Syria and Obama By Thomas Sowell
I cannot see why even a
single American, a single Israeli or a single Syrian civilian should be killed
as a result of a token U.S. military action, undertaken simply to spare Barack
Obama the embarrassment of doing nothing, after his ill-advised public
ultimatum to the Syrian government to not use chemical weapons was ignored. Some people
say that some military response is necessary, not to spare Obama a personal
humiliation, but to spare the American presidency from losing all credibility —
and therefore losing the ability to deter future threats to the United States
without bloodshed.
There is no question
that the credibility of the presidency — regardless of who holds that office —
is a major asset of this country. Another way of saying the same thing is that
Barack Obama has recklessly risked the credibility of future presidents, and
the future safety of this country, by his glib words and weak actions.
Some people who disagree with Obama's issuance of a
public ultimatum to the Assad regime in the first place, and who also disagree
with his recent threat of military action against Syria, nevertheless say that
we must back up that threat now, simply to forestall future dangers from a loss
of American credibility in the eyes of other countries, including both our
enemies and our allies. But will a
transparently token military action preserve American credibility? And dare we
risk an unintended escalation, such as began both World Wars in the 20th
century? Since so little real history is taught in even our prestigious
colleges and universities, it may be worth noting how World War II — the most
catastrophic war in human history — began.
When a weak and vacillating leader, Britain's Prime
Minister Neville Chamberlain, belatedly saw Hitler for what he was, after years
of trying to appease him, he issued a public ultimatum that if Germany carried
out its impending invasion of Poland, Britain would declare war. By this time,
Hitler had only contempt for Chamberlain, as Putin today has only contempt for
Obama. Hitler went ahead with his invasion of Poland. Chamberlain then felt he
had to declare war. That is how World War II began. Britain's action did not
save Poland, but only jeopardized its own survival. Unintended
consequences are at least as common in military actions on the world stage as
they are in domestic policies that start out with lofty words and end with
sordid and even catastrophic consequences. Assurances from either President
Barack Obama or Senator John McCain as to the limited nature of the military
actions they advocate mean nothing. As
someone said, long ago, once the shooting starts all plans go out the window.
If a purely token
military strike will do little or nothing more to preserve our national
credibility than will a failure to act at all, why get people killed to spare
Barack Obama a personal humiliation?
This man's runaway ego has already produced too many
disasters at home and abroad, and nowhere more so than in the Middle East. A
personal humiliation may be all that can make him stop and think before
shooting off his mouth in the future, without thinking through the consequences
beforehand — as he clearly has not done in this case, as shown by his recent
delays and vacillations. Nor is it at
all clear that his previous policies and actions in the Middle East were well
thought out, unless he was deliberately trying to weaken the position of the
Western world, including Israel. Whatever the Obama rhetoric, the
reality is that his policies in Egypt and Libya have led to replacing stable
regimes, at peace with Israel and the West, and tolerant of their own Christian
minorities, with chaotic regimes in which fanatical anti-Western terrorists
have played a large and growing role, with hostility to Israel and murderous
attacks on Christians in their own country. Barack Obama will try to salvage his policy and his presidency with a
speech to the nation. Rhetoric is his strong suit. The big question is: How
many Americans have learned to distinguish between his soaring words and his
sorry record? Matters of life and death can hinge on the answer to that
question.
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