Hillary
Clinton and Her Hawks
Exclusive: Focusing on domestic issues, Hillary
Clinton’s acceptance speech sidestepped the deep
concerns anti-war Democrats have about her hawkish
foreign policy, which is already taking shape in the
shadows, reports Gareth Porter.
By Gareth Porter
July 29, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- As Hillary Clinton begins her final charge for the
White House, her advisers are already recommending
air strikes and other new military measures against
the Assad regime in Syria.
The clear
signals of Clinton’s readiness to go to war appears
to be aimed at influencing the course of the war in
Syria as well as U.S. policy over the remaining six
months of the Obama administration. (She also may be
hoping to corral the votes of Republican
neoconservatives concerned about Donald Trump’s
“America First” foreign policy.)
Last month,
the think tank run by Michele Flournoy, the former
Defense Department official considered to be most
likely to be Clinton’s choice to be Secretary of
Defense, explicitly called for “limited military
strikes” against the Assad regime.
And earlier
this month Leon Panetta, former Defense Secretary
and CIA Director, who has been advising candidate
Clinton, declared in an interview that the next
president would have to increase the number of
Special Forces and carry out air strikes to help
“moderate” groups against President Bashal al-Assad.
(When Panetta gave a belligerent speech at the
Democratic National Convention on Wednesday night,
he was interrupted by chants from the delegates on
the floor of “no more war!”
Flournoy
co-founded the Center for New American Security
(CNAS) in 2007 to promote support for U.S. war
policies in Iraq and Afghanistan, and then became
Under Secretary of Defense for Policy in the Obama
administration in 2009.
Flournoy
left her Pentagon position in 2012 and returned to
CNAS as Chief Executive Officer. She has been
described by ultimate insider journalist David
Ignatius of the Washington Post, as being on a
“short, short list” for the job Secretary of Defense
in a Clinton administration.
Last month,
CNAS published a report
of a “Study Group” on military policy in
Syria on the eve of the organization’s annual
conference. Ostensibly focused on how to defeat the
Islamic State, the report recommends new U.S.
military actions against the Assad regime.
Flournoy
chaired the task force, along with CNAS president
Richard Fontaine, and publicly embraced its main
policy recommendation in remarks at the conference.
She called
for “using limited military coercion” to help
support the forces seeking to force President Assad
from power, in part by creating a “no bombing” zone
over those areas in which the opposition groups
backed by the United States could operate safely.
In an interview
with Defense One, Flournoy
described the no-bomb zone as saying to the Russian
and Syrian governments, “If you bomb the folks we
support, we will retaliate using standoff means to
destroy [Russian] proxy forces, or, in this case,
Syrian assets.” That would “stop the bombing of
certain civilian populations,” Flournoy said.
In a letter
to the editor of Defense One, Flournoy
denied having advocated “putting U.S. combat troops
on the ground to take territory from Assad’s forces
or remove Assad from power,” which she said the
title and content of the article had suggested.
But she
confirmed that she had argued that “the U.S. should
under some circumstances consider using limited
military coercion – primarily trikes using standoff
weapons – to retaliate against Syrian military
targets” for attacks on civilian or opposition
groups “and to set more favorable conditions on the
ground for a negotiated political settlement.”
Renaming a ‘No-Fly’ Zone
The
proposal for a “no bombing zone” has clearly
replaced the “no fly zone,” which Clinton has
repeatedly supported in the past as the slogan to
cover a much broader U.S. military role in Syria.
Panetta
served as Defense Secretary and CIA Director in the
Obama administration when Clinton was Secretary of
State, and was Clinton’s ally on Syria policy. On
July 17, he gave
an interview to CBS News in which he called
for steps that partly complemented and partly
paralleled the recommendations in the CNAS paper.
“I think
the likelihood is that the next president is gonna
have to consider adding additional special forces on
the ground,” Panetta said, “to try to assist those
moderate forces that are taking on ISIS and that are
taking on Assad’s forces.”
Panetta was
deliberately conflating two different issues in
supporting more U.S. Special Forces in Syria. The
existing military mission for those forces is to
support the anti-ISIS forces made up overwhelmingly
of the Kurdish YPG and a few opposition groups.
Neither the
Kurds nor the opposition groups the Special Forces
are supporting are fighting against the Assad
regime. What Panetta presented as a need only for
additional personnel is in fact a completely new
U.S. mission for Special Forces of putting military
pressure on the Assad regime.
He also
called for increasing “strikes” in order to “put
increasing pressure on ISIS but also on Assad.” That
wording, which jibes with the Flournoy-CNAS
recommendation, again conflates two entirely
different strategic programs as a single program.
The Panetta
ploys in confusing two separate policy issues
reflects the reality that the majority of the
American public strongly supports doing more
militarily to defeat ISIS but has been opposed to
U.S. war against the government in Syria.
A poll
taken last spring showed 57 percent in favor
of a more aggressive U.S. military force against
ISIS. The
last time public opinion was surveyed on the
issue of war against the Assad regime, however, was
in September 2013, just as Congress was about to
vote on authorizing such a strike.
At that
time, 55 percent to 77 percent of those surveyed
opposed the use of military force against the Syrian
regime, depending on whether Congress voted to
authorize such a strike or to oppose it.
Shaping the Debate
It is
highly unusual, if not unprecedented, for figures
known to be close to a presidential candidate to
make public recommendations for new and broader war
abroad. The fact that such explicit plans for
military strikes against the Assad regime were aired
so openly soon after Clinton had clinched the
Democratic nomination suggests that Clinton had
encouraged Flournoy and Panetta to do so.
The
rationale for doing so is evidently not to
strengthen her public support at home but to shape
the policy decisions made by the Obama
administration and the coalition of external
supporters of the armed opposition to Assad.
Obama’s
refusal to threaten to use military force on behalf
of the anti-Assad forces or to step up military
assistance to them has provoked a series of leaks to
the news media by unnamed officials – primarily from
the Defense Department – criticizing Obama’s
willingness to cooperate with Russia in seeking a
Syrian ceasefire and political settlement as
“naïve.”
The news of
Clinton’s advisers calling openly for military
measures signals to those critics in the
administration to continue to push for a more
aggressive policy on the premise that she will do
just that as president.
Even more
important to Clinton and close associates, however,
is the hope of encouraging Turkey, Saudi Arabia and
Qatar, which have been supporting the armed
opposition to Assad, to persist in and even
intensify their efforts in the face of the prospect
of U.S.-Russian cooperation in Syria.
Even before
the recommendations were revealed, specialists on
Syria in Washington think tanks were already
observing signs that Saudi and Qatari policymakers
were waiting for the Obama administration to end in
the hope that Clinton would be elected and take a
more activist role in the war against Assad.
The new
Prime Minister of Turkey, Binali Yildirim, however,
made a statement on July 13 suggesting that Turkish
President Recep Yayyip Erdogan may be considering a
deal with Russia and the Assad regime at the expense
of both Syrian Kurds and the anti-Assad opposition.
That
certainly would have alarmed Clinton’s advisers, and
four days later, Panetta made his comments on
network television about what “the next president”
would have to do in Syria.
Gareth Porter is an independent
investigative journalist and winner of the 2012
Gellhorn Prize for journalism. He is the author of
the newly published Manufactured
Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare. |