising
popular support meant that a serious Geneva II initiative was
not going to happen.
In
addition, Obama has been weakened recently by domestic politics
and a number of distractions and potential scandals not least of
which is the disclosures regarding the massive NSA privacy
invasion. In addition, the war lobby led by Senators McClain and
Lindsay Graham is still pounding their drums and claim that
Obama would be in violation of his oath of office and by
jeopardizing the national security interest of the United States
by allowing Iran to essentially own Syria once Assad quells the
uprising.” Both Senators welcomed the chemical weapons
assessment. For months they have been saying that Obama has not
been doing enough to help the rebels. “U.S. credibility is on
the line,” they said in a joint statement this week. “Now is not
the time to merely take the next incremental step. Now is the
time for more decisive actions,” they said, such as using
long-range missiles to degrade Assad’s air power and missile
capabilities. Another neo-con, Sen. Robert P. Casey Jr. (D-Pa.)
said the opposition forces risk defeat without heavier weapons,
but he also warned that may not be enough. “The U.S. should move
swiftly to shift the balance on the ground in Syria by
considering grounding the Syrian air force with stand-off
weapons and protecting a safe zone in northern Syria with
Patriot missiles in Turkey,” Casey said.
According
to some analysts, Obama could alternatively authorize the arming
and training of the Syrian opposition in Jordan without a no-fly
zone. That appears unlikely according to this observers
Washington interlocutors because the Pentagon wants to end the
Syrian crisis by summers end, the observer was advised “rather
than working long term with a motley bunch of jihadists who we
could never trust or rely on. The administration has come to the
conclusion apparently that if they are in for a penny they are
in for a pound, meaning would not allow Iran to control Syria
and Hezbollah to pocket Lebanon.”
Secretary
of State Kerry had meetings with more than two dozen military
specialists on 5/13/13. The Washington Post is reporting that
Kerry believes supplying the rebels with weapons might be too
little and too late to actually flip the balance on the Syrian
ground and this calls “for a military strike to paralyze
Al-Assad’s military capacities.” A Pentagon source reported that
the USA, France, and Britain are considering a decisive
decision to reverse the current Assad momentum and quickly
construct one in favor of the rebels” within a time period not
exceeding the end of this summer.
Shortly
after the meetings began, King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia quickly
returned to Saudi Arabia from his palace at Casa Blanca, Morocco
after receiving a call from his intelligence chief, Prince
Bandar Bin Sultan. Bander reportedly had a representative at the
White House during the meetings with President Obama’s team.
King Abdullah was reportedly advised by Kerry to be prepared for
a rapid expansion of the growing regional conflict.
What
happens between now and the end of summer is likely to be
catastrophic for the Syrian public and perhaps Lebanon. The
“chemical weapons-red line” is not taken seriously on Capitol
Hill for the reason that the same “inclusive evidence” of months
ago is the same that is suddenly being cited to justify what may
become essentially an all-out war against the Syrian government
and anyone who gets in the way. Hand wringing over the loss of
125 lives due to chemical weapons, whoever did use them, pales
in comparison to the more 50,000 additional lives that will be
lost in the coming months, a figure that Pentagon planners and
the White House have “budgeted” as the price of toppling the
Assad government.
“We are
going to see a rapid escalation of the conflict”, a staffer on
the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee emailed this observer:
“The president has made a decision to give whatever humanitarian
aid, as well as political and diplomatic support to the
opposition that in necessary. Additionally direct support to the
(Supreme Military Council), will be provided and that includes
military support.” The staffer quoted the words of Deputy
National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes to the media on 5/13/13 to
the same effect.
A part of
this “humanitarian assistance” the US is going to established in
the coming weeks a “limited, humanitarian no-fly zone, that will
begin along several miles of the Jordanian and Turkish borders
in certain military areas into Syrian territory, and would be
set up and presented as a limited bid to train and equip rebel
forces and protect refugees. But in reality, as we saw in Libya
a Syrian no fly zone would very likely include all of Syria.
Libya’s
no-fly zones made plain that there is no such thing as a
“limited zone”. Put briefly, a “no-fly zone” means essentially
a declaration of all-out war. Once the US and its allies start
a no fly zone they will expand it and intensify it as they take
countless other military actions to protect its zones until the
Syrian government falls. “It’s breathtaking to contemplate how
this in going to end and how Iran and Russia will respond,” one
source concluded.
The White
House is trying to assuage the few in Congress as well as a
majority of the American public that it can be a limited
American involved and that the no-fly zone would not require the
destruction of Syrian antiaircraft batteries. This is more
nonsense. During the no-fly zone I witnessed from Libya in the
summer of 2011 the US backed it up with all manner of refueling,
electronic jamming, special-ops on the ground and by mid-July a
kid peddling his bike was not safe. Over the 192 days of
patrolling the Libyan no-fly zones, NATO countries flew 24,682
sorties including 9,204 bomb strike sorties. NATO claimed it
never missed its target but that was also not true. Hundreds of
civilians were killed in Libya by no-fly zone attack aircraft
that either missed their targets and emptied their bomb bays
before returning to base while conducting approximately 48
bombing strikes per day using a variety of bombs and missiles,
including more than 350 cruise Tomahawks.
At a
Congressional hearing in 2011, then US Secretary of Defense
Robert Gates got it right when he explained which discussing
Libya “a no-fly zone begins with an attack to destroy all the
air defenses … and then you can fly planes around the country
and not worry about our guys being shot down. But that’s the way
it starts.”
According
to the accounts published in American media, Obama could
alternatively authorize the arming and training of the Syrian
opposition in Jordan without a no-fly zone. That appears
unlikely because the Pentagon wants to end the Syrian crisis by
summers end, the observer was advised “rather than working long
term with a motley bunch of jihadists who we could never trust
or rely on. The administration has come to the conclusion
apparently that if they are in for a penny they are in for a
pound.”
In
response to a question from this observer about how he thought
event might unfold in this region over the coming months, a very
insightful long-term congressional aid replied: “Well Franklin,
maybe someone will pull a rabbit out of the hat to stop the push
for war. But frankly I doubt it. From where I sit I’d wager
that Syria as we have known it may soon be no more. And perhaps
some other countries in the region also.”
Franklin Lamb
is doing research in Syria and Lebanon and can be reached c/o
fplamb@gmail.com
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