The Middle East's Peace of the Grave
By Alan Caruba
By Alan Caruba
After both great wars of the last
century nations got together to create organizations that would ensure that
large conflicts would not occur again.
After World War I, it was the League
of Nations. When Woodrow Wilson (who was reelected in 1916 after promising to
keep the U.S. out of the war in Europe) tried to get the U.S. to sign on,
membership in the League was rejected by Congress in the interest of retaining
our national sovereignty. The Versailles Treaty that followed the defeat of
Germany also set in motion all the elements of that led to World War II and the
creation of colonies, new nation-states, in the Middle East by the French and
English after the fall of the Ottoman Empire.
Even as World War II was winding down,
Franklin D. Roosevelt had work begun on the creation of the United Nations.
In 2007, in response to a question
from New York Times’ editors, then Senator Barack Obama explained how he would
resolve the problems in Syria. “I would meet directly with Syrian leaders. We
would engage in a level of aggressive personal diplomacy in which a whole host
of issues are on the table…Iran and Syria would start changing their behavior if
they started seeing that they had some incentives to do so, but right now the
only incentive that exists is our president (Bush) suggesting that if you do
what we tell you, we may not blow you up.”
“My belief about the regional powers
in the Middle East is that they don’t respond well to that kind of bluster. They
haven’t in the past, there’s no reason to think they will in the
future.”
So, naturally, the President is
currently threatening Syria’s Bashar al-Assad with military action and, having
decided to let Congress determine whether he should be granted permission to
proceed, may be deterred if it votes to deny it.
George W. Bush invaded Iraq in 2003
after putting together a “coalition of the willing” and going to the United
Nations to secure a resolution permitting that action. His Secretary of State,
Colin Powell, made a presentation to the Security Council in which he presented
proof that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. Obama’s Secretary of
State has argued forcefully for U.S. intervention in Syria to rid the nation of
Assad, but America currently has no international support, including longtime
ally Great Britain.
Bush’s intervention in Iraq, March
2003 to April 2009, led to casualties whose estimates range from 110,600 by the
Associated Press to more than a million by the Opinion Research Business Survey.
The intervention in Libya in 2011 had estimates of casualties of protesters,
armed belligerents, and civilians ranging from 2,000 to
30,000.
Even a “limited” military action in
Syria would inflict more casualties, adding to the 100,000 that Assad has
already slaughtered and is likely to expand the war into Lebanon, home to Iran’s
proxy, Hezbollah, as well as Jordan and possibly Turkey. Americans are telling
their representatives in Congress not to engage our
military.
Writing in The Weekly Standard on September 6, Reuel Marc
Gherecht, a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies and a
contributing editor, dissected the problems posed by Syria and Iran, along with
al Qaeda. “When it comes to the Middle East, Obama’s presidency has largely been
predicated on two ideas: A hegemonic America is a bad thing, and the second Iraq
war was a serious mistake.”
“Time has been unkind to Obama,” said
Gherecht. “The withdrawal from Iraq has not left that country better off…al
Qaeda now boasts, along with Iran and its militant Iraqi allies, that it drove
the Americans out of the country.” Hardly a week has gone by since American
military forces left that bombs by Sunni militants have not killed Shiite
Iraqis.
In Syria, as Assad’s forces have been
unable to quell the rebellion, he has turned to the use of poison gas.
In Egypt, Obama originally backed the
Muslim Brotherhood’s overthrow of Hosni Mubarak and in Syria in August 2011 he
had told Assad he had to go. It took action by the Egyptian military to remove
the government led by the Muslim Brotherhood. Libya remains in a chaotic state
between its tribal factions. The civil war in Syria rages
on.
“Barack Obama,” says Gherecht, “is now
the American everyone in the region loves to hate.”
Worse than that, warning of the need
to intercede in Syria, he said “That so many in the West don’t see this, and are
unwilling to go to war to stop such an atrocity—to send a clear signal to
tyrants elsewhere—only shows how far we’ve come since 9/11. The Middle East’s
power politics have again, hit us head on. We are, perhaps, too ‘fatigued’ this
time round for the challenge.”
The only peace in the Middle East is
the peace of the grave and the region threatens to erupt into a wider
conflagration in much the same way World War II followed in the wake of the
World War I.
International organizations, the
United Nations, the European Union, NATO, the Arab League, and others have
proven themselves incapable of a diplomatic resolution to the self-interest of
Middle East dictators and monarchies, and the growing tide of Islamic
fanaticism.
Barack Obama, with his pathological
narcissism, believed that his Muslim upbringing and his Marxist ideology held
the key to bringing peace to the Middle East. He has been proven wrong in the
same way his domestic policies are bankrupting America and his foreign policies
are dragging it into a war he desperately wanted to avoid and now feels
compelled to pursue.
© Alan Caruba,
2013
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