Another Great Article by Pat Buchanan on America's Non-Intervention in Syrian Civil War
I think that the most disturbing line from the article and the one that I think is really preventing the secularists as Pat calls them from really helping out the Syrian rebels against the Assad regime is that 'As The New York Times reported Sunday, "Nowhere in rebel-controlled Syria is there a secular fighting force to speak of." I think that in light of this, Pat makes a really good argument to not get involved, at least not militarily, because it has become or always was or maybe is just becoming, but I'm seeing it this way more and more the more I watch on it, including that Frontline documentary a few weeks ago, as just another in a long long line of conflicts betwenn sunni Islam and shia Islam. It's sad that this, what started in Tunisia as a real non-violent movement promoting democracy and liberal values (free speech press petition the government for a redress of grievances), has been hijacked by jihadists who simply see things as Salafist Islam vs the universe. My heart goes out to the true Muslims who have left Syria because of this unlimited militancy and old energies sectarian conflict. Just sad.
Their War, Not Ours
By Pat Buchanan | Pat Buchanan – 5 hrs ago
Syrians officials deny that they ever used chemicals. And before we dismiss Damascus' denials, recall that an innocent man in Tupelo, Miss., was lately charged with mailing deadly ricin to Sen. Roger Wicker and President Obama. This weekend, we learned he may have been framed.
It is well within the capacity of Assad's enemies to use or fake the use of poison gas to suck us into fighting their war.
Even if elements of Assad's army did use sarin, we ought not plunge in. And, fortunately, that seems to be Obama's thinking.
And if Israel does not feel sufficiently threatened by Syria's chemical weapons to go after them, why should we, 4,000 miles away?
Then there is Turkey, with three times Syria's population, NATO's second-largest army and a 600-mile border. Why is ridding the Middle East of Assad our assignment and not Ankara's?
Surely the heirs of the Ottomans have a larger stake here.
And if we get into this war, how do we get out?
For the war is metastasizing. Hezbollah is sending in fighters to help the Alawite Shia. Other Lebanese are assisting the Sunni rebels. The war could spread into Iraq, where the latest clashes between Sunni and Shia are pulling the country apart. Young Muslims are coming in from Europe.
Iran and Russia are aiding Damascus. Qatar and Saudi Arabia are aiding the Islamists. The United States, Jordan and Turkey are aiding the secularists. Syria could come apart, and a sectarian and ethnic war of all against all erupt across the region.
Do we really want the U.S. military in the middle of this?
Because his "red line" appears to have been crossed, Obama is being told he must attack Syria to maintain his credibility with Iran and North Korea.
Nonsense. To attack Syria would compound Obama's folly in drawing the red line. Better to have egg on Obama's face than for America to be dragged into another unnecessary war.
Time for Congress to either authorize Obama to lead us into a new Middle East war, or direct him, in the absence of an attack upon us, to keep America out of what is Syria's civil war.
Before we slide into another war, let the country be consulted first.
Patrick J. Buchanan is the author of "Suicide of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025?" To find out more about Patrick Buchanan and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com.
<< Home