Posted on 09/09/2013 7:10:41 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Via the Free Beacon, Ed mentioned this already but a foreign-policy soundbite this immortal maybe the greatest since leading from behind requires video, especially with Assad claiming that his response might not be quite as teeny tiny. Kerrys Syria pronouncements are aimed at three audiences the majority of Congress, which worries about mission creep if they greenlight this fiasco; the McCainian hawkish minority, which wants mission creep in the sense that they want more support for the rebels in the name of regime change; and of course Assad and Iran, who need to have the fear of God put into them if theyre going to think twice about using gas again. How do you satisfy each of those audiences in your public pronouncements if youre the Secretary of State? I dont know, and neither does this guy, apparently. Last week he assured Chris Hayes that one happy consequence of U.S. intervention will be to empower moderate rebels as an alternative to the jihadis, which made it sound like Americas goals in this were broader than simply bloodying Assads nose for using WMD. Good news for McCainians, not so good for everyone else, and its that everyone else in Congress thats their big problem right now. So heres Waffles waffling back towards the doves by promising that any attack will be unbelievably small, which is just what you want to hear if youre prepared to gamble your House seat on a big show of American muscle abroad.
And its not just Kerry. Different White House actors are saying different things to please/frighten their various audiences. Alex Massie cuts through it at the Spectator UK:
But since the purpose of the raid is and no-one sensible disputes this, I think just to send a message to Assad and other tyrants that the use of chemical weapons is something up with which the international community will not put it makes very little sense to send a message thats so unbelievably small neither Assad nor his counterparts elsewhere will feel the need to read or otherwise get it. And if the message is not received it has not, in this instance, been sent either.
And since, moreover, the case for military action also rests upon the sense that American (and western) credibility is on the line vis a vis Syria (and all future foreign entanglements) it seems foolish to make a virtue out of the fact that this action is actually going to be, as Kerry puts it, unbelievably small. What price credibility then?
Heres a more colorful way to think about it:
The strike, as envisioned, would be limited in the number of targets and done within a day or two. It could be completed in one fell swoop with missiles, said one senior official familiar with the weapons involved. A smaller, follow-on strike could be launched if targets arent sufficiently damaged.
A second senior official, who has seen the most recent planning, offered this metaphor to describe such a strike: If Assad is eating Cheerios, were going to take away his spoon and give him a fork. Will that degrade his ability to eat Cheerios? Yes. Will it deter him? Maybe. But hell still be able to eat Cheerios.
As goofy as that it, its a nifty way to sum up what theyre going for here. They dont want to stop him from eating Cheerios altogether, just make things a bit harder for him so that they can semi-plausibly claim success later. The McCainians will trumpet that weve degraded Assads capabilities, doves will sigh with relief that we havent been dragged in deeper, and the White House can rest assured that they didnt do anything (like killing Assad) that would cause too much extra chaos in Syria. Remember, the U.S. goal here isnt regime change, as much as O pays lip services to that from time to time. The goal is to negotiate a settlement between Sunnis and Alawites that will preserve an uneasy balance of power. Kill Assad and that probably becomes less likely, either because the regime will start to implode despite Irans best efforts to hold it together or because the Shiites, as retaliation, will begin to behave even more ruthlessly. If either side wins on the battlefield by rolling over the other, sectarian cleansing is likely to result. The White House figures, probably rightly, that if a peace deal is reached, having Assad in charge to restrain the Shiites will be more helpful in preventing that cleansing than taking him out now would be.
Your homework assignment is the RAND study concluding that theres no guarantee that a conflict designed to be unbelievably small would stay that way for long. Exit question via Jim Geraghty: Didnt the White House just expand the Pentagons target list in Syria last week? Cruise missiles, jets, bombers when Kerry says unbelievably small, maybe he means that literally. I.e. when they call it small, its unbelievable.
Update: Maverick is unhappy:
Unbelievably small=yuuuup, that “small” reference was not to be believed
"A few pop bottle rockets and we're outta there!" - The "White House"
Roman Candles at 100 paces!
A pinprick by a pinhead.
The Obama plan seems to be: Get chaos.
Actually, it looks more like “Get the MB in control.” . He did it in Libya, he did it in Egypt for awhile, and now he’s trying to do it in Syria. Every where he’s intervened it has been to overthrow a secular government, with muslims waiting in the wings to fill the vacuum. He’s using US military assets to create caliphates in middle eastern countries.”
Yes, for sure, getting chaos is one of the means to overturn the status quo and in the charade of saying they are “installing democracy” and getting rid of a “tyrant,” they install the far, far more tyrannical MB next to Israel and other more stable Islamic countries. The author(s) of Obama’s “autobiographical” books wrote that Obama loves above all other sounds the Islamic call to prayer and supports Islamists over than the U.S. and wants to use his office to bring about a world caliphate.
bump
“to send a message to Assad and other tyrants that the use of chemical weapons is something up with which the international community will not put . . .”
I was about to put on my Language Police hat and call this guy out on his faulty grammar. Then it became clear to me that he did it deliberately, in order to make fun of Obama, Kerry, and the other idiots he is criticizing.
It clearly is a deliberate echo of a famous, comic pronouncement by Winston Churchill:
“Ending a sentence with a preposition is something up with which I will not put.”
Great catch, Marce Tulli Cicero.
To match an infinitesimal Commander in Chief.
Oh, that’s graphic. Whatever it is I don’t want to see what can’t be unseen.
...nor smell what can’t be un-smelled.
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