I promised you yesterday, dear reader, a
post arguing that the Manichean pro- and anti-democracy polarity with which
most Americans think about the situation in Egypt is deeply and dangerously
misguided. I promised, as well, an argument to the effect that this view is an
expression of a secularized evangelism anchored in the Western/Christian
mythical, salvationist idea of progress, and that its unselfconscious use says
a great deal more about what’s wrong with us than about what’s wrong with
Egyptians. I will fulfill that promise and more—maybe too much more for
some tastes. But first a little scene-setting.
Yesterday morning I went over to Carnegie
to listen to Senator Carl Levin talk about Syria on a basis of a recent trip he
and Senator Angus King of Maine took to Jordan and Turkey. On Syria, Senator
Levin has turned into a liberal hawk a year and a half too late, in my view. To
prevent Syria from becoming a failed or a split state that would give aid and
comfort and room to plot to terrorist groups, he wants lots of lethal U.S. aid
delivered to assist the anti-Assad insurgency in Syria, and he wants the U.S.
military, in the context of a wide coalition understanding not yet achieved, to
attack Syrian artillery and air bases with standoff weapons (so as to avoid
having first to fly approximately 700 sorties to take down Syria’s integrated
air-defense system). The purpose of this is to level the battlefield so that
diplomacy can arrange an inclusive, post-Assad reconstruction of Syrian politics
and society. He assumes that radical sectarianism is foreign to Syria, and that
a new compact would rid the country of both Sunni and Shi’a foreign fanatics in
the pay of neighboring states. He also assumes that because of this compact, no
extensive international peacekeeping force or reconstruction effort will be
required—not only no boots on the ground, but not even all that many shoes on
the ground. Naturally, he is somewhat vexed that other Senators do not see
things his way, and are trying to obstruct the shipment of weapons to the
Syrian insurgents. But he a very good-natured and well-intentioned man, and so
does not appear nearly as vexed as he actually is.
In my view, Senator Levin’s proposal
belies a certain naiveté about Syria. As my more loyal readers would know, I
sympathized with some of Senator Levin’s points a year and more ago, before the
situation had metastasized within the country and spread toxins without. Then
the risks of acting were relatively small, and the benefits prospectively large;
now the risks are huge and the benefits deeply uncertain. But never mind that;
he’s wrong on the facts.
First, the ability to reliably destroy
targets of the kind he identifies with standoff weapons is questionable. Libya
is an island from a military point of view. Every target worth hitting can be
hit from a naval platform. Syria’s topography and demographic realities are
another matter. I’m a big fan of cruise missiles fired from Aegis cruisers,
too; I saw a test-firing of one once from the deck of the USS Farragut a
few years ago and it was tres cool, believe me. But I am
skeptical that standoff weapons can do in Syria what Senator Levin thinks they
can do. General Dempsey, can you please enlighten us on this point?
Second, the early 1980s Sunni radicalism
that led Bashar al-Assad’s father to level the town of Hama in 1982 was almost
entirely homegrown, not foreign. Syrians are more than capable of radical
capture, especially in the current dire circumstances. When people’s backs are
up against the wall, radicals thrive and moderates melt away.