According to a pair of hot-off-the-presses public opinion polls, the American people are deeply skeptical of any additional US intervention in Syria's bloody civil war . First up are the new numbers from ABC News and theWashington Post. Note the bipartisan nature of the data on airstrikes; opposition levels among Republicans (43/55) and Democrats (42/54) are practically indistinguishable, with independents leading the way:
Support for airstrikes rises to 46 percent -- with a slim majority still opposed -- if countries like France and Great Britain joined our coalition. The British Parliament voted down an intervention proposal late last week. The least popular proposition is providing (additional) arms to the Syrian rebels, with fully 70 percent opposing the idea. But that's apparently what the Obama administration is preparing to do, according to Sen. John McCain:
And who are these rebels? The answer to that question is muddy at best, and "heinous Al Qaeda-affiliated jihadists" at worst. The public appears to be unconvinced that the US has the capacity to distinguish between "good" and "bad" rebels -- a distinction that might not mean much if the worst elements
And here's why Americans aren't keen on airstrikes:
The final item is the most important one, in my book. Even if we lob a few missiles into Syria, will it actually affect anything for the better? What, precisely, do we expect to achieve? The administration says "Assad must go," but insists that regime change isn't our goal, yet wants to arm the rebels (whose objective is regime change) -- but only the "good" ones. Americans can be forgiven for viewing this posture as incoherent. Also notice the worry that airstrikes might "lead to a long-term military commitment" in Syria. The last thing the Obama administration wants is a protracted engagement with boots on the ground. They want to take symbolic action, and little more. But Sec. Kerry didn't help to allay Americans' concerns with this stunning answer at today's Senate hearing:
The first part of his answer is actually pretty responsible. If we get involved militarily, and even if we don't, the US shouldn't take that possible contingency off the table. But running away from that answer, and saying that he was just "thinking out loud" (!) is stunning. High-stakes Senate hearings don't lend themselves to sloppy spit-balling. That wasn't even the worst moment of the hearing:
Kerry and Hagel also contradicted each other on whether airstrikes would constitute "war." The Secretary of State also said a potential attack isn't about President Obama's red line (which it should be), but humanity's red line. This is silly. "Humanity" includes the pro-Assad Russians, and the anti-intervention Brits. I'll leave you with a question, and two links: (1) Why didn't all of these hearings and justifications happen in April, when the administration asserted that Assad's regime had unleashed two separate chemical weapons attacks? (2)National Review's editors make the case for intervention. Key word: "credibility." (3) John Bolton builds the case against intervention:
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