• Comment (7)

Four Reasons Why U.S. Military Intervention in Syria is Unlikely

Obama likely is mindful of political, military challenges that did not exist in Libya

January 20, 2012 RSS Feed Print

President Barack Obama surprised many in Washington last year when he ordered the U.S. military to lead a NATO operation to prevent Moammar Gadhafi's forces from slaughtering Libyan citizens. While the U.S. military eventually took a backseat to NATO and the Arab League, some military officials and analysts quickly called the Libya operation a model for future American missions in the Middle East and across the globe. 

As the rebellious energy of the Arab Spring spread to Syria last March, strongman Bashar al-Assad began a brutal crackdown on protesters that is still active. Assad's actionshave already killed more than 5,000 Syrian citizens, according to the United Nations. As the death toll grows, so do calls for the U.S., along with other Western powers and the Arab League to intervene and force Assad to step aside. 

[Read U.S. News's national defense blog, DOTMIL.]

But a U.S.-led military operation in Syria would be tactically challenging, and would open a Pandora's Box full of political risks similar to those that hampered George W. Bush's efforts in Iraq. Obama likely will seek other measures, like tough Assad-targeted sanctions, eagerly avoiding the missteps of Iraq during his re-election campaign. Here are four reasons the U.S. is unlikely to intervene militarily in Syria: 

All politics is local. Obama chose to act militarily in Libya with not only the backing of the Arab League, but the behest of some members. Gadhafi had few friends among Arab League leaders. That's not the case with Assad.

"The Assad regime has some powerful allies," according to Stewart Patrick and Isabella Bennett of the Council on Foreign Relations. Michael O'Hanlon of the Brookings Institution put it more succinctly: "Everyone thought Gadhafi was a nut." That made it "relatively easy to get the Arab League to call for an end to Moammar Gadhafi," O'Hanlon said.

Several experts told U.S. News & World Report that there is, as O'Hanlon put it, "nowhere near that kind of support to act against Assad." The Syrian leader, however, has some powerful friends outside the region. For months, his allies in Moscow and Beijing have used their veto power on the U.N. Security Council to block tough sanctions, including an arms embargo. They almost certainly would do the same to any U.N. resolution backing a Western military operation against Assad and his loyalist forces. Obama is most likely to continue his current course of using sanctions and rhetoric to pressure the regime, while leaving the heavy lifting to Washington's allies in Assad's backyard.

[Read: Iran threatens U.S. in Persian Gulf.]

"We are leaving the matter in Turkish hands; a hazardous, but necessary, course of action," said retired Army Col. Doug Macgregor, a former military planner-turned-consultant. 

The alternative is unclear. If Obama, his French and British counterparts and the Arab League opted to use force to remove Assad from power, who would rule Syria? That question stumps even regional experts. The conventional wisdom goes something like this: Despite the ongoing conflict within his own borders, Assad is not a major destabilizing force in the region. A new regime in Damascus might be far more anti-American and anti-Western than the current leader.

Obama is unlikely to gamble that a strict Islamist regime would take root in Damascus in the midst of his own re-election bid back home. That would give his eventual Republican opponent a powerful political weapon to bludgeon him with. Obama has some impressive national security and foreign policy victories on his resume. After all, he is the president who killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, along with a long list of that organization's leaders and the unpredictable Gadhafi.

"If we undermine the status quo on Syria, we are likely to end up with a Sunni Islamist regime that will be far more hostile to the West than the secular Assad regime," said Macgregor. 

"You don't have the right military options." That's how Iraq war veteran and frequent Pentagon adviser Andrew Exum describes factors like geography and the location of Syria's population. In Libya, there were "clear battle lines" between Gadhafi's fighters and opposition forces that have yet to appear in Syria, said Exum, a senior analyst at Washington's Center for a New American Security (CNAS).

Tags:
Syria

Reader Comments Read all comments (7)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

Hopefully, Assad has learned from Muammar Gaddafi's mistakes. To appease the West, Gaddafi took responsibility for what Libyan mercenaries did, even though the Libyan state has nothing to do with their terrorism. Gaddafi did what Nelson Mandela urged him never to do. He allowed the West to enter Libya. The CIA and MI6 wasted no time in agitating the Benghazi tribes and placing moles in key positions around Gaddafi. When the orchestrated war broke out, Gaddafi suddenly found himself surrounded by traitors.

As NATO bombed and killed Libyans, thousands of portable anti-aircraft missiles lay in warehouses. There were Libyans willing to challenge the No-Fly Zone but, traitors kept them grounded. All the Libyan Army could get its hands on was artillery and infantry weapons. Even then, they could have shut down the CIA-backed rebels but, NATO stepped in repeatedly to rescue them.

Finally, when the rebels approached Tripoli, it was a NATO mole in charge of the city's defense that ordered his men to stand down. Certain Tuaregs who were Gaddafi's body guards were CIA operatives. They betrayed him to first degree murder.

All the Benghazi rats wanted was a quick payday from NATO. They got their filthy payoff and now are fighting amongst themselves. The U.S. and E.U. will begin the shoddy reconstruction projects, destroy the social integrity of Libya, and put that once great nation into debt slavery.

The real free world has every reason to feel guilty for standing by as the E.U. and U.S. raped, plundered, and murdered Libya. Russia and China decided to stand up for Syria and did the right thing by vetoing the criminal desires of Hitlery Clinton, Sarkozy, and the rest in the U.N. Security Council. Iran was selfish for not coming to Gaddafi's aid. Algeria was cowardly for not coming to Gaddafi's aid. Russia and China are feeling the shame and thank God they are all drawing their Red Line around Syria! Lebanon and Hezbollah have little to offer but, they will do what they can to help.

Syria, by itself, is a small country. Whether Assad is right or wrong, the line must be drawn somewhere and predatory capitalist imperialism must be stopped.

Jim in Occupied Amerika of FL 12:27PM March 03, 2012

US has showed its unwillingness to intervene in Syria. First of all protestors have showed that they refused any kind of foreign interferece in their own affairs. In addition, US let the situation to the Syrian people to decide their destiny. Moreover, US dislikes to seem the main motivator behind such liberal movement. Anyway, US supports the peoples who seek freedom, justice and democracy but by peaceful means. And it resotes to military forces when it feels that its interests are liable to danger.

eldinomo of ME 8:17AM January 28, 2012

there is more money left to enter a new war with the economy like this bad but instead of that why america don't sale the rebels their arm like in Lybia, Russian made money that way now aday who ever give them cash then the stuff that they need will be there for them to used for their own war they get rich that way. Promote world conflict and gain more profit from arm sale around the world, it also have positive way you sale your arm to those countries you have some influence over them as well they listen to you, if your allies win the war you get influence over their whole country, well in some war case the more they kill each other the more casualties they get the more hate toward each among themselves less worry for the US in the future in the long run term, in the long run they also need a long way to rebuild their country to catch up with the US in economy in some case because their country is totaly in chaos in wartorn condition, their road and building trusture will be destroy in some ways they must need to hire us back for the reconstruct phase of that part

LonelyGuyUSD of CA 12:01PM January 24, 2012

Photo Galleries

History of U.S. Bombings, Failed Attempts

A look at some of the worst bombings in the U.S. and infamous failed attempts.

advertisement

Latest Videos