Can Obama finally stop acting like George W. Bush? (photo: Getty Images)
By Robert Scheer, Truthdig
10 September 13
It may come to naught—calls for peace so rarely still
the drums of war—but there was a moment Monday when the odds for sanity seemed
to finally stand a chance of prevailing. It came when President Obama
acknowledged the Russian proposal for Syria to avert war by agreeing to destroy
its chemical weapons stock as “a potentially positive development.” It was
quintessentially an un-Bush moment when suddenly this presidential “decider”
seemed possessed of a brain capable of reversing his disastrous course.
It helped that a majority of the public, and even many
of its representatives in Congress, had expressed strong opposition to entering
into a civil war without a plausibly positive outcome. According to The New
York Times/CBS News poll conducted over the weekend, “nearly 9 in 10 Americans
are concerned that United States military action in Syria will become a long
and costly mission” and would lead to “a more widespread war in the Middle
East.” Imperial hubris has been soundly rejected by a properly chastened
war-weary public, and nation building, particularly in that part of the world,
is now most often treated as an expectation that is indelibly cursed.
The bipartisan rejection of the inevitability of a
military response has been stunning in its geographical reach, and as Peggy
Noonan, a leading Republican intellectual as well as a former top speechwriter
for Ronald Reagan, observed in her Wall Street Journal column Saturday: “The
American people do not support military action… . Widespread public opposition
is in itself reason not to go forward.” Although underscoring the need to
“rebuke those who used the weapons, condemn their use, and shun the users … a
military strike is not the way, and not the way for America,” she wrote.
She is right. The use of chemical weapons cannot be
ignored, even though the U.S. did just that decades ago when then-Mideast
special envoy Donald Rumsfeld embraced Saddam Hussein after he deployed those
heinous weapons on his own people and in his war with Iran. A strong response
to the use of those weapons is in order, but instead of more violence that
would inevitably kill innocent people, why not give peace a chance? At the very
least, even if the Syrian government continues to deny responsibility for the
chemical attacks, it must abandon its arsenal of these weapons that are inherently
inhuman.
The foreign minister of Russia came up with exactly
that proposal. Speaking with the authority of Syria’s sole significant arms
supplier, Sergey V. Lavrov seized upon Secretary of State John Kerry’s purely
rhetorical point that Syria could abandon its chemical weapons supply and
asked, why not? It was a serious plan, given that it had been previewed in a
phone conversation between Lavrov and Kerry and that Syria’s foreign minister,
who was in Moscow at the time, welcomed the sentiment. Walid al-Moallem, who is
also Syria’s deputy prime minister, endorsed Lavrov’s proposal because of “the
concern of the Russian leadership about the life of our citizens and the
security of our country,” he told reporters Monday in Moscow.
Moallem, at least, took it as a lifeline to the Assad
government that just might be grabbed, and suddenly the peacemakers had their
talking point. Better to explore the possibility of peaceful disarmament than
to plunge into the “unbelievably small” war that Kerry was prattling about and
that Obama reminded would not be a “pinprick.” Perhaps mindful of the innocent
civilians killed by the drone attacks he has authorized, Obama declared: “The
U.S. does not do pinpricks. Our military is the greatest the world has ever
known. And when we take even limited strikes, it has an impact on a country
like Syria.”
And on the Syrian people, who will inevitably be
sacrificed as collateral damage in even the most surgical of U.S. strikes. It
is they who are the victims of the extreme violence in their country inflicted
by both the government and the rebels, and it is absurd to suggest that
increased violence administered by the U.S. will ameliorate their condition.
Surely President Obama can recall his own earlier
warnings about the danger of such military adventures, and the disarray in
Libya is a constant reminder that even once promising attacks quickly lose
their luster. He has also realized that it is necessary to finally bury the
legacy of the Cold War and recognize, as the Chechnya-connected Boston bombing
demonstrated, the common stake in dealing effectively with terrorism. It is
also Obama who acknowledged that the U.S. shares with Russia the ugly
reputation of being the developers and possessors of nuclear weapons of mass
destruction that make the Syrian arsenal seem insignificant in
comparison.
Perhaps this bold Russian initiative will have been
discarded as an option by the time this is read, but without such cooperation
between these former enemies who competed so long and destructively in the
Mideast, there is no hope for genuine peace throughout that region.
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