Amid growing media fervor about alleged chemical attacks in Syria, peace advocates and policy experts on Thursday are urging caution as the clamor for Western military intervention intensifies.
Though employing a different set of arguments than progressive analysts, one of the U.S. military’s top commanders also expressed caution this week, warning against those calling for an escalation of US military involvement in Syria’s civil war.
On Wednesday, Syrian opposition forces accused the government of Bashar al-Assad of launching a chemical weapons attack on suburban areas of Damascus, but even as international condemnation was immediate, details of the incident remained largely unverified.
In an interview with Common Dreams, Robert Naiman, policy director for Just Foreign Policy, warned against a rush towards military intervention, referring to recent events inside Syria as well the illegal US invasion of Iraq and other foreign policy missteps in the region.
“If we learned anything from last ten years, it is slow down, be cautious, let the United Nations take the lead,” Naiman said. “We have already dealt with a similar sequence of events surrounding alleged chemical attacks in Syria. When the dust settled, the situation was far more murky than it initially appeared.”
Meanwhile, in a letter written to Congressman Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.), the ranking Democrat on the House Committee on Foreign Affairs who recently called for limited air strikes against Syria, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsey issued a warning that, once entangled in military conflict in Syria, it would be very difficult to exit: “We can destroy the Syrian Air Force. The loss of Assad’s Air Force would negate his ability to attack opposition forces from the air, but it would also escalate and and potentially further commit the United States to the conflict. Stated another way, it would not be militarily decisive, but it would commit us decisively to the conflict.”
Further, Dempsey said, “Syria today is not about choosing between two sides but rather about choosing one among many sides.”
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