Cognitive-Dissonance said:
By making incursions into Syria to destroy these foreign assets, I believe that you're only worsening the situation. If anything, in the eyes of those sympathetic to the Iraqi Insurgency this is only "proof" of American's "imperialism", so to speak. Its very easily manipulated by enemies of the United States into a propaganda tool, and very easily so (picture this, "American imperialists bomb and kill innocent civilians inside sovereign Arabic nation!"). So it is of my opinion that the end results do not outweigh the immediate and short term benefits of eliminating this threat. Its very short sided on a geopolitical scale.
First, US (or Western, or European) foreign policy and security policy cannot be held hostage to notions of Syrian or Iranian public opinion. Second, Syrian media is no doubt working very hard to maintain the idea of Evil American Imperialist Crusader, no matter what the US
actually does. On the day of the raid, I'd bet my house that the Syrian Gov't killed more Syrians than the US military, but that will never make the headlines in Damascus, so arguing about perception is largely irrelevant. Popular (and officially sanctioned) Syrian opinion is already so anti-American that a raid like this is hardly going to change much. Besides, given that Syrian public opinion has zero influence on Syria's policies, what does it matter?
Cognitive-Dissonance said:
As for Syrian involvement, while there is most likely involvement there is still a lot of forced information coming in from the United States side that reeks of dubious claims in order to legitimize their operations in Iraq. The United States has always claimed the problems of Iraq are from foreign fighters, when recently it has been proven that only some 5% of Iraqi Insurgents are actual foreign. GlobalSecurity has this to say about Syrian involvement in particular:
"Yet while coalition forces often suspect Syria of assisting insurgents, Syrian denials are adamant and hard evidence is lacking." (from
Here )
Now I am not suggesting that the Syrians are happy go lucky and are simply innocent in this regard. They are most likely aiding the actions of foreign fighters going into Iraq by simple inaction. That being said, the hard evidence is still not there on direct Syrian involvement. And even so, again the problems of Iraq come from deep seated ethnic tensions, not the often claimed problem of foreign fighters.
I could line up quotes from websites - in fact, here's several from the GlobalSecurity.org site you cited:
"...[as of 2005 there were three factions] The main one, still owing allegiance to jailed dictator Saddam Hussein, is operating out of Syria. It is led by Saddam's half-brother Sabawi Ibrahim al-Hassan and former aide Mohamed Yunis al-Ahmed, who provide funding to their connections in Mosul, Samarra, Baquba, Kirkuk and Tikrit. Izzat Ibrahim al-Duri is still in Iraq."
" London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies estimates roughly 1,000 foreign Islamic jihadists have joined the insurgency. And there is no doubt many of these have had a dramatic effect on perceptions of the insurgency through high-profile video-taped kidnappings and beheadings."
"One group of Ansar al-Islam militants captured in the Kurdish region during early August 2003 consisted of five Iraqis, a Palestinian and a Tunisian. It was reported that the men had five forged Italian passports for another group of militants. It is estimated that at least 150 members of Ansar al-Islam have entered Iraq with the help of smugglers within the last few weeks."
"The recalcitrant cleric Muqtada al-Sadr is widely perceived as an Iranian proxy, while in a television interview, Muayed al-Nasseri, commander of Saddam's "Army of Muhhammad," said his group received weapons and cash form both Iran and Syria."
- but I could go on forever with various quotes from various reputable sources. I'd only add that whatever we see in open media (who have almost no real access to the insurgency) is a shadow of what American forces in Iraq see, hear about, and monitor. Given Syria's record of interference n Lebanon, it's support for Hezbollah, and it's proxy conflicts aganst Israel, I have no doubt they have the will and capacity to support anti-American insurgents in Iraq. Therefore, when American authorities present facts regarding Syrian complicity in fighter networks, I'll believe it, unless they suggest something wild or outlandish.
Cognitive-Dissonance said:
It's very easy to say this from our perspective but one must be careful not to get caught up in our own experiences and how we view things. You have to understand that in their nations, the reputation and legitimacy of United States foreign affairs has already been massively destroyed because of constant American interventionism. Thus they are unlikely to see American claims of fighting insurgency and bringing peace and stability as legitimate. Personal responsibility is easy to tout while we talk about this in the comfort of our homes in the West, while they are having to hear information filtered through various competing outlets, each with much more overt agendas than objective western media. With that in mind we need to always be careful of our actions in the region, because information is easily used against us in this regard. Futhermore I don't think the majority of those unsympathetic to American causes in the Middle East would be mad about arming foreign fighters, as they see the invasion of Iraqi and occupation to be illegitimate and illegal from the beginning.
I don't understand why we need to be careful of our actions in the region - Syrian popuar opinion should guide Western foreign policy?
Does the President of France evaluate a trade policy based on how it will play in Saskatchewan?
Anyways, as Syria is already a pariah state pursuing destructive, anti-social policies, I don't see what else can go wrong. And why should Syria matter? It has no means to retaliate, There's a reason Syria was raided and not Iran.
Cognitive-Dissonance said:
The USA is not only responsible to be accountable to only their soldiers.
You're right - they are accountable to American voters and taxpayers, and are obligated to always act in the best interests of American citizens. Always.
Cognitive-Dissonance said:
If the USA wishes to continiue to be a big player in the geopolitical stage, they have an obligation to be accountable to all.
The US has an obligation to be accountable to all if it wishes to continue to be a big player on the world stage???
Come again?
Ok, Poli Sci 101:
1) Might makes right.
2) History is written by the victors.
3) God is on the side of the big battalions.
4) States do not have permanent friends, they have permanent interests.
The US
is a
hyper-power because it has by far the world's largest, most prosperous and most innovative economy, coupled with a dynamic scientific and intellectual community, and fields a military exponentially more powerful than anything before, and anything existing.
Being a "big player in the geopolitical stage" has nothing to do with accountability to others; otherwise, we'd be discussing Swedish foreign policy and the US, Russia, China would be relegated to the level of Bolivia. Like all states, the US will go along with international norms/treaties/organizations to the extent it furthers the interest of the US. Because, in the end, the US is accountable to American citizens - just like Iceland is accountable to Icelanders, and Poland is accountable to the Polish.
Cognitive-Dissonance said:
The trade off is destroying some operatives, in exchange for further destroying the legitimacy of US foreign relations. I believe that trade off is seriously troubling, not just for the bad precedent but even from an American perspective; it destroys reconciliation efforts with the Middle East. If the USA wants to not get into more quagmires like Iraq, and more terrorist attacks on their home soil they need to understand the root problems of the Middle East. Much of these problems come from Western interventionism, both overt, covert, political, military and economic.
I believe this raid just
added to the credibility and legitimacy to American foreign relations, because it fulfills the Bush Doctrine, and transplants the policies of the Afghan/Pak theatre to the Iraq theatre. I think it forces nations like Syria to take the US seriously, and shake them of the misconception that the US is too "tied down" to react or retaliate against further aggression. Globally, the presence or threat of American military force is the single greatest stabilizer (well, perhaps second after the global standard of the US dollar) - just as the Royal Navy kept the peace in the 1800s. The re-assertion of the capacity and will of America to intervene reinforces this stabilizing factor.
Cognitive-Dissonance said:
Ofcourse I will acknowledge that the immediete effects aren't changing the status quo, and you are correct in that regard. However I still posit that the long-term precedent with this, coupled with so many other incidents of US unilateralism sets a bad precedent and bad foundation for future reconciliation with the people of the Middle East. How are common Syrians supposed to support the USA when all they hear about is American invasions of neighbouring nations, and incursions into their country? These are very easily manipulated situations and they need to be avoided so the regimes don't have any more ammunition at their disposal for misinformation.
I see no true reconciliation in the Middle East - it's hardly as if this US raid prevented the signing of a sweeping Mid East Peace Accord tomorrow. In the long run, this (and future such raids) will contribute to Mid East stability by preventing pariah nations like Syria from acting as 'spoilers'. Syria has NOT acted as a legitimate stakeholder in Iraq, and acts against US policies in Iraq that will eventually create peace and stability there.
Cognitive-Dissonance said:
The alternative in this certain situations is to see that the benefit of not provoking even more outrage in a region strife with anti-Americanism, is larger than the benefit of destroying a small insurgent compound. Now as for what alternatives the military leaders themselves had, without regards to geopolitics? Well I won't try to stray too far out of my lane in saying this but I am sure there are ways in which an eye can be kept on the movements and travel of insurgents can be monitored from these already known location, and from there they can intercept movements across the border. Though I admit this may not be feasible, so in that case my strongest argument is still that the large-scale geopolitical benefit outweighs the short-term, micro-scale military goals of destroying insurgent military infrastructure.
The small insurgent compound was not just a nest of foot soldiers - it was a key transit point, and home to a High Value Target. The seriousness of this attack was not lost on US policy makers - it was deliberately chosen for the High Value of the Target.
"An eye" cannot be kept on the movement and travel of insurgents to the degree necessary - if that were possible, there would be no insurgency left in Iraq. Perfect situational awareness is a pipedream.
Cognitive-Dissonance said:
my strongest argument is still that the large-scale geopolitical benefit outweighs the short-term, micro-scale military goals of destroying insurgent military infrastructure.
As there has been no backlash in foreign relations - even Syria is barely compalining - and as a insurgent leader is dead and a network disrupted, I guess that's it then. The benefits of the raid did outweigh the costs.