March 07, 2005
Bush Plunging Into Syrian Swamp
By Paul Craig Roberts
How much longer can American
prestige survive the embarrassments inflicted by
President Bush?
Bush’s demand that Syria
immediately withdraw its troops from Lebanon is a
ricochet demand. If Lebanon cannot have free elections
while under foreign military occupation, how, asks the
rest of the world, does Iraq have free elections when it
is under US military occupation?
Bush’s latest guffaw is the work of
desperation. Every explanation and justification Bush
has given for his ill-fated invasion of Iraq has proven
false. There were no weapons of mass destruction. No
terrorist links to Osama bin Laden. No WMD programs. The
penultimate justification—to bring democracy to
Iraq—fast faded when the Islamic Shi’ite
winners announced that Islam would be a basis for
the new Iraqi state.
The
assassination of former Lebanese prime minister
Rafic Hariri permitted the Bush administration to shift
attention from its Iraq failure to Syria’s presence in
Lebanon, just as the US invasion of Iraq shifted
attention from Bush’s failure to capture bin Laden in
Afghanistan.
Bush hasn’t sufficient troops to
occupy Iraq and none to spare with which to invade
Syria. But the lack of means does not stop Bush from
issuing ultimatums. Bush’s tough talk plays well to his
supernationalist supporters at home.
Syria, of course, has its own
reasons for getting out of Lebanon, and Syria’s
withdrawal lets Bush claim that his invasion of Iraq is
spreading democracy to Lebanon. Yesterday Iraq.
Today Lebanon. Tomorrow the Middle East.
This latest justification for
invading Iraq was on no one’s mind when the US invaded
Iraq. It is likely to be as short lived as the other
justifications. Throughout the Lebanese civil war from
the mid 1970's until 1990 Lebanon was a collection of
armed camps more numerous than those in Iraq today.
The Lebanese government invited the
Syrians into Lebanon shortly after the outbreak of the
civil war. Unlike the US in Iraq, the Syrians have
managed to perform the role of peacekeeper in Lebanon
without leveling entire cities, destroying Lebanon's
infrastructure, and killing tens of thousands of
civilians. (This is not to say that in 1982 the Syrian
government did not brutally put down an Islamic
fundamentalist uprising in the Syrian city of Hama.)
Syria has a secular Alawite
government. Now that Shi’ites are taking over in Iraq,
Shi'ites in Lebanon—and especially the Iranian sponsored
and controlled Shi'ite Hizbullah movement—are likely to
gain additional political traction as well. Today, we
are witnessing the creation of precisely the Shi'ite
geopolitical bloc—the
“Shi’ite crescent from Iran to Lebanon”—of which
King Abdullah of Jordan warned, without effect, a
deluded President Bush.
Proud not to be “reality based,”
the Bush administration is oblivious to the situation on
the ground. But reality in Syria, Jordan and Saudi
Arabia is up close and personal. The last thing wanted
by the rulers of those countries, as well as the leaders
of Egypt and Pakistan, is more instability that will
play into the hands of such Islamist revolutionaries as
Osama bin Laden and Abu Musab al Zarqawi. But
instability is rising, and the rulers of those countries
now fear being swept away.
Syria had absolutely nothing to
gain from the assassination of former Lebanese Prime
Minister Hariri. In fact, the assassination was a
catastrophe for the Syrian government. It is Osama bin
Laden’s aim, and perhaps Iran’s, to destabilize Lebanon
and Syria in order to draw the US in deeper. Instability
serves bin Laden’s revolutionary purposes and aids Iran
by creating new problems for the US in the region.
Today, Syria has begun to withdraw
from Lebanon not because of US and Israeli ultimatums
but because of the threat of a new axis of Shi'ite power
stretching from Teheran westward through southern Iraq
into Lebanon, and then back into Syria itself from both
Lebanon and Iraq. The secular Syrian government now sees
far more danger from Iran and Islamists supported by
Teheran than it does from the US.
It may well be that Syria would
like American protection from a rising Islamist and
Iranian geostrategic revolution. The Bush
administration, however, is too stupid to realize this.
The United States lacks the
resources necessary to occupy the Middle East. Bush has
failed to occupy Baghdad, much less Iraq. Indeed, US
troops could not even occupy Fallujah, a small city of
300,000. Unable to take control of the city, the
Americans destroyed it. The US cannot level every city
in the Middle East.
The US invasion of Iraq has brought
to power long-suppressed Shi’ite majorities and shown
Islamists that secular rulers can be overthrown.
Change has begun that the US cannot
control, change that will exhaust American resources and
will.
COPYRIGHT CREATORS
SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts is the author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good
Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are
Trampling the Constitution in the Name of Justice.
Click
here
for Peter Brimelow’s
Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the
recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.