Biden’s reckless Syria bombing: This is
not the diplomacy he promised
This ill-advised attack, at a delicate moment in
U.S.-Iran relations, sends exactly the wrong
signal to the world
By Medea Benjamin - Nicolas J.S. Davies
February 28, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - The Feb. 25 U.S.
bombing of Syria immediately puts the policies of
the newly-formed Biden administration into sharp
relief. Why is this administration bombing the
sovereign nation of Syria? Why is it bombing
"Iranian-backed militias" who pose absolutely no
threat to the United States and are actually
involved in fighting ISIS? If this is about getting
more leverage vis-à-vis Iran, why hasn't the Biden
administration just done what it said it would do:
rejoin the Iran nuclear deal and de-escalate the
Middle East conflicts?
According to the
Pentagon, the U.S. strike was in response to the
Feb. 15 rocket attack in northern Iraq that
killed a contractor working with the U.S.
military and injured a U.S. service member. Accounts
of the number killed in the U.S. attack vary from
one to 22.
he Pentagon made the incredible claim that this
action "aims to de-escalate the overall situation in
both Eastern Syria and Iraq." This was
countered by the Syrian government, which
condemned the illegal attack on its territory and
said the strikes "will lead to consequences that
will escalate the situation in the region." The
strike was also condemned by the governments of
China and Russia. A member of Russia's Federation
Council
warned that such escalations in the area could
lead to "a massive conflict."
Ironically, Jen Psaki, now President Biden's
White House spokesperson, questioned the lawfulness
of attacking Syria in 2017, when it was the Trump
administration doing the bombing. Back then she
asked: "What is the legal authority for strikes?
Assad is a brutal dictator. But Syria is a sovereign
country."
The airstrikes were supposedly authorized by the
20-year-old, post-9/11 Authorization for the Use of
Military Force (AUMF), legislation that Rep. Barbara
Lee, D-Calif., has been trying for years to repeal
since it has been misused,
according to the congresswoman, "to justify
waging war in at least seven different countries,
against a continuously expanding list of targetable
adversaries."
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The U.S. claims that its targeting of the
militia in Syria was based on intelligence
provided by the Iraqi government. Defense
Secretary Lloyd Austin
told reporters: "We're confident that target
was being used by the same Shia militia that
conducted the strike [against U.S. and coalition
forces]."
But
a report by Middle East Eye (MEE) suggests that
Iran has strongly urged the militias it supports in
Iraq to refrain from such attacks, or any warlike
actions that could derail its sensitive diplomacy to
bring the U.S. and Iran back into compliance with
the 2015 international nuclear agreement or JCPOA.
"None of our known factions carried out this
attack," a senior Iraqi militia commander told MEE.
"The Iranian orders have not changed regarding
attacking the American forces, and the Iranians are
still keen to maintain calm with the Americans until
they see how the new administration will act."
The inflammatory nature of this U.S. attack on
Iranian-backed Iraqi militias, who are an integral
part of Iraq's armed forces and have played a
critical role in the war with ISIS, was implicitly
acknowledged in the U.S. decision to attack them in
Syria instead of in Iraq. Did Prime Minister
Mustafa Al-Kadhimi, a pro-Western British-Iraqi,
who is trying to rein in the Iranian-backed Shiite
militias, deny permission for a U.S. attack on Iraqi
soil?
At Kadhimi's request, NATO is increasing its
presence from 500 troops to 4,000 (from Denmark, the
U.K. and Turkey, not the U.S.) to train the Iraqi
military and reduce its dependence on the
Iranian-backed militias. But Kadhimi risks losing
his job in an election this October if he alienates
Iraq's Shiite majority. Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad
Hussein is heading to Tehran to meet with Iranian
officials over the weekend, and the world will be
watching to see how Iraq and Iran will respond to
the U.S. attack.
Some analysts say the bombing may have been
intended to strengthen the U.S. hand in its
negotiations with Iran over the nuclear deal (JCPOA).
"The strike, the way I see it, was meant to set the
tone with Tehran and dent its inflated confidence
ahead of negotiations,"
said Bilal Saab, a former Pentagon official who
is currently a senior fellow with the Middle East
Institute.
But this attack will make it more difficult to
resume negotiations with Iran. It comes at a
delicate moment when the Europeans are trying to
orchestrate a "compliance for compliance" maneuver
to revive the JCPOA. This strike will make the
diplomatic process more difficult, as it gives more
power to the Iranian factions who oppose the deal
and any negotiations with the United States.
Showing bipartisan support for attacking
sovereign nations, key Republicans on the foreign
affairs committees such as Sen. Marco Rubio of
Florida and Rep. Michael McCaul of Texas immediately
welcomed the attacks. So did some Biden
supporters, who crassly displayed their partiality
to bombing by a Democratic president.
Democratic organizer
Amy Siskind tweeted: "So different having
military action under Biden. No middle school level
threats on Twitter. Trust Biden and his team's
competence." Biden supporter Suzanne Lamminen
tweeted: "Such a quiet attack. No drama, no TV
coverage of bombs hitting targets, no comments on
how presidential Biden is. What a difference."
Thankfully though, some members of Congress are
speaking out against the strikes. "We cannot stand
up for Congressional authorization before military
strikes only when there is a Republican President,"
Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., tweeted. "The
Administration should have sought Congressional
authorization here. We need to work to extricate
from the Middle East, not escalate." Peace groups
around the country are echoing that call. Rep.
Barbara Lee and Sens. Bernie
Sanders, I-Vt., Tim
Kaine, D-Va., and
Chris Murphy, D-Conn., also released statements
either questioning or condemning the strikes.
Americans should remind Biden that he promised to
prioritize diplomacy over military action as the
primary instrument of his foreign policy. Biden
should recognize that the best way to protect U.S.
personnel is to take them out of the Middle East. He
should recall that the Iraqi Parliament voted a year
ago for U.S. troops to leave their country. He
should also recognize that U.S. troops have no right
to be in Syria, still "protecting the oil," on the
orders of Donald Trump.
After failing to prioritize diplomacy and rejoin
the Iran nuclear agreement, Biden has now, barely a
month into his presidency, reverted to the use of
military force in a region already shattered by two
decades of U.S. war-making. This is not what he
promised in his campaign and it is not what the
American people voted for.
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