An international coalition of troops should be ready to go into Syria to secure the country’s chemical weapons stockpiles, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) said Sunday, warning that U.S. troops on the ground would only spark more Mideast anger.
But McCain said that putting troops in Syria is the “worst thing United States could do right now,” because the Syrian people are bitter and angry at the United States.
“I think that the American people are weary. They don’t want boots on the ground. I don’t want boots on the ground,” McCain said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
Well, he's right, actually. But, as always with the constantly dishonest and prevaricating McCain, there's always a catch.
But McCain urged the Obama administration to take several actions in Syria, such as arming rebel groups or establishing a safe zone, steps he and other GOP hawks have long pressed for.
Yeah, what does "establishing a safe zone" mean, and how do we do that without troops on the ground to enforce that zone? Doug Mataconis responds:
What McCain doesn’t understand, or which he chooses to ignore, is that even the “limited” involvement that he’s in favor of poses the significant danger of sucking us further into the conflict in the future. In for a penny, in for a pound so to speak. Additionally,an “international coalition” is far harder to put together than McCain seems to think. Who is going to make up this coalition? The British? Somehow I don’t think the British public is going to want to bear that burden in the wake of their experiences in Iraq. The French? That poses the danger of reigniting passions from the days when France controlled what is now Syria and Lebanon after the post-World War I collapse of the Ottoman Empire. The Turks? That poses the danger of igniting regional tensions, not to mention Kurdish resentment in the areas of Syria where they predominate. In the end, the U.S. would end up having to shoulder a large part of the burden of this “international coalition,” and the mission would be seen as predominantly an American initiative notwithstanding whatever “international” window dressing may be put upon it.I'll go one step further. Who's going to pay for this? Deficit hawk Republicans who are screaming about "the debt crisis" every 35 seconds? The ones who say we can't spend money for Sandy victims because we can't afford it, but can spend tens of billions, maybe hundreds of billions or more in a protracted Syria campaign? And in the age of European Austerity, who in Europe has the appetite for war, either?
Here's the truth about Damascus: there are zero good options. Bashar al-Assad is by no means innocent in this vicious civil war, but he's also riding the runaway train that is the Syrian Army, and if he tries to rein them in, they'll end him. Frankly, he's the only thing standing between the generals and a full-out military coup, and the junta would then go weapons free on everything moving. He's inherited all the sins of his father Hafez, and the cost in blood to the Syrian people will skyrocket no matter what happens.
Getting rid of al-Assad won't stop the war, and if anything he's the plug in the dam bottling up a lake of blood. If he goes, so does the region...and yet I don't see any way out for him at this point that doesn't end in his demise, Saddam-style. He knows this, and I don't think he's too keen on his death.
A lot of people are going to die in Syria if we get involved. That's going to go up by an order of magnitude or so if we do. Perhaps pressure on China and Russia to stop blocking the UN on Syria will finally pay off and something can be done through peacekeeping forces, but as Doug says anything the US puts together is a guaranteed hunk of sodium in the bathtub.
There may not be much of anything we can do other than try to contain the fallout. The alternative is another ten-year war. I'll pass. President Obama continues to play things cautiously, and given the last guy in the Oval Office, I'm glad for it.
The US and Israel could be the multi-national force. I'm sure that would be very effective in unifying the Syrian people, and indeed the entire region. Of course, they'd all be unified against us...
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