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Syria Is the Quintessential Obama War
New York Magazine ^ | 8/29/13 | Benjamin Wallace-Wells

Posted on 08/30/2013 11:27:09 AM PDT by nickcarraway

During the NATO intervention in Libya, to date perhaps the great success of Obama's foreign policy, senior White House officials went so far as to suggest that the logic that led the president to intervene in order to protect the citizens of Benghazi from slaughter might be expanded into a broader principle: the Obama doctrine, they called it. The Obama doctrine had two basic components — imminence and collaboration. America ought to intervene militarily when it could prevent the imminent slaughter of civilians, the doctrine said, but it would not do so unless it could secure the collaboration of a significant coalition, the latter both as a safety valve against malfunctions in our moral radar and as protection against any perceptions that our aims might be imperial.

As doctrines go, this did not seem like a bad one. Its imminence clause clearly reflected the humanitarian interventionist conviction that the moral failure of the West in Rwanda should not be repeated; its collaboration clause the realpolitik conclusion that the U.S. must avoid a repeat of the Iraq disaster. And it implicitly provided an answer to the question — really raised only rhetorically by the left — that every liberal White House wrestles with: If we are universalists, and our country is under no threat of invasion, then why do we maintain such a singularly vast military, for which we spend more than all of the other nations on Earth combined? What is the point of all these bombs? The point of all the bombs, the Obama doctrine suggested, in at least some significant part, is to protect those who cannot protect themselves.

Given the clarity of that doctrine, and given how recent and successful the Libya operation was, it has been striking — as the question of humanitarian intervention has come to focus on Syria — to see the president abandon his rhetoric and logic so completely. The details of the bombing plans that have been publicized — targeted raids lasting no more than three days, directed not at chemical weapons but at the military units that carried out the horrifying August 21 chemical attack — suggest that their aim is not protection but punishment. So does the intervention's timing. The Assad government has been slaughtering its own civilians by the tens of thousands for two years. It has been several months since Defense secretary Chuck Hagel suggested that American intelligence believed the Syrian government had likely used sarin gas against its own citizens. As abhorrent and inhumane as this latest attack was, it is hard to see exactly how it altered the moral compulsion to act. Slaughter is slaughter; dead is dead. But the tell is not just in the details, or the timing. In his interview on Wednesday with PBS's NewsHour, Obama did not make a case that there was any looming humanitarian crisis, focusing instead on an argument for geopolitical stability. "We cannot see," the president explained, "a breach of the nonproliferation norm that allows, potentially, chemical weapons to fall into the hands of all kinds of folks." The president began by addressing the humanitarian case: "Although what's happened there is tragic," he said, "what I've also concluded is that direct military engagement, involvement in the civil war in Syria, will not help the situation on the ground." In contrast to the president's own caution, David Cameron's government was far more blunt — at least until Britain's parliament rejected any military involvement in Syria. Cameron saw intervention as explicitly humanitarian. "The use of chemical weapons by the Syrian regime is a serious crime of international concern, as a breach of the customary international law prohibition on use of chemical weapons, and amounts to a war crime and a crime against humanity," the Cameron government argued in its failed resolution. "However, the legal basis for military action would be humanitarian intervention; the aim is to relieve humanitarian suffering by deterring or disrupting the further use of chemical weapons."

One way of viewing the difference between the American and British rhetoric over Syria would be to say that the Obama White House is heading toward this weird little war more cynically than the Cameron government was, more openly cognizant perhaps of the broad strategic game at work in the Middle East, with one side lining up behind Saudi Arabia and the other behind Iran. But it seems more likely that the difference is simpler. Obama's devotion to the humanitarian interventionist position has never been as clear, as single-minded, as those of his most famous foreign-policy advisers, Samantha Power and Susan Rice. Obama is, in his usual way, more guarded than that, more complicated, a complex algorithm into which both idealist impulses and realist ones are input. And so this unusual military intervention — extremely limited and transparent and targeted, triggered by humanitarian concerns but not exactly humanitarian in its aims, couched in the language of universalism but supported only by a few allies, accompanied by public declarations that it was not expected to alter the trajectory of the larger conflict — feels in some ways more true to the president than that particular framing of the Obama doctrine ever did. This three-day exercise does seem, in some meaningful sense, Obama's war.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: carladelponte; endlesswar; maheralassad; obamawar; thebrotherdidit; unilateral
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1 posted on 08/30/2013 11:27:09 AM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway
During the NATO intervention in Libya, to date perhaps the great success of Obama's foreign policy,

With success like that what does a screw-up look like? Syria?

2 posted on 08/30/2013 11:31:58 AM PDT by AU72
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To: nickcarraway
During the NATO intervention in Libya, to date perhaps the great success of Obama's foreign policy...

That's not saying much.

3 posted on 08/30/2013 11:33:29 AM PDT by Timber Rattler (Just say NO! to RINOS and the GOP-E)
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To: nickcarraway

I learned something new today. It’s either that there is an “0bama Doctrine” and that it has “clarity” and “logic,” or it is that Benjamin Wallace-Wells has access to some mind-blowing drugs for believing same.

I’m leaning toward option 2.


4 posted on 08/30/2013 11:34:32 AM PDT by henkster (If the Feds create an unlimited demand for bastard children, you get an unlimited supply of them.)
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To: henkster

Below I have summarized the combined military combat experience of the entire NY Times newsroom:


5 posted on 08/30/2013 11:44:45 AM PDT by pabianice
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To: FReepers; Patriots




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6 posted on 08/30/2013 11:45:51 AM PDT by onyx (Please Support Free Republic - Donate Monthly! If you want on Sarah Palin's Ping List, Let Me know!)
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To: nickcarraway

Our new Syrian MISADVENTURE is a DIVERSION from all the domestic scandals besetting this gang of criminals.

Hey, all you stupid low and no information voters. Don’t look there. Look at this shiny thing over HERE!


7 posted on 08/30/2013 11:48:11 AM PDT by Dick Bachert (“To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.”- Voltaire)
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To: nickcarraway
Libya was a success? Ask the Americans who were murdered there by terrorists.

This is just liberal doctrine re-heated. Liberals think America should only intervene when we have no national interest to do so. As in Kosovo.

8 posted on 08/30/2013 11:49:10 AM PDT by colorado tanker
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To: nickcarraway

“NATO intervention in Libya, to date perhaps the great success of Obama’s foreign policy”

http://www.johnspeedie.com/healy/horse.wav


9 posted on 08/30/2013 11:51:34 AM PDT by BenLurkin (This is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire; or both.)
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To: henkster

“Obama is, in his usual way, more guarded than that, more complicated, a complex algorithm into which both idealist impulses and realist”

http://www.johnspeedie.com/healy/crap.wav


10 posted on 08/30/2013 11:53:43 AM PDT by BenLurkin (This is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire; or both.)
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To: pabianice

Nowhere in the entire excerpt does the author make any mention of Hussein’s support for the Muslim Brotherhood — and that, as we all know, is the true driving force behind his mindless squandering of American munitions.


11 posted on 08/30/2013 11:55:12 AM PDT by BenLurkin (This is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire; or both.)
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To: nickcarraway
Gotta love the is Reuters article “Exclusive: Syrian army moves Scud missiles to avoid strike”

http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/08/29/us-syria-crisis-missiles-idUSBRE97S12920130829

My favorite quote from the article

“Rebel military sources said spotters saw missiles draped in tarpaulins on the launchers, as well as trailer trucks carrying other rockets and equipment. More than two dozen Scuds - 11-metre (35-foot) long ballistic missiles with ranges of 300 km (200 miles) and more - were fired from the base in the Qalamoun area this year, some of which hit even Aleppo in the far north.

The base was among a list of suggested targets presented by the rebel Syrian National Coalition to Western envoys in Istanbul earlier this week, opposition sources said. Scud units, of Soviet or North Korean manufacture, are designed to be mobile and so could still be set up quickly to fire from new positions.”

with the eye popper being

“The base was among a list of suggested targets presented by the rebel Syrian National Coalition to Western envoys in Istanbul earlier this week, opposition sources said. “

Our Air Force, it seems, is working at the direction of the Syrian insurgents ( the media term "rebel's" is a misnomer because most of the fighters are foreign Jihadi mercenaries, not native Syrians)

We really and truly have become Al Qaeda’s air force, in the most literal sense.

12 posted on 08/30/2013 12:04:53 PM PDT by rdcbn
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To: BenLurkin

“Obama is, in his usual way, more guarded than that, more complicated, a complex algorithm into which both idealist impulses and realist”

And all this time I thought he was just an incompetent, clueless hack, instead of this complex algorithm. Man, was I ever the dumbass. /s/


13 posted on 08/30/2013 12:05:18 PM PDT by henkster (If the Feds create an unlimited demand for bastard children, you get an unlimited supply of them.)
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To: nickcarraway

14 posted on 08/30/2013 12:07:23 PM PDT by Yosemitest (It's Simple ! Fight, ... or Die !)
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To: nickcarraway
Why a nervous Hillary Clinton is remarkably silent on Syria
15 posted on 08/30/2013 12:42:06 PM PDT by opentalk
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To: nickcarraway

Boy, listening to Lurch today, I can’t help but wonder if we are going to have a cage match between the two most recent heads of the Department of State come 2016?

Truth to tell, if Kerry sounded as good in 2004 as he does now on the Syrian problem, Dubya could have been a 1-termer like Daddy Bush.


16 posted on 08/30/2013 12:44:44 PM PDT by ssaftler (Oh, hell YEAH!!!! This is absolutely Obama's fault)
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To: nickcarraway

“Obama’s devotion to the humanitarian interventionist position has never been as clear, as single-minded, as those of his most famous foreign-policy advisers, Samantha Power and Susan Rice. Obama is, in his usual way, more guarded than that, more complicated, a complex algorithm into which both idealist impulses and realist ones are input. And so this unusual military intervention — extremely limited and transparent and targeted, triggered by humanitarian concerns but not exactly humanitarian in its aims, couched in the language of universalism but supported only by a few allies, accompanied by public declarations that it was not expected to alter the trajectory of the larger conflict — feels in some ways more true to the president than that particular framing of the Obama doctrine ever did. This three-day exercise does seem, in some meaningful sense, Obama’s war.”

After reading that I feel like I just waded through a chin-high pile of crap.


17 posted on 08/30/2013 1:18:57 PM PDT by aquila48
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To: colorado tanker
Libya was a success? Ask the Americans who were murdered there by terrorists.

Keep in mind this is the bizarro world of Baraq Hussein mohammed 0bama.

- In this world economic recovery means millions more on food stamps.
- Al queda "on the run" means we've given up, and are taking our ball and going home, (aka unilateral surrender).
- And "Affordable Health Care" means that the costs only quadruple.

So to the libs, Libya was a diplomatic success. At least we haven't been nuked by Iran - yet.

18 posted on 08/30/2013 1:56:05 PM PDT by The Sons of Liberty (For congress, it's not the principle of the thing, it's the money.)
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To: The Sons of Liberty
Keep in mind this is the bizarro world of Baraq Hussein mohammed 0bama.

Yep. Here we are four years into a truly jobless "recovery" and I have yet to read that phrase in the MSM.

19 posted on 08/30/2013 2:00:08 PM PDT by colorado tanker
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To: nickcarraway

“During the NATO intervention in Libya, to date perhaps the great success of Obama’s foreign policy...”

Perhaps we should ask the former US ambassador to Libya what he thinks of this great success.


20 posted on 08/30/2013 2:35:41 PM PDT by ops33 (Senior Master Sergeant, USAF (Retired))
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