Friday, August 23, 2013
Still not the ‘red line’: Obama edges away from ‘difficult, costly’ Syrian ‘mire’.
Still not the ‘red line’: Obama edges away from ‘difficult, costly’ Syrian ‘mire’.HT: RussiaToday.
Questioned on the continuing upheaval in Syria and Egypt during Friday’s CNN interview, Obama said the United States should be wary “being drawn into very expensive, difficult, costly interventions that actually breed more resentment in the region.”
Throughout his answers, the president sounded like a man reciting a litany of reasons for not joining the 30-month internecine conflict that has already claimed more than 100,000 lives according to UN estimates.
"If the US goes in and attacks another country without a UN mandate and without clear evidence that can be presented, then there are questions in terms of whether international law supports it, [and] do we have the coalition to make it work?” said Obama.
The US leader is under renewed pressure to take action following the emergence of footage of what appears to be the aftermath of a toxic agent attack in a Damascus suburb on Wednesday. The forces of President Bashar Assad were assaulting a rebel stronghold in the district at the time, but deny responsibility. Moscow, which has maintained close ties with the regime, called the incident a rebel “provocation” possibly designed to derail upcoming Geneva peace talks.
Republican Senator McCain immediately pinned the blame for the incident – which opposition reports may have killed as many as 1,300 people – on government forces. He also said that if the administration was to “let this go on”, it was “writing a blank check to other brutal dictators around the world if they want to use chemical weapons." McCain also outlined a concrete plan for a military incursion.
Inevitably, Obama called the attack “a big event of great concern”, but bristled when faced with McCain’s accusations.
“What I think the American people… expect me to do as president is to think through what we do from the perspective of, what is in our long-term national interests?”
“Folks will call for immediate action, jumping into stuff… that does not turn out well, gets us mired in very difficult situations.”
Yet for all their cool-headed sense, Obama’s words unmistakably clashed with his own pronouncements exactly a year ago, when he claimed that any utilization (or even movement) of chemical weapons by the government forces was a “red line” that would engender “enormous consequences”.
But more than going back on his words, Obama seemed to question the entire rationale for a US intervention.
While the conflict in Syria was never as simple as a battle of democracy against dictatorship, even since Obama’s “red line” quote the “mire” has grown increasingly murky. Increasingly, the Syrian conflict has become divided along religious lines, while outside forces with their own agendas have picked their own sides. Documented atrocities by radical Islamists among the rebels, and fears for the stability of a future Syrian state, have also diluted outsider sympathies.
And while Obama insisted that the United States remains “the one indispensable nation” in international diplomacy, he suggested that perhaps this is not the one conflict where the world should look to Washington for an answer.
"The notion that the US can somehow solve what is a sectarian complex problem inside of Syria sometimes is overstated," said the president.
The White House later released a statement confirming Obama’s words, and emphasizing that the US has no plans to put “boots on the ground”.
Having already strong responses from other major powers like Russia, China and the EU, Obama is not likely to send troops to Syria and stand openly against the coup government in Egypt easily despite grave human rights violations there. The rise and radicalization of political Islam under the wings of the US military. Obama seems to adopt the Cold War settings for the US policy, at least for the Greater Middle East and that policy shift could lead to shock waves in foreign and domestic politics of the regional countries, including Turkey.
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