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The Impulsive Foreign Policy Establishment Of US

ByPatrick J Buchanan

Some 50 US State Department officials have signed a memo calling on President Barack Obama to launch air and missile strikes on the Damascus regime of Bashar Al Assad.

If US bombs and missiles rain down on Damascus, to the cheers of the C-Street Pattons, what do we do if Assad’s allies Iran and Hizbollah retaliate with Benghazi-type attacks on US diplomats across the Middle East?

What if Syrian missiles and Russian planes start shooting down US planes?

Some 50 US State Department officials have signed a memo calling on President Barack Obama to launch air and missile strikes on the Damascus regime of Bashar Al Assad.

A “judicious use of stand-off and air weapons”, they claim, “would undergird and drive a more focused and hard-nosed US-led diplomatic process”. In brief, to strengthen the hand of our diplomats and show we mean business, we should start bombing and killing Syrian soldiers.

Yet Syria has not attacked us. And the US Congress has not declared war on Syria, or authorised an attack. Where do these State hawks think President Obama gets the authority to launch a war on Syria?

Does State consider the Constitution to be purely advisory when it grants Congress the sole power to declare war? Was not waging aggressive war the principal charge against the Nazis at Nuremberg?

If US bombs and missiles rain down on Damascus, to the cheers of the C-Street Pattons, what do we do if Assad’s allies Iran and Hizbollah retaliate with Benghazi-type attacks on US diplomats across the Middle East? What do we do if Syrian missiles and Russian planes start shooting down US planes?

Go to war with Hizbollah, Iran and Russia?

Assume US strikes break Syria’s regime and Assad falls and flees. Who fills the power vacuum in Damascus, if not the most ruthless of the terrorist forces in that country, Al-Nusra and Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS)?

Should ISIS reach Damascus first, and a slaughter of Alawites and Christians ensue, would we send an American army to save them?

According to CIA director John Brennan, ISIS is spreading and coming to Europe and America. Does it make sense then that we would launch air and missile strikes against a Syrian regime and army that is today the last line of defence between ISIS and Damascus?

Does anyone think these things through?

Wherever, across the Middle East, we have plunged in to wage war — Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Yemen, Syria — people continue to suffer and die, and we are ensnared. Have we not fought enough wars in this godforsaken region?

Last week, Russian planes launched air strikes on the rebels in Syria whom we have been arming and training to overthrow Assad. “Russia needs to understand that our patience is not infinite,” US Secretary of State John Kerry said.

But why are we arming rebels to overthrow Assad? Who rises if he falls? Moscow’s alliance with Damascus goes back decades. Syria provides Russia with a naval base in the Mediterranean.

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s support for the embattled Syrian regime in the civil war being waged against it is legal under international law. It is our policy that appears questionable.

Where did Obama get the right to arm and train rebels to dump over the Damascus regime? Did Congress authorise this insurrection? Or is this just another CIA-National Endowment for Democracy project?

Why are we trying to bring down Assad, anyhow? US foreign policy today seems unthinking, reactive and impulsive.Last week, 31,000 Nato troops conducted exercises in Poland and the Baltic republics, right alongside the border with Russia.

For the first time since 1945, German tanks appeared in Poland. Now we are planning to base four Nato battalions — one US-led, one British, one German, and perhaps one Canadian, as the French and Italians are balking at being part of a tripwire for war.

How would we react if 31,000 Russian, Chinese, Cuban, Iranian and North Korean troops conducted military exercises across from El Paso and Brownsville, Texas? How would we react if each of those countries left behind a battalion of troops to prevent a repeat of General “Black Jack” Pershing’s intervention in Mexico in 1916?

Americans would be apoplectic. Nor are some Europeans enthusiastic about confronting Moscow.

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier called the Nato exercises “warmongering” and “saber-rattling”. He adds, “Anyone who believes that symbolic tank parades on the alliance’s eastern border will increase security is wrong. We would be well-advised not to deliver any excuses for a new, old confrontation.”

Not only is Steinmeier’s Social Democratic Party leery of any new Cold War with Russia, so, too, is the German Left Party, and the anti-EU populist party Alternative for Germany, which wants closer ties to Russia and looser ties to the US.

This month, we sent the USS Porter into the Black Sea. Why? Says Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, “to deter potential aggression”. While there is talk of a Nato Black Sea fleet, Bulgaria, one of the three Nato Black Sea nations, appears to want no part of it.

The European Union also just voted to extend sanctions on Russia for annexing Crimea and supporting separatists in Ukraine. Donald Trump calls the Nato alliance a rip-off, a tripwire for the Third World War and “obsolete”. Hillary Clinton compares Putin’s actions in Ukraine to Hitler’s actions in Germany in the early 1930s.

Looking for a four-year faceoff with a nuclear-armed Russia? Hillary’s the one!

This piece was first published in The American Conservative and has been republished here with permission.