When New York Times columnist Roger Cohen, a man who finds
much to applaud in the presidency of Barack Obama, denounces the president’s
Syria policy so unequivocally, his words are well worth noting.
It is refreshing to see someone who is presumably liberal
holding the president accountable for one of his greatest failures. After all,
most Democrats think that the fault lies entirely with George W. Bush.
To be fair, in blaming Obama for the Syria debacle Cohen is laying
down a predicate. He is saying that since we are responsible we should be
taking in many more Syrian refugees. That much said, one can disagree with his effort to guilt trip the country while still noting the cogency of his accusations.
He begins by describing the situation in Aleppo, a city that
is currently besieged by the Syrian Army, with the help of Russia:
Aleppo,
Syria’s largest city, is now virtually encircled by the Syrian Army. A war that
has already produced a quarter of a million dead, more
than 4.5 million refugees, some 6.5 million internally displaced
individuals and the destabilization of Europe through a massive influx of
terrorized people is about to see further abominations as Aleppo agonizes.
Aleppo
may prove to be the Sarajevo of Syria. It is already the Munich.
By
which I mean that the city’s plight today — its exposure to Putin’s whims and a
revived Assad’s pitiless designs — is a result of the fecklessness and
purposelessness over almost five years of the Obama administration. The
president and his aides have hidden at various times behind the notions that
Syria is marginal to core American national interests; that they have thought
through the downsides of intervention better than others; that the diverse
actors on the ground are incomprehensible or untrustworthy; that there is no
domestic or congressional support for taking action to stop the war or shape
its outcome; that there is no legal basis for establishing “safe areas” or
taking out Assad’s air power; that Afghanistan and Iraq are lessons in the
futility of projecting American power in the 21st century; that Syria will
prove Russia’s Afghanistan as it faces the ire of the Sunni world; and that the
only imperative, whatever the scale of the suffering or the complete
evisceration of American credibility, must be avoidance of another war in the
Middle East.
Obama’s failure in Syria has also had repercussions in
Europe and America. Cohen continues:
Obama’s
Syrian agonizing, his constant what-ifs and recurrent “what then?” have also
lead to the slaughter in Paris and San Bernardino. They have contributed to a
potential unraveling of the core of the European Union as internal borders
eliminated on a free continent are re-established as a response to an
unrelenting refugee tide — to which the United States has responded by taking
in around 2,500 Syrians since 2012, or about 0.06 percent of the total.
Obama fiddles while the Middle East and Europe burn:
“The
Syrian crisis is now a European crisis,” a senior European diplomat told me.
“But the president is not interested in Europe.” That is a fair assessment of
the first postwar American leader for whom the core trans-Atlantic alliance was
something to be dutifully upheld rather than emotionally embraced.
Syria
is now the Obama administration’s shame, a debacle of such dimensions that it
may overshadow the president’s domestic achievements.
So-called domestic achievements aside, the important point
is that Cohen is willing to accept that Obama’s failure in Syria is of world
historical importance.
He then delineates the face of that failure:
Obama’s decision
in 2013, at a time when ISIS scarcely existed, not to uphold the American
“red line” on Assad’s use of chemical weapons was a pivotal moment in which he
undermined America’s word, incurred the lasting fury of Sunni Persian Gulf
allies, shored up Assad by not subjecting him to serious one-off punitive
strikes and opened the way for Putin to determine Syria’s fate.
The White House is no place for charismatic amateurs.
I wish I thought that Obama's Syrian failure was the only failures he has had during his tenure as the most incompetent occupant of the White House, but alas I cannot. Too many in Obama's administration, and many republicans, seem to believe that with a little help the people in the Middle East will become enamored with democracy. This discounts the fact that we have been living and experimenting with being a republic for 200 plus years and we still have our problems.
ReplyDeleteI am not sure how we got to the point that we did not understand that those in the ME, et al, have been living and experimenting with what their particular culture has grown into and how over a 1000 plus years have made them what they are as people. The fact is that one cannot take someone out of a tribal culture and all that entails and believe that generations of experience and religious trainings are going to be changed. Especially if one is not going to expect assimilation into the established culture of the countries involved. We are a composite of those experiences, religions, cultures that we are/were a part. We have in the past been called the "Ugly American" because we failed to recognize that others are not the same as us no matter how nice we thought we were trying to be towards others.
Obama has never understood the tribal cultures involved and the inherent violence and nepotism that maintains them. If he did he would have understood what those culture respect. When a part of your life is spent experiencing other cultures it is not unusual to relate to them, but this is at a very superficial level. I spent a couple of years in Southeast Asia and got to meet, live with and generally enjoy the people. I knew it was time for me to come back when I started putting coins into Thai juke boxes to listen to Thai music. Unlike Obama I hold no illusions as to the cultures involved and their many problems because I have witnessed them at a personal level. You don't forget these things.
The fact that Obama cannot relate to the American experience in a positive way leads to seeing us as the problem and a fecklessness in dealing with others. Apparently Obama has never taken the time or effort to study World History which, in most cases, makes us look tame to the things other countries have done and are still doing to their own people. This lack explains much of Obama's lack and his sense of arrogance.
I don't think he ever understood the fact that we have made great strides in addressing ours compared to the vast majority of the world. It is why he cannot help being a divider.
Syrians don't vote. I suspect they wouldn't vote for Obama if they could, so he doesn't care about them.
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