Sunday, December 23, 2018

Syrian withdrawal - reason to panic?

The foreign policy establishment and commentators across the political spectrum seem to be a bit flummoxed by Trump's announcements that he's pulling US troops out of Syria and Afghanistan. (Thomas Gibbons-Neff and Mujib Mashal, U.S. to Withdraw About 7,000 Troops From Afghanistan, Officials Say New York Times 12/20/2018; Gregory Hellman and Connor O'Brien, Pulling out of Syria: A primer Politico 12/20/2018)

Elite reaction to the announced Syria pullout has been negative. It's worth keeping in mind that Trump is unpredictable, and may well have greenlighted some other kind of covert and/or mercenary intervention in Syria. Consistency and transparency have not so far been hallmarks of his Presidency.

Richard Haass and Fareed Zakaria provide an mild illustration here, talking about how the Syria withdrawal will reduce American "leverage" (What next for the US Syria strategy? CNN 2/22/2018):


Haass also tweeted:


For some context, Haass, who is the longtime president of the prestigious Council on Foreign Relations, has been complaining about a lack of clarity in Syrian policy for a while.

And Secretary of Defense James Mattis' unusual step of resigning in protest after the pullout was announced lit the pundits' hair on fire.

Karen DeYoung et all (A tumultuous week began with a phone call between Trump and the Turkish president Washington Post 12/21/2018) write that Trump told Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan on a phone call about his Syiran withdrawal plan late on Friday a week ago:
[Trump] repeated his inability to understand why the United States was still arming and supporting Syrian Kurdish fighters to conduct a ground war against the Islamic State. To Turkey, which shared a 500-mile long border with Syria, they were a national security threat, allied with Turkish Kurds that even the United States considered terrorists.

The Islamic State, according to Trump himself, had been defeated, Erdogan said. Turkey’s military was strong and could take on any remaining militant pockets. Why did some 2,000 U.S. troops still need to be there?

“You know what? It’s yours,” Trump said of Syria. “I’m leaving.”
They also report, "The call, shorthanded in more or less the same words by several senior administration officials, set off events that, even by the whirlwind standards of Washington in the Trump years, have been cataclysmic."

The article also includes this video with Bipartisan objections to the Syria withdrawal:

For some on the antiwar left were perplexed on how to understand the withdrawal decision. Here's an example. Chomsky Says US Should Stay In Syria The Jimmy Dore Show 12/22/2018:


Some anarchists are particularly supportive of the Kurdish cause in Syria: Dan Arel, What is attracting anarchists to Syria? The New Arab 07/29/2017; David Graeber, Why are world leaders backing this brutal attack against Kurdish Afrin? Guardian 02/23/2018

Predicting what Trump will do or won't do is obviously exceptionally tricky. But I'll go out on a limb and suggest that he is unlikely in the extreme to intervene to support a radical-democratic anarchist experiment in democratic self-governance, if that is what is actually occurring.

Pulling US troops out reduces the very real risk of American forces coming into a direct clash with forces from NATO ally Turkey. But it does mean abandoning temporary allies. And plain decency would require the US to pressure Turkey not to go into Syria to crush the Kurds there. Do I need to add that we have little reason to expect plain decency from the Trump Administration?

Paul Pillar in Mattis Resigns: Sky Will Not Fall LobeLog 12/21/2018 notes the typical Trump sloppiness in the Syria withdrawal decision:
All indications are that Trump made the decision in an atrociously casual manner—trusting his instincts, deferring to his desire to fulfill a campaign promise, and consulting little or not at all with his advisors. In short, there was no policy process worthy of the name. There are important reasons that a thorough policy process should precede important foreign policy decisions. Such a process uncovers costs and risks that an otherwise favored course of action might entail. The most remarkable thing about the single worst U.S. foreign policy decision over the past couple of decades—the decision to invade Iraq in 2003—is that no policy process preceded it. There never was, prior to the invasion, an options paper or a meeting of National Security Council principals that discussed whether the invasion was a good idea.
But he still approves of the withdrawal:
Understandable opposition to Trump—driven by concern about both his decision-making style and the substance of many of his decisions—has heavily affected the current hysteria about Syria. Many voices that already were accustomed to criticizing Trump, including some generally pro-Democratic editorial pages and hawkish Republican never-Trumpers, have expressed full-throated dismay over the decision. There still are plenty of legitimate reasons to worry about Trump and foreign policy. But even a broken clock is correct twice a day. And the decision about military withdrawal from Syria was the right one...
And he cautions about the dangers of running wars and foreign policy by analogy, which actually is a serious problem:
To keep U.S. troops in Syria now implies a forever war, with no realistic ending imaginable. Once again one hears a familiar assertion—like the “light at the end of the tunnel” assurances during the Vietnam War and heard in other versions during the Iraq War—that events just happen to be at a highly unlikely cusp where a little more effort will make the difference between catastrophe and victory. Related to this is another mistaken way of thinking about combating ISIS: that it supposedly is similar to eradicating a viral disease such as smallpox, in which the war will be won when the last case in the last village in which the disease appears is stamped out. That time will never come with ISIS. The ideology, the resentment, and the capacity for political violence will still be there, to be dealt with through means other than fighting in Syrian villages. [my emphasis]
Pillar also indicates his approval of the arguments made by Doug Bandow of the libertarian Cato Institute in Why Trump Is Right to Withdraw Troops The National Interest 12/20/2018. Bandow writes:
Congress has not authorized military action in Syria, even against the Islamic State. The authorization for the utilization of military force passed after 9/11 was directed against Al Qaeda, not new groups which did not then exist and did not participate in the attacks. That AUMF cannot be stretched to cover Syria, Iran, Russia, Turkey, or anyone else.

Of course, Congress had no reason to authorize force in Syria, which is not a security problem for America. The U.S. prospered for decades while a hostile and even stronger Syrian Arab Republic was allied with the Soviet Union. Would it be good if Bashar al-Assad was a warm, loyal, devoted ally like, say, Saudi Arabia’s Mohammed bin Salman? Sure (well, probably). But the fact that Assad is not isn’t a cause for military intervention. As a superpower, America has interests all over the world. As a superpower, most of them aren’t particularly important. Very few are worth war. [my emphasis]
He also observes, "The ever-hysterical Sen. Graham complained of 'devastating consequences for our nation, the region, and throughout the world.' Actually, the Mideast matters far less these days, and would diminish in importance still further if Washington did not make that dismal assembly of nations central to American foreign and military policy."

Yes, it does look like an advantage to Turkish policy and to Russian ambitions. I wouldn't want to downplay either concern. But Turkey is a formal NATO ally of the United States, a fact the US cannot afford to take lightly. And Russian ambitions in the Middle East? If their more active presence there brings results similar to what America's military interventions there have brought us, they may decide sooner rather than later that such a mess damages their standing in the world rather than enhancing it.

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