On
to Tehran – or Is It Damascus?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Who
Wants War With Iran?
On to Tehran
– or Is It Damascus?
Our War Party
has been temporarily diverted from its clamor for war on Iran by
the insurrection against the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad.
Estimates of
the dead since the Syrian uprising began a year ago approach 6,000.
And responsibility for the carnage is being laid at the feet of
the president who succeeded his dictator-father Hafez al-Assad,
who ruled from 1971 until his death in 2000.
Unlike Egypt's
Hosni Mubarak who buckled, broke and departed after three weeks
of protests, Bashar is not going quietly.
And, predictably,
with the death toll rising, those champions of world democratic
revolution – John McCain, Joe Lieberman and Lindsey Graham – have
begun beating the drums for U.S. aid to a "Free Syrian Army."
Last week,
the three senators jointly declared:
"In Libya,
the threat of imminent atrocities in Benghazi mobilized the world
to act. Such atrocities are now a reality in Homs and other cities
all across Syria. ... We must consider ... providing opposition
groups inside Syria, both political and military, with better means
to ... defend themselves, and to fight back against Assad's forces."
"The end of
Assad's rule would ... be a moral and humanitarian victory for the
Syrian people" and "a strategic defeat for the Iranian regime."
Danielle Pletka
of the American Enterprise Institute, Neocon Central, is also pushing
the Iranian angle.
"Syria is the
soft underbelly of Iran, Tehran's most important ally, conduit for
arms and cash to terrorists. ... A unique confluence of American
moral purpose and America's strategic interest argue for intervention
in Syria. ... It's time to start arming the Free Syrian Army."
What are the
arguments against U.S. intervention?
First, there
is no vital U.S. interest in who rules Syria. If we could live with
Hafez al-Assad for decades – Bush 1 enlisted him as an ally in Desert
Storm – and his son for a dozen years, what threat does Bashar's
rule pose to the United States?
Answer: none.
Second, while
McCain & Co. insist that "the bloodshed must be stopped and
we should rule out no option that could help save lives," arming
the rebels would cause a geometric increase in dead and wounded.
Should America
start funneling arms to the rebels, Assad will realize that, like
Moammar Gadhafi, he is in a fight to the death.
In 1982, his
father, to crush a rebellion centered in the city of Hama, rolled
up his artillery and leveled the town, killing an estimated 20,000.
This is what we are risking if we start arming the rebels.
Syria is not
Libya. Assad's arsenal of missiles, tanks, planes and guns is far
superior. He has a 270,000-man army and thousands of security police.
And with a
tiny Shia Alawite sect dominant in Syria, and the rebellion rooted
in a Sunni Muslim majority, Assad and his loyalists know that if
they go down, they go to the wall.
"Christians
to Beirut and Alawites to the wall," was an early slogan of the
resistance.
And after seeing
the atrocities visited upon the Christians in Iraq when Saddam went
down, and on Copts when Mubarak went down, do we want to depose
another secular dictator – only to empower another regime of Islamic
fundamentalists?
In Libya, the
British and French led us in. Those NATO allies want no part of
a Syrian civil war.
In Libya, a
third of the country was rebel-held territory. With a single coastal
road leading from Gadhafi's command post in Tripoli to Benghazi,
NATO planes could easily interdict convoys trying to reach the rebel
base.
In Syria, the
rebels have no "liberated" territory.
The U.N. Security
Council authorized a no-fly zone over Libya. But Russia, burned
by what NATO did in Libya, stands ready to veto a no-fly zone over
Syria. U.S. military aid to the rebels could bring Russian military
aid to its client regime in Damascus.
U.S. intervention
could also trigger a proxy war and a regional war. Assad's ally,
Hezbollah, is already battling Syrian rebels in Lebanon. Sunnis
in Iraq's Anbar province are shipping guns to their fellow Sunnis
in Syria.
And if Assad
falls, who rises?
Would a triumphant
Muslim Brotherhood in Damascus keep the peace on the Golan Heights,
as the Assads did for 40 years?
According to
U.S. sources, al-Qaida was behind the four suicide bombings that
killed scores of Syrian soldiers and officials in Damascus and Aleppo.
Osama bin Laden's successor, Ayman al-Zawahiri, has called on Sunnis
from all neighboring countries to join the war against Assad's "pernicious,
cancerous regime."
If
the ouster of Assad is good for al-Qaida, can it also be good for
America?
As for the
Free Syrian Army to whom U.S. military aid would go, it is divided
with itself, and one ranking colonel has described the Syrian National
Council, with whom we have been working, as "traitors."
Iraq, Afghanistan,
Libya – none has turned out as was predicted when we plunged in.
And other than neoconservative ideology, what makes us think intervening
in Syria will?
February
15, 2012
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
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