If the G20 summit in St. Petersburg was a barometer of international opinion on the impending American missile strikes on Syria, then the United States lost hands down.
Barring Saudi Arabia, Turkey and France, there were hardly
any takers or willing participants for President Barack Obama’s
coalition to attack Syria. This outcome would leave a
particularly bitter taste for Obama because of his stated
preference for multilateral consensus on international security
and economic problems.
The American government’s ability to convince and persuade its
international partners as well as its own citizens on the methods
of managing world problems has hit an all-time low, and Obama has
to blame himself for getting cornered like this. Why is hardly
anyone buying the rationale of attacking Syria if the evidence of
chemical weapons usage by the Bashar al-Assad government is
allegedly “clear and compelling” (US Secretary of State
John Kerry)?
Enforcing ego, not norms
At the G20 summit, Obama argued futilely that punishing Syria with force was necessary to defend the global “norm” of banning usage of chemical weapons. He warned that the price of inaction on Syria was “a more dangerous world” in which dictators like Assad could take it easy and commit mass murder. But this seemingly moral purpose of raising the costs for accused perpetrators who wield weapons of mass destruction (WMD) fell on deaf ears at the G20 summit, since the international community can tell the difference between strategic guile and genuine humanitarian purpose.
What is at stake with the Syrian question is the credibility of
American warnings about ‘red lines’ and the concomitant
prestige issue of the US’ words becoming cheap and
non-consequential. The real norm that Washington fears being
diluted is that its threats of the use of force will lose
deterrent value if Obama does not walk the talk and demonstrate
compelling military power. US allies like Israel, which are
itching for the war on Syria to be broadened and deepened, are
already on record that Washington must act tough and attack Syria
so as to send a message to Iran that its disputed nuclear program
can also be targeted and obliterated.
The chemical weapons charges are rhetorical devices manifesting
the anxieties of a declining great power which believes that
demonstrating military might is one way by which its relative
fall in world politics can be stemmed.
National ego was a prime motive that held America back from
realizing its follies in Vietnam until it was too late. But
judicious presidential rescinding of prior ‘red lines’ based on
reconsideration of the international situation is not
unprecedented. In 1983, President Ronald Reagan pulled US troops
out of Lebanon after a deadly Hezbollah bombing, despite vowing
previously to stay on in that civil war-plagued nation. It is
perfectly honorable to step back from a minefield after thorough
rethinking, rather than stepping into a morass. America will
emerge with greater applause if it reads the Syrian scenario with
an open mind and heeds international governmental and public
opinion.
The majority opinion of the G20 summit, as well as more
widespread international public opinion, is calling for Obama to
be prudent and rebuff his egotism.
'Dangerous precedent' of might is right
Russian President Vladimir Putin countered Obama at the St.
Petersburg G20 summit by raising an entirely different
“dangerous precedent” than the one which the Americans
have been proclaiming - namely Assad getting away with alleged
WMD crimes. The former raised the classic realpolitik issue of
the security of small nations which should not be vulnerable to
the whims and fancies of stronger powers. If there is an
‘international society’ at all with civilized laws and customs
that are meant to protect the weak from the strong, how can Syria
be left to the mercies of the US and Israeli militaries?
The Western counter to this question would be that the definition
of ‘weak’ and ‘strong’ is no longer confined to the
inter-state dimension but applies to intra-state settings, thanks
to notions like the ‘responsibility to protect’ civilians from
terrible harm by their own governments. But if one scans the
horizons of armed humanitarian interventions since the end of the
Cold War, who are the usual policemen setting out to ‘protect’
innocent civilians within some selected small nations? The
Americans have been at the forefront of a liberal humanitarian
imperialism that goes after strategic rivals who are not playing
ball with Western interests in critical regions of the world like
the Balkans, the Middle East and South and Central Asia.
That the so-called ‘humanitarian’ concerns for atrocities against
civilians within states are highly selective and politicized goes
without saying. The same Washington, which is now ratcheting up
the pressure for an illegal attack on Syria on the grounds that
its government gassed its own people, provided a convenient cover
for chemical attacks by the former dictator of Iraq, Saddam
Hussein, in Halabja against Kurdish minorities in 1988. The
Ronald Reagan administration of that time, which backed Saddam
against Iran, went to the ludicrous extent of defending a crime
against humanity by suggesting that Kurds were not deliberately
targeted in Halabja, and that it was the government of Iran which
was responsible for the horror.
The fact that Saddam had deployed WMD against Iraqi citizens was
highlighted by the Western media and governments only much later,
once he lost his tag as a strategic asset. The momentum for
Western military strikes on Syria, which is being applauded by
hawks in the United States and Europe as the only solution to
alleged vicious chemical warfare, is clearly driven by opposition
to his [Assad’s] political role in the Middle East as a patron of
Hezbollah and a client of Iran. If Washington was really a fair
judge and righteous upholder of the ‘norm’ of banishing the usage
of chemical weapons, why did it not raise a hullabaloo over
Israel’s deployment of white phosphorus munitions and shells in
its 3-week war against Hamas in Gaza in December-January of
2008-’09?
Some Western liberal humanitarians contend that selective justice is still justice, and that just because the US ignores crimes committed by its allies, it does not imply that crimes perpetrated by its enemies should go unchecked. But this is precisely the nub of the matter raised by Putin at the St. Petersburg G20 summit. If you are a small state and enjoy patronage of a great power by serving its strategic goals, you are exempt from all the pious ideals enshrined in international law. If you are a small state but a thorn in the flesh for a great power, does that make you fair game?
This double standard defeats the basic principle of equality
before the law and reinforces the practices of the jungle where
might is right. At the level of pragmatic foreign policy, the
double standard also forces more and more small nations to
relinquish their freedom of choice and become followers of
liberal hegemons so as to avoid repercussions for impunity. The
moral of the impending American attack on Syria is that kowtowing
to the West is the surest guarantee of safety. Humanitarian
imperialism is thus a means to impose foreign policy slavery on
smaller states.
The geopolitical game in Syria
Since resort to high-sounding humanitarian language is mostly a
smokescreen for geopolitical ambitions, it is necessary to
uncover the real strategic purpose of the coming illegal American
military attack on Syria. Firstly, it would be a mistake to
overemphasize the missile strikes as the beginning of American
military involvement in Syria.
US-trained and armed Sunni rebel fighters have been entering
Syria from Turkey and Jordan for a long time without much media
attention. The assurance given by Obama to hawkish Senator John
McCain that a 50-man rebel cell trained by US Special Forces in
Jordan was “making its way across the border into Syria”
has been mentioned in the Western media as the “first tangible
measure of support” from Washington to the anti-Assad
coalition.
But the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and the US military’s special operations units have been arming and training Sunni rebels ranged against Assad in Jordan and Turkey since at least November 2012. The goal of this covert operation is to reverse the balance of power in the battlefield, which has not been going too well for the anti-Assad forces. There is no evidence that these trainees are hardcore jihadists, but America already committed one major mistake in the last two years by not forcefully dissuading its Arab and Turkish allies from turning Syria into another playground of jihad like Afghanistan.
Most of the weaponry and funding being delivered to the anti-Assad rebel forces from US allies like Qatar and Saudi Arabia have been reaching hardline Sunni Islamist fighters, who are not only brutal in war but also imposing harsh Taliban-like restrictions on Syrian civilians in zones beyond government control. The internal dynamic of the war in Syria, with prospects of a fundamentalist Sunni regime replacing President Assad, looks too alarming to justify American military attacks. One of the reasons why Obama found war on Syria a hard sell at the St. Petersburg G20 summit is this recognition that a US attack on Syrian military installations will compound the current regional character of the Syrian war and convert it into a global war of epic proportions that can prolong the misery of Syrian people for years to come.
I asked a recently remitted member of the US State Department’s Policy Planning Staff why Washington did nothing to stop its allies when they were arming and financing brutal killers in Syria. He responded with a shrug that “we have no leverage over Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkey to change their behavior.” Admittedly, the US is not its former omnipotent self in the Middle East. But surely, the Obama administration could have publicly embarrassed its allies who were compounding the crisis in Syria by injecting ‘jihad international’ into the cauldron. No such sanity emerged from Washington because of the obsession for weakening and overthrowing the regime in Iran via the fall of Assad.
Nadir of humanitarian imperialism
Much hinges on Iran to avoid escalation of the war on Syria. There are two overarching diplomatic solutions to the Syrian war which depend on Iran’s cooperation. Firstly, a US-Iran rapprochement through bilateral engagement between the Obama administration and the newly elected “moderate conservative” President Hassan Rouhani, can help bring closure to the war in Syria. Obstinate opposition from pro-Israel lobbyists in Washington and demonization of Iran in the Western media has blocked this tantalizing prospect. Assad’s will to fight to the finish comes from the confidence booster given by Iranian aid and military assistance. Iran can steer a moderate finale to the Syrian war if it gets guarantees and concessions from the West.
Secondly, intra-Arab disunity is the main cause of the terrible bloodshed in Syria. A diplomatic push from Washington to force Qatar and Saudi Arabia to stop internecine wrangling between themselves and terminate their reckless backing of Sunni jihadists in Syria can build confidence with Iran and limit further carnage in Syria. The tit-for-tat arming of opposite camps in Syria, which is leaving few chances for a peaceful settlement, is occurring due to the adamant attitude of Sunni Arab monarchies which are being tacitly egged on by anti-Iran elements in the US government.
It takes political vision and an acute reading of regional
equations in the Middle East to realize that the Syrian imbroglio
still has non-military solutions. All the fault lines that mark
contemporary geopolitics, viz. US-Russia tussles over missile
defense, influence in Eastern Europe, and human rights; US-China
competition for global hegemony; the US-Iran Cold War on nuclear
weapons; and the West vs. Islam dynamic that lurks beneath many
illegal foreign military interventions of the past few years, are
at stake in the Syrian tussle.
The import of Putin’s message at the St. Petersburg G20 summit
was to remind the world that geopolitics and diplomacy are the
main causal factors behind the tragedy of Syria. The moment the
mask of liberal humanitarianism is taken off, naked power
politics emerges as the true canvas on which Syria is being
tossed around. The long public debate on whether or not Syria
should be attacked has helped undermine humanitarian imperialism.
St. Petersburg was the grand stage where the proverbial
humanitarian emperor was confirmed to be wearing no clothes.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.