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Is Syria Next? [Leftist Apology for Murderers of Americans]
The Nation ^ | 10/16/03 | Editors

Posted on 10/21/2003 8:15:13 AM PDT by TastyManatees

Is Syria Next?
[from the November 3, 2003 issue]

Shortly after 9/11, the government received an extraordinary gift of hundreds of files on Al Qaeda, crucial data on the activities of radical Islamist cells throughout the Middle East and Europe and intelligence about future terrorist plans. These dossiers did not come from Israel or Saudi Arabia, whose kingdom appeared more concerned at the time with securing safe passage for members of the bin Laden family living in the United States, but--as Seymour Hersh revealed in the July 28 New Yorker--from Syria. One CIA analyst told Hersh, "the quality and quantity of information from Syria exceeded the agency's expectations." Yet, the analyst added, the Syrians "got little in return for it."

What they got instead was an unrelenting Washington-sponsored campaign of vilification. It began last year, when the "Axis of Evil" was expanded to include Syria, largely because Syria--a member of the 1991 coalition against Saddam Hussein--refused to support a pre-emptive war against Iraq. And it has culminated in the Syria Accountability Act, approved 33 to 2 by a House committee on October 8. If the bill passes, Syria will not be able to receive "dual use" goods unless it cuts all ties with Hamas and Islamic Jihad (neither of which is linked to Al Qaeda) and cracks down on Hezbollah (a guerrilla movement that enjoys wide popular support among Lebanese Shiites); withdraws its troops from Lebanon; and proves that it is not developing weapons of mass destruction. What's more, the President would be directed to choose from a menu of six additional sanctions, including a freeze on Syrian assets in the United States and a ban on US exports, except food and medicine.

The committee's vote came on the heels of Bush's endorsement of an Israeli airstrike on a Palestinian training camp outside Damascus, Israel's first assault on Syrian territory since 1974. Never mind that the apparently moribund camp belonged to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, not to Islamic Jihad, which claimed responsibility for the October 4 suicide attack in Haifa; or that Israel's attack threatened to widen the already explosive Israeli-Palestinian conflict. In Bush's words, "Israel must not feel constrained in terms of defense of the homeland."

The Syria Accountability Act is all but certain to destroy the fledgling cooperation between US and Syrian intelligence agencies, which have a common interest in combating Islamic extremism. To sabotage such a relationship would seem downright perverse, when America is in desperate need of Arab allies in the "war on terrorism." But a perversion of priorities is something we have come to expect from the Bush Administration, and from the influential neoconservative clique--many of them closely allied with the Israeli right--shaping policy in the Pentagon.

In an eerie replay of the buildup to the war on Iraq, the demonization of Syria has swelled to a chorus in Washington, whose members include not only Republicans but pro-Israel Democrats like Tom Lantos, the senior Democrat on the House committee that passed the act. The leading Democratic presidential candidates backed Bush's support for Israel's bombing in Syria. Only months ago we were told that the "road to peace in Jerusalem runs through Baghdad." As resistance to the US occupation of Iraq grows and the road map continues to crumble, the neocons are having a much harder time making that argument, so we are now being told that the twisted road to peace runs through Damascus.

Syria, to be sure, is hardly an appealing regime. A police state run by a tiny Baathist clique, it deprives its own citizens of the most basic liberties, maintains thousands of troops in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley in violation of UN Resolution 520 and continues to meddle in Lebanon's internal affairs. It has also supported Hezbollah's "resistance" operations against Israeli positions in the disputed Shebaa Farms, finding it a useful proxy force with which to pressure Israel to return the Golan Heights, illegally occupied since 1967. Yet Syria has also played an important role in stabilizing Lebanon since the civil war--a role quietly appreciated by Washington--and in encouraging Hezbollah's transformation from a radical militia to a pragmatic political party. Despite occasional flare-ups, violent incidents on the Lebanese-Israeli border have been rare since Israel's withdrawal in 2000.

The Accountability Act simply ignores this, in a flagrant display of the double standards of US Middle East policy. How, in good faith, can we call for sanctions against Syria for its occupation of Lebanon while coddling Israel, whose incomparably more violent and brutal occupation remains the chief source of troubles in the Mideast--the principal reason we are not viewed as honest brokers? Moreover, while claiming to promote democracy in Syria, the act is more likely to strengthen the hand of the sclerotic Baathist old guard, which can now invoke the threat of an American war to suppress dissent, and hobble President Bashar Assad's (admittedly inadequate) efforts to pursue reform. The intellectuals who participated in Syria's short-lived "Damascus Spring" two years ago will be further silenced by the act for fear of being associated with a policy that might have been devised in Tel Aviv.

In a sense, it was. To properly understand the Syria Accountability Act, one has to go back to a 1996 document, "A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm," drafted by a team of advisers to Benjamin Netanyahu in his run for prime minister of Israel. The authors included current Bush advisers Richard Perle and Douglas Feith. "Syria challenges Israel on Lebanese soil," they wrote, calling for "striking Syrian military targets in Lebanon, and should that prove insufficient, striking at select targets in Syria proper." No wonder Perle was delighted by the Israeli strike. "It will help the peace process," he told the Washington Post, adding later that the United States itself might have to attack Syria.

But what Perle means by "helping the peace process" is not resolving the conflict by bringing about a viable, sovereign Palestinian state but rather--as underscored in "A Clean Break"--"transcending the Arab-Israeli conflict" altogether by forcing the Arabs to accept most, if not all, of Israel's territorial conquests and its nuclear hegemony in the region. This one-sided approach has succeeded only in fueling resentment against America, as demonstrated most recently by the October 15 bombing of a US convoy in Gaza that killed three Americans. The attack, which was denounced by Palestinian leaders, came just hours after the US veto of a Security Council resolution condemning Israel's new "security" wall, which gobbles up large swaths of land in the West Bank.

No one doubts that citizens of Syria and Lebanon would benefit from the demise of the Baathist dictatorship. But making an enemy of Syria will neither lead to the flowering of Syrian democracy nor bring an end to terror in Israeli cities. If any state is a breeding ground for terrorists today, it is Iraq, thanks to America's reckless war. The absence of stable governance in Mesopotamia poses far more of a threat to regional security than the presence of an Islamic Jihad office in Damascus. To be sure, states must be held accountable for fostering terrorism. What we need now, however, is not a Syria Accountability Act but an America Accountability Act.


TOPICS: Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: america; assad; bushdoctrineunfold; hezbollah; iraq; nation; next; syria; terror; terrorists; terrorwar; thenation; warlist
In know, this is an article from The Nation, but it really is worth reading. It accurately reproduces the Syrian Ba'athist party line so well it could have been written in Damascus (while it is missing the obligatory "Kill the Jews!", it does have "coddling Israel") . As we move to fight the terrorists where they breed in Syria, expect the Left to work from the arguments presented in this piece.

My personal favorite line is, "No one doubts that citizens of Syria and Lebanon would benefit from the demise of the Ba’athist dictatorship. But making an enemy of Syria will neither lead to the flowering of Syrian democracy nor bring an end to terror in Israeli cities." Silly me, I thought Syria's financial support, housing, and training for Hezbollah, Hamas, Al Qaeda, Islamic Jihad, et al. and their sending terrorists across their borders to kill American servicemen already qualified Syria for "enemy" status. What's more, I thought that by vanquishing the Ba'athists and liberating the Syrians, we would be eliminating that deadly enemy. Thank you for clearing that up, editors of The Nation.

There's a lot here to disagree with, and it might be a good idea to sit down and think about what the left is saying here. You'll be hearing Syrian press releases like this for the next six months as we get ready for the next step in the war.

Tasty Manatees
1 posted on 10/21/2003 8:15:14 AM PDT by TastyManatees
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To: *Bush Doctrine Unfold; *war_list; *TerrOrWar
Bump.
2 posted on 10/21/2003 8:17:57 AM PDT by TastyManatees (http://www.tastymanatees.com)
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To: TastyManatees
"No one doubts that citizens of Syria and Lebanon would benefit from the demise of the Ba’athist dictatorship. But making an enemy of Syria will neither lead to the flowering of Syrian democracy nor bring an end to terror in Israeli cities."

I'm not interested in whether Syria flowers into a democracy. Personally, I'd rather see it as a National Park called Death Valley East. I also don't buy the illogical argument that terrorism won't decrease in Israel if we do snuff out Syria. I'm all for killing terrorists and Syria is loaded with them.

3 posted on 10/21/2003 8:24:15 AM PDT by TADSLOS (Right Wing Infidel since 1954)
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To: TastyManatees
The true root cause of terrorism is that the terrorists know damn well it works and there no real negative consequences. Pimp-slapping the likes of Iraq and Syria tells the world otherwise.

My only regret is the lack of a more open linkage. Telling Saddam and Bashir that "America is terminating your miserable statist regimes specifically because you finance terrorist attacks in Israel, In the US and anywhere else you think it will work." makes the point in a direct and condign fashion.

Islamic fundamnetalists will become even more basic when they see a whole lot of their correligionists meet with JDAMnation. They will focus on self-preservation and stop the violence while they still draw breath. Force and intimidation is the only form of dialougue that reaches the cowardly, worm-eaten heart of a bully.
4 posted on 10/21/2003 8:31:31 AM PDT by .cnI redruM (The September 11th attacks were clearly Clinton's most consequential legacy. - Rich Lowry)
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To: TastyManatees
The wages of terrorism bear bitter fruit; Syria will soon know..
5 posted on 10/21/2003 8:43:43 AM PDT by sheik yerbouty
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To: sheik yerbouty
Syria will be a Vietnam style Quagmire for the US!

Was I first, or did some commieRAT beat me to it?

6 posted on 10/21/2003 8:48:52 AM PDT by ASA Vet (People have the governement they deserve.)
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To: sheik yerbouty; Poohbah
Was that a reference to "The Shadow"? I recently got a bunch of the episodes and the DVD of the movie that was done in the early 90s...
7 posted on 10/21/2003 8:55:36 AM PDT by hchutch ("I don't see what the big deal is, I really don't." - Major Vic Deakins, USAF (ret.))
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To: hchutch
Only onamatoepiacly..
8 posted on 10/21/2003 9:06:49 AM PDT by sheik yerbouty
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To: ASA Vet
Syria will soon change its tune and be three billion dollars poorer.
9 posted on 10/21/2003 9:22:31 AM PDT by sheik yerbouty
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To: ASA Vet
re: "Syria will be a Vietnam style Quagmire for the US!"

Nope! Check your Bible, Isaiah, chapter 17:

1: An oracle concerning Damascus. Behold, Damascus will cease to be a city, and will become a heap of ruins.
2: Her cities will be deserted for ever; they will be for flocks, which will lie down, and none will make them afraid.

10 posted on 10/21/2003 9:33:18 AM PDT by RonHolzwarth
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To: TastyManatees
Typical of the Left, they have never met a drug dealing totalitarian regime they cannot support.
Read Dennis Eisenberg's article "The World's Largest Drug Field" at http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1005133/posts
11 posted on 10/21/2003 9:34:59 AM PDT by ijcr (Age and treachery will always overcome youth and ability.)
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To: RonHolzwarth
Although I was saying it "tongue in cheek," I was referring to reality not supernaturalist mumbo jumbo.
12 posted on 10/21/2003 9:43:41 AM PDT by ASA Vet (People have the governement they deserve.)
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To: TastyManatees
The article is a string of lies and propoganda. However, let me hit one doozy
Syria will not be able to receive "dual use" goods unless it cuts all ties with Hamas and Islamic Jihad (neither of which is linked to Al Qaeda)
Actually, there are clear ties. Al Qaeda is made up of a number of groups, the largest of which is Islamic Jihad. The number 2 and operations chief in Al Qaeda is Ayman Al Zawahri, who headed Islamic Jihad.
As for Hamas, it essentially has merged with the Palestinian subsidiary of Islamic Jihad. Thus The US is demanding that Syria stop supporting Al Qaeda.

Damn fifth columnists.

13 posted on 10/21/2003 9:55:00 AM PDT by rmlew (Peaceniks and isolationists are objectively pro-Terrorist)
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To: TastyManatees
The "Nation" is striving to find a new foreign, angry adversary to trust and believe in.

Same old, same old.
14 posted on 10/21/2003 9:57:50 AM PDT by Shermy
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To: TastyManatees
Rid the world of Syria's boobs and Lebanon will fall without a shot. Kill two birds with one shot.
15 posted on 10/21/2003 12:05:29 PM PDT by lilylangtree
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To: ASA Vet
I was referring to reality not supernaturalist mumbo jumbo.

Isaiah looks like mumbo jumbo to most people.
Just as calculus looks like mumbo jumbo to most people.

I'd agree with you that Isaiah is a supernaturalist in the classical sense,
but digress with your assigning him a disconnect to reality.

16 posted on 10/22/2003 9:01:38 PM PDT by TeleStraightShooter
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To: TastyManatees
"Syria, to be sure, is hardly an appealing regime. A police state run by a tiny Baathist clique, it deprives its own citizens of the most basic liberties, maintains thousands of troops in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley in violation of UN Resolution 520 and continues to meddle in Lebanon's internal affairs. It has also supported Hezbollah's "resistance" operations against Israeli positions..."

Plenty of reasons enough to whack 'em. To be sure...

17 posted on 10/22/2003 9:19:54 PM PDT by okie01 (www.ArmorforCongress.com...because Congress isn't for the morally halt and the mentally lame.)
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