Talk is cheap: Quietly, Some Allies Push for Action
From The Wall Street Journal:
Mr. Kerry made explicit that argument during formal comments Friday on Syria, when he said the choice facing the administration was "directly related to our credibility and whether countries still believe the United States when it says something." He said not acting would mean there would be "no end to the test of our resolve" from countries who think they can act with impunity.
In recent meetings, South Korean officials told their
U.S. counterparts that continued White House inaction in Syria could embolden
North Korea to use its own chemical weapons against its southern neighbor.
Similar messages were relayed by Turkish, Israeli and
Saudi officials in recent days, telling President Barack Obama he must respond
to Syria's alleged use of chemical weapons, current and former U.S. and Middle
Eastern officials said. Failure to act, these allies said, could convince Iran
that Washington isn't serious about halting its pursuit of nuclear weapons.
Mr. Obama's possible move to strike Syria is designed to
retaliate against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for what the U.S. and others
call a chemical-weapons attack on Aug. 21. A strike would also be intended to
persuade friends and foes alike that the U.S. won't renege on global-security
commitments.
Current and former U.S. officials say growing concerns
about American credibility helped tip the scales within the White House in favor
of a limited military intervention. Two months ago, when U.S. intelligence
agencies concluded that Mr. Assad had crossed Mr. Obama's "red line" by using
chemical weapons on a smaller scale, neither the president nor his top military
advisers favored striking Syria.
Some Middle Eastern diplomats and American lawmakers
have lamented the limited nature of Mr. Obama's telegraphed intervention in
Syria, saying only more decisive action might be enough to deter such countries
as Iran, North Korea, Russia and China from bucking U.S. interests. Indeed, Mr.
Assad already has taken advantage of a week of U.S. saber-rattling to disperse
military equipment and forces where it will be harder to destroy them with a
limited number of strikes, U.S. officials said. The Pentagon is adjusting its
targeting in response, a senior official said.
Secretary of State John Kerry has been advocating a harder line against Mr.
Assad for months. In Situation Room meetings, Mr. Kerry has argued the stakes
were broader than Syria and specifically cited the strategic implications should
Iran doubt "our seriousness about red lines," a senior administration official
said.
In a conference call on Thursday to brief lawmakers on
U.S. intelligence, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, who was traveling at the time
in Asia, said that South Korean leaders were concerned that U.S. inaction in
Syria would make North Korea think it could get away with using chemical and
biological weapons without consequence.
Mr. Kerry made explicit that argument during formal comments Friday on Syria, when he said the choice facing the administration was "directly related to our credibility and whether countries still believe the United States when it says something." He said not acting would mean there would be "no end to the test of our resolve" from countries who think they can act with impunity.
That the U.S. felt the need to reassure allies about its
commitments is partly a consequence of Mr. Obama's deliberately light footprint
on the world stage. A hallmark of Mr. Obama's foreign policy has been a
concerted effort to lower expectations that the U.S. would automatically assume
the role of global policeman, given the president's preference to concentrating
on his domestic policy agenda, officials and experts say.
Events overseas, however, notably the Arab Spring and
its bloody aftermath, have time and again pulled the administration back to a
region from which Mr. Obama wanted to withdraw.
Sen. John McCain (R., Ariz) described the Obama Syria
policy as "muddled," citing Mr. Obama's past assertions that Mr. Assad should
step down. "So the president two years ago said he had to leave power, but now
that [Mr. Assad] has committed a war crime, the president of the United States
says he's not interested in removing him from power."
Colin Kahl, a former Obama administration Pentagon
official, said the president's expected military action was an appropriate
demonstration of U.S. credibility. "One of the things I heard most often when I
was in the administration is that superpowers don't bluff," he said. "That's why
the administration has been very cautious across a whole host of issues not to
issue a lot of red lines."
In the run-up to the strikes, Mr. Obama suffered a
series of embarrassing international affronts, which underlined the limits of
U.S. influence.
Hong Kong then Russia refused to hand over National
Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden to the U.S. In July, Egyptian generals
with long-standing ties to the Pentagon overthrew their country's first
democratically elected president over U.S. objections. The U.S. subsequently saw
its message to Cairo undercut by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and
Israel, its closest regional allies, which urged the generals to crack down hard
on the Muslim Brotherhood over Washington's warnings.
The Obama administration also struggled to bring allies
on board this week, notably the U.K., whose parliament scotched the prospect of
a joint mission.
The administration has long been divided over how to
tackle Mr. Assad's forces. Even before the alleged chemical-weapons attack, Gen.
Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, cautioned the White House
against trying to change the balance of power, citing a danger that opposition
groups linked to al Qaeda will try to gain the upper hand. Officials say Gen.
Dempsey backs the limited strikes now on the table, citing the importance of
U.S. credibility and about sending a message that chemical-weapons use won't be
tolerated.
At the direction of the State Department this week,
ambassadors in the Middle East have been prodding Arab leaders to issue
statements of support for the U.S., but the early results haven't been
encouraging, officials in the region say.
Besides Mr. Assad, U.S. allies and foes remain a target
audience for the pending military action. One former administration official
said the South Koreans and the Israelis "have been beating this drum hard" in
talks with the U.S. and its allies, questioning the U.S.'s security commitments
to defend them against North Korea and Iran.
Israel, on the border with Syria, is one of the U.S.'s
biggest concerns. The Israelis are worried that Lebanese militant group
Hezbollah could be encouraged by U.S. inaction to acquire sophisticated guided
rockets that could be loaded with poison gas. If Israel is attacked by either
Syria or Hezbollah, Israeli have made clear they will respond with force.
The U.S. has sought to reassure Israel that Mr. Obama
will enforce U.S. "red lines" with Tehran, going so far as to show top Israeli
officials a secret Pentagon video showing what the largest U.S. bunker buster
bomb can do. Israeli leaders remain skeptical of Mr. Obama's intentions,
reflected in efforts by the Jewish state to build a bunker buster of its own,
according to American and Israeli officials.
Saudi King Abdullah, meanwhile, has sent private
messages to Mr. Obama warning the American president that an abdication of
U.S.'s leadership would have dire consequences for U.S. allies in the Middle
East, according to U.S. officials.
"Your credibility is on the line, not just in the region
but globally," he warned Mr. Obama in one of those messages, according to U.S.
officials briefed on the exchange.
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