Syria’s descent and America’s feeble plan to stop it
The U.S. view of how its strategy will work depends on an extraordinary cascade of unlikely events. First, the coalition will gain control over most of the rebel forces. Then Russia or dissident Alawites will force Assad aside. Then there will be negotiations leading to agreement on a transitional government.
A slightly more likely scenario is that the West will get lucky and Assad’s regime will soon collapse in Damascus. In the resulting vacuum, the coalition will gain recognition from the outside world, and most of the rebel forces and Syria will follow the shaky path of Libya, with a weak government coexisting with a panoply of militias — some of them allied to al-Qaeda. The difference is that any spillover of terrorists and weapons will affect not Mali, but Israel, Turkey, Iraq and Jordan.
The main reason this is unlikely to happen is that for Assad and much of the Alawite elite — and for their chief sponsor, Iran — the West’s nightmare scenarios don’t look so unattractive. Better to hold out in an enclave, the minority ruling sect will conclude, than risk annihilation at the hands of vengeful Sunnis. Better to be a spoiler in an anarchic Syria, figures Shiite Iran, than to see a strategic ally flip over to the opposing Sunni bloc.
If Syria’s war takes this most likely of courses, how will the United States and its allies protect their interests? Officials seem to have no plan, other than to hope that the scenarios they are thinking about won’t happen.








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Obama wants the MB and the huge AlQauida contingent, the anti Asaad rag tags to win.
All are AmeriKa’s enemies, including Obama.
This says it all, very succinctly.
Schadenfreude on December 10, 2012 at 3:20 PM
Hope for the best and plan for nothing else!
You know, I think we’ve stumble onto The Obama Doctrine here.
BigGator5 on December 10, 2012 at 3:22 PM
The Sunnis and Shia’s have been waging a cold war for more than a decade. Syria is where it will become hot.
Add in assorted other sects, tribes, groups and outside powers trying to gain advantage and you’ve got a horror show.
We may have to intervene to stop genocide if (when?) that occurs. But short of that I can’t see us getting involved.
SteveMG on December 10, 2012 at 3:23 PM
I don’t see any evidence where this Administration wants to stop it.
Mitoch55 on December 10, 2012 at 3:28 PM
Let them kill each other. They and Obama are all our enemies.
Schadenfreude on December 10, 2012 at 3:34 PM
At this very moment Bark is gearing up; sliding into a Kevlar vest, strapping a Deerstalker to his thigh, tying a camo headband around his strangely-shaped skull, checking his crossbow.
His staff will have to work mightily to restrain Bark once he decides to go after Assad, though when he gets focused on killing there’s no one on Earth who can do much about it.
Bishop on December 10, 2012 at 3:44 PM
Not the women and children.
Obama’s not my enemy.
SteveMG on December 10, 2012 at 4:09 PM