Before we slide
into another war, let the country be consulted first
By PATRICK J. BUCHANAN
“The worst mistake of my presidency,” said Ronald Reagan of his
decision to put Marines into the middle of Lebanon’s civil war, where 241
died in a suicide bombing of their barracks.
And if
Barack Obama plunges into Syria’s civil war, it could consume his
presidency, even as Iraq consumed the presidency of George W. Bush.
Why
would Obama even consider this?
Because
he blundered badly. Foolishly, he put his credibility on the line by
warning that any Syrian use of chemical weapons would cross a “red line”
and be a “game changer” with “enormous consequences.”
Not
only was this ultimatum unwise, Obama had no authority to issue it. If
Syria does not threaten or attack us, Obama would need congressional
authorization before he could constitutionally engage in acts of war
against Syria. When did he ever receive such authorization?
Moreover,
there is no proof Syrian President Bashar Assad ever ordered the use of
chemical weapons.
U.S.
intelligence agencies maintain that small amounts of the deadly toxin
sarin gas were likely used. But if it did happen, we do not know who
ordered it.
Syrians
officials deny that they ever used chemicals. And before we dismiss
Damascus’ denials, recall that an innocent man in Tupelo, Miss., was
lately charged with mailing deadly ricin to Sen. Roger Wicker and
President Obama. This weekend, we learned he may have been framed.
It is
well within the capacity of Assad’s enemies to use or fake the use of
poison gas to suck us into fighting their war.
Even if
elements of Assad’s army did use sarin, we ought not plunge in. And,
fortunately, that seems to be Obama’s thinking.
Why
stay out? Because it is not our war. There is no vital U.S. interest in
who rules Syria. Hafez Assad and Bashar have ruled Syria for 40 years. How
has that ever threatened us?
Moreover,
U.S. intervention would signal to Assad that the end is near, making his
use of every weapon in his arsenal, including chemical weapons, more — not
less — likely.
U.S.
intervention would also make us de facto allies of Assad’s principal
enemies, the Muslim Brotherhood and al-Nusra Front, Syria’s al-Qaida. As
The New York Times reported Sunday, “Nowhere in rebel-controlled Syria is
there a secular fighting force to speak of.”
Do we
really wish to expend American blood and treasure to bring about a victory
of Islamists and jihadists in Syria?
If
Assad’s chemical weapons threaten any nation, it is Israel. But Israel
knows where they are stored and has an air force superior to our own in
the Med. Israeli troops on the Golan are as close to Damascus as Dulles
Airport is to Washington, D.C. Yet Israel has not attacked Syria’s
chemical weapons.
Why
not? Israel is well aware that Syria’s air defense system is, as The Wall
Street Journal reported yesterday, “one of the most advanced and
concentrated barriers on the planet.”
And if
Israel does not feel sufficiently threatened by Syria’s chemical weapons
to go after them, why should we, 4,000 miles away?
Then
there is Turkey, with three times Syria’s population, NATO’s
second-largest army and a 600-mile border. Why is ridding the Middle East
of Assad our assignment and not Ankara’s?
Surely
the heirs of the Ottomans have a larger stake here.
And if
we get into this war, how do we get out?
For the
war is metastasizing. Hezbollah is sending in fighters to help the Alawite
Shia. Other Lebanese are assisting the Sunni rebels. The war could spread
into Iraq, where the latest clashes between Sunni and Shia are pulling the
country apart. Young Muslims are coming in from
Europe.
Iran
and Russia are aiding Damascus. Qatar and Saudi Arabia are aiding the
Islamists. The United States, Jordan and Turkey are aiding the
secularists. Syria could come apart, and a sectarian and ethnic war of all
against all erupt across the region.
Do we
really want the U.S. military in the middle of this?
Because
his “red line” appears to have been crossed, Obama is being told he must
attack Syria to maintain his credibility with Iran and North Korea.
Nonsense.
To attack Syria would compound Obama’s folly in drawing the red line.
Better to have egg on Obama’s face than for America to be dragged into
another unnecessary war.
Obama
would not be alone in having his bluff called. George Bush proclaimed that
no “axis of evil” nation would be allowed to acquire the “world’s worst
weapons.” North Korea now has those weapons.
Congressional
war hawks, led by Sens. John McCain and Lindsey Graham, are cawing for air
strikes and no-fly zones, which would mean dead and captured Americans and
many more dead Syrians.
Time
for Congress to either authorize Obama to lead us into a new Middle East
war, or direct him, in the absence of an attack upon us, to keep America
out of what is Syria’s civil war.
Before
we slide into another war, let the country be consulted first.
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