There is justifiable outrage - and also some of it confected - about what the Syrian president has done by bombing his own people with chemical weapons.
Whilst there are those who congratulate Trump for what they perceive as his decisive action, there are at least 2 aspects of America's actions missing. One, what now? More attacks on Syrian installations? Two, no introspection on what America's role has been in roiling things up in the Middle East.
Chris Hedges (former Bureau Chief of the NY Times) writing on truthdig....
Whilst there are those who congratulate Trump for what they perceive as his decisive action, there are at least 2 aspects of America's actions missing. One, what now? More attacks on Syrian installations? Two, no introspection on what America's role has been in roiling things up in the Middle East.
Chris Hedges (former Bureau Chief of the NY Times) writing on truthdig....
"War opens a Pandora’s box of evils that once unleashed are beyond anyone’s control. The invasion of Afghanistan set out to defeat al-Qaida, and nearly 16 years later, we are embroiled in a losing fight with the Taliban. We believed we could invade Iraq and create a Western-style democracy and weaken Iran’s power in the region. The fragmentation of Iraq among warring factions has left Iran the dominant Muslim nation in the Middle East and Iraq destroyed as a unified nation. We set out to topple President Bashar Assad in Syria but then began to bomb the Islamic insurgents trying to overthrow him. We spread the “war on terror” to Yemen, Libya and Syria in a desperate effort to crush regional resistance. Instead, we created new failed states and lawless enclaves where vacuums were filled by the jihadist forces we sought to defeat. We have wasted a staggering $4.79 trillion on death, destruction and folly as our nation is increasingly impoverished and climate change threatens us with extinction. The arms manufacturers, who have a vested interest in perpetuating these debacles, will work to make a few trillion more before this act of collective imperial suicide comes to a humiliating end.
In war, when you attack one force you implicitly aid another. And the forces we assist by striking the Assad regime are the forces we ironically are determined to eradicate—Nusra Front, al-Qaida and other Islamic radical groups. These are the same Islamic forces we, along with Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey and Kuwait, largely created, armed and funded at the inception of the civil war in Syria. They are the forces that have responded to the chaos caused by our misguided military interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Yemen, Somalia and Pakistan. They are the forces that execute Western captives, slaughter religious minorities, carry out terrorism in Europe and the United States and collect billions of dollars from smuggling refugees into Europe. They are our sometime enemies and our sometime allies."
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