Jackson Diehl feels Obama's decisions on Syria are far worse than what happened in Libya.
The result is not a painful but isolated setback, but an emerging strategic
disaster: a war in the heart of the Middle East that is steadily spilling over
to vital U.S. allies, such as Turkey and Jordan, and to volatile neighbors, such
as Iraq and Lebanon. Al-Qaeda is far more active in Syria than it is in Libya —
while more liberal and secular forces are turning against the United States
because of its failure to help them. More than 30,000 people — most of them civilians — have
been killed, and the toll mounts by the hundreds every day.
Of course, Obama is not solely responsible for this mess. But his serial
miscalculations have had the consistent if unintended effect of enabling Syria’s
Bashar al-Assad — first to avoid international isolation, then to go on
slaughtering his own population with impunity.
Obama’s Syria policy began in 2009 with the misguided idea of reaching out to
the dictator. Within a month of his inauguration, Obama reversed the Bush
administration’s approach of isolating Assad. He later reopened the U.S. Embassy
and dispatched senior envoys, such as George Mitchell.
The problem with this policy was not just the distasteful courting of a rogue
regime but the willful disregard of the lessons absorbed by George W. Bush, who
also tried reaching out to Assad, only to learn the hard way that he was an irredeemable thug. Yet
Obama insisted on reversing Bush’s policy of distancing the United States from
strongmen like Assad and Hosni Mubarak — a monumental miscalculation.
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