7 Reasons Why the Public Is Right to Mistrust Obama on
Syria
By Conor Friedersdorf, The Atlantic
09 September 13
In the anti-war column that Peggy Noonan published in the Wall Street
Journal, she notices a new gulf between Washington's interventionist elite and
the people:
The Syria debate isn't, really, a struggle between
libertarians and neoconservatives, or left and right, or Democrats and
Republicans. That's not its shape. It looks more like a fight between the
country and Washington, between the broad American public and Washington's
central governing assumptions.
I've been thinking of the "wise men," the foreign policy mandarins of the 1950s and '60s, who so often and frustratingly counseled moderation, while a more passionate public, on right and left, was looking for action. "Ban the Bomb!" "Get Castro Out of Cuba." In the Syria argument, the moderating influence is the public, which doesn't seem to have even basic confidence in Washington's higher wisdom.
I've been thinking of the "wise men," the foreign policy mandarins of the 1950s and '60s, who so often and frustratingly counseled moderation, while a more passionate public, on right and left, was looking for action. "Ban the Bomb!" "Get Castro Out of Cuba." In the Syria argument, the moderating influence is the public, which doesn't seem to have even basic confidence in Washington's higher wisdom.
Just so.
The public lacks basic confidence in Washington's
foreign-policy judgment, and that skepticism is justified. Let us consider just
some of the reasons that is so:
1. Team Obama acknowledged that the Iraq catastrophe is
part of why Americans are wary of another war, and promised Syria isn't going
to be the same. It's as if they don't understand why Iraq makes people wary.
What Iraq taught Americans -- what Vietnam taught before that -- is that
Washington foreign-policy planners cannot accurately say beforehand just how
long a war will last, how much it will cost, or how many Americans it might
ultimately kill, even though many of them earnestly believe that their
prognostication is accurate.
If Obama Administration officials had learned the
right lessons from Iraq, they'd realize that what they ought to understand and
explain is why intervention in Syria would be worthwhile for the U.S. even
though its aftermath is inherently unpredictable. Instead they're asking us to
believe their assurances about how limited the conflict will be, even though
many of them got Iraq wrong on that same metric. They talk about intervention
in Syria as if they know just what will happen. That's part of why they can't
be trusted: their delusions of control.
2. The Obama Administration won't have made a full
case for war until it explains how it expects Syria, Iran, Russia, and other
countries to respond to an American strike, leveling with the American people
about the possibility of retaliation and proving that they have a prudent plan
prepared in case it happens.
3. The Obama Administration avows that there won't be
any American boots on the ground in Syria. But that's a promise that its
officials don't necessarily intend to keep, as John Kerry unintentionally
acknowledged
when questioned on the matter.
4. The military thinks this is a bad idea.
5. President Obama has broken so many
promises in the course
of campaigning and governing that there's no reason to trust his word when he
makes pledges about anything. He long ago proved he'll say what he thinks he
needs to say to get what he wants. The wisdom of striking Syria should be
judged independent of his assurances.
6. Obama's ill-advised "red line" comments,
the wrongheaded way that the political press casts heads of state not getting
what they want as "humiliation," and the influential
lobby pushing for war all
give U.S. leaders incentives for intervention that have nothing to do with
what's best for the country.
7. Nothing about the way Team Obama has handled events
in Syria so far inspires confidence that they know what they're doing or are
likely to take the right course.
All these reasons help to explain why American
citizens are against entrusting the Obama Administration with the power to wage
war in Syria, and why the House of Representatives so far appears to be against
voting Obama that power.
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