Both myopic and counterproductive
The apparent use
of chemical weapons in Syria's civil war has produced shrill calls for
launching air strikes on the regime of Bashar al Assad. Even the inconvenient
detail that the source of the chemical attack is not clear has not deterred
advocates of a U.S-led military response. Some proponents have latched onto the
1999 NATO war in Kosovo as an ideal precedent. Kosovo is a precedent all
right-an object lesson for why going to war in Syria would be morally dubious
and strategically unwise.
Adopting that
approach especially has the potential to cause serious tensions in Washington's
already delicate ties with China and Russia. Policy regarding Kosovo has been a
festering sore on U.S. relations with those countries since the original crisis
in the late 1990s. The supposedly inadvertent U.S. bombing of China's embassy
in Belgrade in 1999 was only the most spectacular example of the diplomatic
carnage.
Indeed, for
Chinese and Russian leaders, Kosovo has become a symbol of Washington's
contempt for international law and disdain for the prerogatives of other major
powers in the international system. No rational person should wish to replicate
that outcome by pursuing the same high-handed strategy in response to the Syria
conflict.
President Bill
Clinton and his supporters insisted that adequate international support was
sufficient authorization for U.S. action against Serbia over the Kosovo issue,
even absent congressional approval. International support typically meant a UN
Security Council resolution-an argument that George H.W. Bush made before
belatedly deciding, under domestic public pressure, to seek congressional
authorization for the Persian Gulf War.
The Kosovo
conflict, though, posed a problem for pro-war internationalists in the U.S.
foreign policy community. Both Russia and China vehemently opposed intervention
against Serbia, and there was, therefore, no chance of passing a Security
Council Resolution authorizing the use of force. Clinton administration
officials overcame that impediment by simply bypassing the Council just as they
bypassed Congress. "Sufficient international support" now meant
support from the U.S.-dominated NATO alliance.
Washington's
subsequent actions under the administration of George W. Bush further
antagonized Beijing and Moscow and undermined international security
cooperation. Bush took the Kosovo precedent one step further with the invasion
of Iraq. Once again, Russia and China believed that military action was
unwarranted and threatened to use their Security Council vetoes. This time,
even NATO was divided, so U.S. leaders could not use the alliance's imprimatur
as supposed sufficient justification for an armed intervention. Washington
overcame that problem by arguing that endorsement by an ad hoc "coalition
of the willing" (or as cynical wags described it, the coalition of the
bribed and bullied) constituted adequate international support. Seething leaders in Russia and China
disagreed.
The Bush
administration was not done showing its contempt for the views and rights of
its fellow permanent members on the Security Council. Although the Council had
reluctantly authorized the NATO-led postwar occupation of Kosovo under nominal
UN auspices, Beijing and Moscow assumed that the province would not be granted
independence from Serbia without another Council vote. But the United States,
Britain, and France adopted a markedly different course. They recognized
Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence in February 2008-once again
over the strenuous objections of China and Russia.
Events soon showed
that those countries could respond to such policy snubs in ways that frustrated
U.S. officials. The Russian government cited the Kosovo precedent for its own
moves against the Republic of Georgia in 2008, helping to detach that country's
two restless regions, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, despite Washington's angry
denunciations and the lack of UN Security Council approval. China issued pointed
warnings that U.S. leaders should not even think about using the Kosovo
strategy toward such sensitive secessionist issues as Taiwan, Tibet and
Xinjiang.
Barack Obama has
demonstrated that he is no more respectful than his two predecessors toward the
views and interests of Russia and China. Washington persuaded Beijing and
Moscow not to veto a Security Council resolution authorizing force against the
Libyan regime of Muammar Gaddafi by assuring those governments that air and
missile strikes would be limited in nature and motivated solely to prevent
atrocities against innocent civilians. That proved to be untrue. It quickly
became apparent that the real goal of the United States and its NATO allies was
regime change. Chinese and Russian officials felt, with considerable
justification, that they had been conned. Now, Obama is offering similar
assurances that attacks on Assad's forces would be only to punish the regime
for the chemical attacks, not help the rebels oust Assad. Unsurprisingly, those
assurances are being viewed with a good deal of skepticism.
Adding a Syria
intervention to the Kosovo, Iraq, and Libya episodes will convince Beijing and
Moscow, if any doubt lingers, that the United States shows no respect for their
Security Council roles and will use the Council when, and only when, it is
convenient for Washington's policy objectives. Given the number of economic and
security issues requiring cooperation with Russia and China, the Obama
administration's flirtation with that course is myopic and counterproductive.
The damage to Washington's crucial relations with Beijing and Moscow will
likely exceed any conceivable policy "victory" with regard to Syria.
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