Portrait, Robert Reich, 08/16/09. (photo: Perian Flaherty)
By Robert Reich, Robert Reich's Blog
01 September 13
We are on the brink of a tragic decision to strike Syria, because, in the
dubious logic of the President, "a lot of people think something should be
done," and American "credibility" is at stake. He and his
secretary of state assure us that the strike will be "limited" and
"surgical."
The use of chemical weapons against Syrian citizens is
abominable, and if Assad's regime is responsible he should be treated as an
international criminal and pariah.
But have we learned nothing from our mistakes in the
past? Time and again over the last half century American presidents have
justified so-called "surgical strikes" because the nation's
"credibility" is at stake, and because we have to take some action to
show our "strength and resolve" - only to learn years later that our
credibility suffered more from our brazen bellicosity, that the surgical
strikes only intensified hostilities and made us captive to forces beyond our
control, and that our resolve eventually disappears in the face of mounting
casualties of Americans and innocent civilians - and in the absence of
clearly-defined goals or even clear exit strategies. We and others have paid an
incalculable price.
On Labor Day weekend we should instead be testing the
nation's resolve to provide good jobs at good wages to all Americans who need
them, and measuring our credibility by the yardstick of equal opportunity. And
we should strike (and join striking workers) against big employers who won't
provide their employees with minimally-decent wages. We need to commit
ourselves to a living wage, and to providing more economic security to the
millions of Americans now working harder but getting nowhere.
Mr. President, a lot of Americans do think something
should be done - about these mounting problems at our doorstep here in America.
We can have more influence on the rest of the world by showing the rest of the
world our resolve to live by our ideals here in America, than by using brute
force to prove our resolve elsewhere.
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