Friday, September 06, 2013

If not that, then what? Thoughts on Syria and US intervention

A group of us Mennonites was talking about Syria yesterday, and all agreed that US bombing was a bad thing. This led to the question: if not that, then what should be done? Doing nothing avoids making matters worse, but also runs the risk of letting the situation get worse. All of us have served in relief and development roles, and ought to have some ideas, it would seem.

Everyone quickly suggested helping the many refugees created by the situation in Syria, something that Mennonite Central Committee is already doing. There is a lot more to be done, and helping in this way is something all of us could happily advocate.

But what should be done about the situation that is creating the refugees? That question did not get such a ready response. If the concern is to stop creating refugees and allow those in camps to return home, the goal should be political and economic stability in Syria. The US has a history of helping to create stability by propping up dictators, and, by definition, stability is achieved when one group has the ability to exert political influence and control over all other groups. The logical way to help is to pick a side and assist them in stabilizing the country under their rule. This course of action doesn't sound very good these days, particularly in light of recent US efforts along that line in Iraq and Afghanistan. That course didn't serve the US well in Iran either, and there are many other examples.

Where various factions are killing each other, the help they want is military. Diplomacy is nice, but when the shooting is ongoing on you mostly want ammunition and heavier weapons. Fighters keep dying while diplomats talk. In a multi-faction civil war with outsiders involved, diplomacy doesn't stand much of a chance until either one of the factions shows clear signs of winning, or everyone is exhausted.  Neither of those scenarios applies in Syria just now.

A limited attack to degrade the government forces sounds simple enough, but who benefits and who is deterred? The government is fighting for its life, and if it gives up there is no sanctuary to which its leaders can safely retreat. Deterrence doesn't work in that situation, so the only useful outcome is strengthening opposition forces by degrading government forces.

The opposition is fragmented in its allegiances and goals. Islamists of the Shia faction appear to be mostly concerned with achieving hegemony in a portion of the former Syria, something they are already accomplishing in the north. Alawites need to keep the present government in power. Sunnis would like to replace the current government with their own people. And on it goes. All that unites the opposition is opposition to the regime. Its fall would signal the start of the new civil war among the surviving factions.


Back in 1941 a world power was having its interests interfered with by another world power. It chose to use a limited air strike on purely military targets to degrade the opposition’s ability to meddle in its affairs. We all know how well that worked out for Japan, at least in the short term. History does keep repeating itself if we don’t pay attention. In the meantime, I will focus my advocacy on the refugees from the Syria battleground.