ADC
Update:
ADC Oped on Threats against Syria
April 19,
2003
The following oped article by ADC Communications Director Hussein
Ibish appears in the Philadelphia Inquirer.
'World War IV' strategy may please neoconservatives but spell
disaster
By Hussein Ibish
Neoconservative hawks have said time and again that they'd like
the U.S. government to use the war in Iraq as the starting point
in a campaign completely to reshape the Middle East. In that
light, recent comments from President Bush and Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld threatening Syria are exceptionally alarming.
Many Americans supported the war in Iraq because they genuinely
believed it would make our country safer and bring freedom to a
people living under brutal tyranny. They never signed on to an
agenda that amounts, as former CIA director James Woolsey puts it,
to "World War IV."
The neocons have wasted no time in laying down the basic charges
that would form the case for an attack against their next target
of opportunity: Syria.
First, Syria is accused of cooperating with Iraq by allowing
weapons to be smuggled back and forth across the border during the
war and of harboring former Iraqi officials. No evidence has been
presented on either of these counts, but even if true, they would
hardly form a legitimate cause for war.
Under no circumstances could one argue that the Syrian and Iraqi
governments have been allies during the past 25 years. The
antagonism between these two intense Baathist rivals has been
profound, as witnessed by Syria's participation in the first Gulf
War in 1991 on the American side.
Obviously, if indeed any arms were sent or smuggled to Iraq
through Syria in recent weeks, they had no impact on the conflict
or its outcome. And if former Iraqi officials either went to or
through Syria, it does not take a historian to recall the legion
of deposed despots whose flight was facilitated by ourselves or
our allies.
Second, Syria is charged with supporting terrorist organizations.
This is essentially an Israeli accusation adopted wholesale by our
government to provide leverage for Israel in negotiations with
Syria. American officials have made it clear for years that
Syria's presence on the list of "state sponsors of
terrorism" would be ended immediately upon the signing of an
Israeli-Syrian peace treaty.
More importantly, while Israel has its own agenda, Syria can and
has been an extremely helpful partner in the war against al-Qaeda,
whose ultrareligious agenda is not tolerated by Damascus. American
officials have acknowledged that Syrian help was vital in
thwarting a number of dangerous al-Qaeda plots to kill large
numbers of American troops in the Middle East. This sort of
cooperation needs to be cultivated.
Third, Syria is accused, most recently by President Bush, of
having chemical weapons. This may or may not be the case, but the
absence of any sign of Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction
ought to give everyone some pause.
Scores of countries possess nonconventional weapons of some kind
or other. Are all such countries now subject to bullying and
possible unprovoked attack? Iraq, we were repeatedly told, was a
special case because it had used these weapons in the past and had
been ordered to renounce them by the United Nations Security
Council. Neither of these things applies to Syria. Moreover, it is
absurd to make an issue out of Syria's alleged chemical weapons
when its immediate neighbor Israel is a major nuclear power.
Fourth, Syria is charged with occupying Lebanon, usually by people
who have no objection to Israel's occupation of East Jerusalem,
the West Bank and Gaza. To them, any comparison between these two
situations is odious. Israel has been declared the "occupying
power" in the Palestinian territories by the Security Council
on numerous occasions. Syria's presence in Lebanon, however
problematic, is pursuant to the American-brokered Taiff
agreements, several Arab League declarations, and the stated
wishes of the recognized government of Lebanon.
As a person born and raised in Beirut, I share the misgivings many
Lebanese feel about Syria's often heavy-handed presence in that
country. And that presence may soon outlive its usefulness in the
rest of the country, as it has in Beirut, where no Syrian troops
remain. That said, American antagonism to Syria does nothing
whatever to help the Lebanese.
Fifth, it is observed that Syria is a dictatorship, and certainly
the Syrian people suffer from a notable lack of democracy in a
one-party state. Real reforms are clearly in order, as in almost
all Arab states, but cannot come at the point of a gun.
There is no comparison between the authoritarian government in
Syria and the horrors of Saddam's Iraq. It is certainly not more
oppressive than many of our staunch allies in the Gulf. We have
yet to see a single result of American foreign policy promoting
any form of democracy in the Arab world.
None of these charges, or even all of them taken together, amount
to a coherent argument in favor of American belligerence toward
Syria. Such recklessness does nothing to promote the interests of
the American people, who have no need and no taste for anyone's
schemes to launch World War IV.
Hussein Ibish is communications director for the American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee. ================================
ADC
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Washington, D.C. 20008, U.S.A.
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