America’s
True Role in Syria
By Jeffrey D.
Sachs
September 09,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Project
Syndicate"
-
Syria’s civil
war is the most dangerous and destructive crisis on
the planet. Since early 2011, hundreds of thousands
have died; around ten million Syrians have been
displaced; Europe has been convulsed with Islamic
State (ISIS) terror and the political fallout of
refugees; and the United States and its NATO allies
have more than once come perilously close to direct
confrontation with Russia.
Unfortunately,
President Barack Obama has greatly compounded the
dangers by hiding the US role in Syria from the
American people and from world opinion. An end to
the Syrian war requires an honest accounting by the
US of its ongoing, often secretive role in the
Syrian conflict since 2011, including who is
funding, arming, training, and abetting the various
sides. Such exposure would help bring to an end many
countries’ reckless actions.
A widespread –
and false – perception is that Obama has kept the US
out of the Syrian war. Indeed, the US right wing
routinely criticizes him for having drawn a line in
the sand for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad over
chemical weapons, and then backing off when Assad
allegedly crossed it (the issue remains murky and
disputed, like so much else in Syria). A leading
columnist for the Financial Times, repeating
the erroneous idea that the US has remained on the
sidelines,
recently implied that Obama had rejected the
advice of then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to
arm the Syrian rebels fighting Assad.
Yet the
curtain gets lifted from time to time. In January,
the New York Times
finally reported on a secret 2013 Presidential
order to the CIA to arm Syrian rebels. As the
account explained, Saudi Arabia provides substantial
financing of the armaments, while the CIA, under
Obama’s orders, provides organizational support and
training.
Unfortunately,
the story came and went without further elaboration
by the US government or follow up by the New York
Times. The public was left in the dark: How big
are the ongoing CIA-Saudi operations? How much is
the US spending on Syria per year? What kinds of
arms are the US, Saudis, Turks, Qataris, and others
supplying to the Syrian rebels? Which groups are
receiving the arms? What is the role of US troops,
air cover, and other personnel in the war? The US
government isn’t answering these questions, and
mainstream media aren’t pursuing them, either.
On
more than a dozen occasions, Obama has told the
American people that there would be “no US boots on
the ground.” Yet every few months, the public is
also notified in a brief government statement that
US special operations forces are being deployed to
Syria. The Pentagon
routinely denies that they are in the front
lines. But when Russia and the Assad government
recently carried out bombing runs and artillery fire
against rebel strongholds in northern Syria, the US
notified the Kremlin that the attacks were
threatening American troops on the ground. The
public has been given no explanation about their
mission, its costs, or counterparties in Syria.
Through
occasional leaks, investigative reports, statements
by other governments, and rare statements by US
officials, we know that America is engaged in an
active, ongoing, CIA-coordinated war both to
overthrow Assad and to fight ISIS. America’s allies
in the anti-Assad effort include Saudi Arabia,
Turkey, Qatar, and other countries in the region.
The US has spent billions of dollars on arms,
training, special operations forces, air strikes,
and logistical support for the rebel forces,
including international mercenaries. American allies
have spent billions of dollars more. The precise
sums are not reported.
The US public
has had no say in these decisions. There has been no
authorizing vote or budget approval by the US
Congress. The CIA’s role has never been explained or
justified. The domestic and international legality
of US actions has never been defended to the
American people or the world.
To those at
the center of the US military-industrial complex,
this secrecy is as it should be. Their position is
that a vote by Congress 15 years ago authorizing the
use of armed force against those culpable for the
9/11 attack gives the president and military carte
blanche to fight secret wars in the Middle East and
Africa. Why should the US explain publicly what it
is doing? That would only jeopardize the operations
and strengthen the enemy. The public does not need
to know.
I subscribe to
a different view: wars should be a last resort and
should be constrained by democratic scrutiny. This
view holds that America’s secret war in Syria is
illegal both under the US Constitution (which gives
Congress the sole power to declare war) and under
the United Nations Charter, and that America’s
two-sided war in Syria is a cynical and reckless
gamble. The US-led efforts to topple Assad are not
aimed at protecting the Syrian people, as Obama and
Clinton have suggested from time to time, but are a
US proxy war against Iran and Russia, in which Syria
happens to be the battleground.
The stakes of
this war are much higher and much more dangerous
than America’s proxy warriors imagine. As the US has
prosecuted its war against Assad, Russia has stepped
up its military support to his government. In the US
mainstream media, Russia’s behavior is an affront:
how dare the Kremlin block the US from overthrowing
the Syrian government? The result is a widening
diplomatic clash with Russia, one that could
escalate and lead – perhaps inadvertently – to the
point of military conflict.
These are
issues that should be subject to legal scrutiny and
democratic control. I am confident that the American
people would respond with a resounding “no” to the
ongoing US-led war of regime change in Syria. The
American people want security – including the defeat
of ISIS – but they also recognize the long and
disastrous history of US-led regime-change efforts,
including in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria,
Central America, Africa, and Southeast Asia.
This is the
main reason why the US security state refuses to
tell the truth. The American people would call for
peace rather than perpetual war. Obama has a few
months left in office to repair his broken legacy.
He should start by leveling with the American
people.
Jeffrey
D. Sachs, Professor of Sustainable Development,
Professor of Health Policy and Management, and
Director of the Earth Institute at Columbia
University, is also Director of the UN Sustainable
Development Solutions Network.
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