It turns out the Obama Administration's claim that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons in the ongoing civil war rests on dubious evidence -- from the Post:
The more we learn, the more we see the President's intervention in the Syrian conflict for what it is: a fool's errand.
As I noted last week, the rebels are unfriendly to American interests and at least as ruthless as Assad if not worse. The Administration aims to identify moderate factions within the rebel umbrella and deliver arms only to them. But since the rebel movement is really just an anarchic hodgepodge of the dissatisfied -- united only in that they are all Sunni Muslims fighting Alawites and other Shiites -- this will be quite an undertaking. Of course, that's before you even consider that these weapons aren't going to stay put. In the real world, weapons move around quite a bit, and a multitude of American arms are sure to end up in unintended hands. To this criticism, the Administration counters that it can reliably track these weapons --Fast and Furious reminds us this is easier said than done. And what are they going to do if this vaunted tracking system works? It's not like these rebels are going to simply give us back our guns on request.
What's more: this won’t stop at small arms. Once the small arms arrive and make very little difference, the interventionists (bolstered by the ascendance of Susan Rice and Samantha Power in the White House) will dial up the pressure on Obama to do more. Small arms could turn into anti-aircraft weaponry and armored vehicles; then comes a no-fly zone. Who knows where it'll end? With US-Russian relations growing more frigid by the hour and Iran's nuclear program plugging ahead despite its change in leadership, Syria could morph into a true proxy war. Russia and Iran on one side, the West on the other -- implications for the geopolitical balance of power are frightening. If World War I taught us anything, it's that small regional conflicts can flare up into something much, much worse. It's time to hit the brakes on this one while we still can.
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