T. Belman. Much as I hate to admit it, the US should try to keep Turkey in its camp if only to keep it from moving to the Russian camp. But I don’t see that the US has to abandon the Kurds in order to do so.
A second reason I like the Trump policy is that he is forcing the Arabs to embrace Israel in self defense and to do so out of the closet.
By Michael Doran, MOSAIC 1-7-19
America needs to back up its allies (Israel, Saudi Arabia, and potentially Turkey), and isolate its adversaries (Iran, Russia, China, Islamic State). Everything else is secondary.
President Trump’s surprise December 19 announcement of an immediate withdrawal of American forces from Syria hit some Israelis like a sucker punch. “With this withdrawal, the United States abandons Syria and leaves Israel alone,” said Yaakov Amidror, a former national-security adviser to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. While conceding that “the effect of the U.S. decision is primarily psychological and diplomatic,” Amidror continued: “In those arenas, this is a very significant decision.” Subsequent reports to the effect that the drawdown of forces will be slower than originally announced and coordinated with America’s allies have softened the blow, but the shock still remains.
In retrospect, the announcement shouldn’t have come as a surprise. After all, Trump has never hidden his conviction that extended military operations in the Middle East are futile. He campaigned on the theme in 2016 and then returned to it last April. The United States, he declared then, had “spent $7 trillion in the Middle East in the last seven years. We get nothing out of it, nothing.” To this general observation, he added a specific promise: “We’ll be coming out of Syria . . . very soon. Let the other people take care of it now.”
In the intervening months, however, the president’s top advisers seemed to suggest that the withdrawal would never happen. “We’re not going to leave as long as Iranian troops are outside Iranian borders, and that includes Iranian proxies and militias,” said National Security Adviser John Bolton last September. Given Bolton’s proximity to the president, the promise sounded authoritative.
The shock in Israel, then, was understandable, and it quickly gave way to related fears. Trump’s Syria decision is clearly part of a larger effort that includes patching up American relations with Turkey, a goal that leaves Israelis decidedly cold. For over a decade, Jerusalem’s relations with Turkey have been abysmal, with no prospect of improvement on the horizon. Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish president, who aligns with the Muslim Brotherhood in the Arab world, would appear to have made hostility to Israel an enduring part of his political persona. To make matters worse, the American withdrawal will likely entail a downgrading of U.S. relations with the Syrian Kurdish forces that have aided the United States in the fight against Islamic State.
For reasons both romantic (Kurds as a stateless people struggling to establish a homeland) and strategic (Kurdish aspirations seen as blocking the regional ambitions of Ankara) Israel is sympathetic to Kurdish nationalism. Thus, shortly after Trump’s announcement, Netanyahu made a point of publicly labeling Erdogan as an “anti-Semitic dictator” who “has an obsession with Israel because he knows what a moral army is and what a real democracy is, in contrast with a military that massacres the Kurds.”
But the greatest source of Israel’s fears is not Turkey; that distinction is held by Iran. The American presence in Syria had formed the primary obstacle in the way of Iran’s completing a land bridge and an unbroken corridor of political influence from landlocked Tehran to Beirut on the Mediterranean shore. With only 2,000 soldiers, the United States was controlling, indirectly, about a third of the entire country, yet this small force was still large enough to overwhelm any potential combination of adversaries, as it proved last February when it annihilated some 200 Russian mercenaries in a matter of hours, with no losses on the American side.
No question, the American withdrawal will indeed create a vacuum in the region that Iran—and behind Iran, Russia—will inevitably seek to fill, thereby escalating clashes on the ground with Israel. Indeed, within days of Trump’s decision, Israel launched a premonitory airstrike deep into Syrian territory on Iranian targets, causing serious ripple effects in relations between Jerusalem and Moscow.
As Israel squares off against this Russian–Iranian axis, what kind of support will it receive from the White House? Not much, if American congressmen and senators, and major pundits in the media, know what they’re talking about. The prevailing view among them is not just that Israel feels sucker-punched; it is that Israel has indeed been sucker-punched.
The truth is less alarming, however.
@ yamit82:
There is a solution , the same solution to slavery in America , the Nazis in Germany , the militarist in Japan and the Isis Caliphate
.
There Is No Political Solution for Gaza
@ yamit82:
https://besacenter.org/perspectives-papers/gaza-political-solution/
There Is No Political Solution for Gaza
@ adamdalgliesh:
Sorry. I thought I had posted the entire article.
The key conclusion in Duran’s article is stated in the following paragraph:
Unfortunately, Mr. Duran’s article is too long, rambling and unfocused. He gets to the point only somewhere in the middle of the article, not in the beginning or the end, as is necessary to communicate effectively with his readers. Mr. Duran would have flunked the writing 101 course that I taught at various colleges over a 25 year period.
As I see it, Mr. Duran’s four main points are that the Syria withdrawal does not seriously endanger Israel; that Trump’s decision is consistent with the policiy objectives and strategic plans Trmp has been enunciating for the past two and a half years, so that it should not have come as a surprise; that Trump’s action is a continuation of Obama’s policy of withdrawing American soldiers from combat zones and reducing America’s military footprint around the world; that the “punditocracy” supported these policies as long as Obama, not Trump, was president.
The key conclusion in Duran’s article is stated in the following paragraph:
For reasons that I don’t understand, Ted has republished only the introduction to Mr. Doran’s article. The reprinted excerpt stops at the precise moment that Mr. Doran finally gets to his point. Here is the rest of the article:
The Strategy Washington Is Pursuing in the Middle East Is the Only Strategy Worth Pursuing
America needs to back up its allies (Israel, Saudi Arabia, and potentially Turkey), and isolate its adversaries (Iran, Russia, China, Islamic State). Everything else is secondary.