At this writing, President Trump is considering āthe possibility of retaliation in Syria in response to a suspected chemical attack on young children and families in the Syrian city of Douma,ā reported CBS News. āIf itās the Russians, if itās Syria, if itās Iran, if itās all of them together, weāll figure it out,ā Trump said. āNothingās off the table,ā including a military attack by the United States.
Whether that possibility involves a cruise missile strike, drone attacks or conventional bombing raids by fighter jets, this is deadly serious business. People, mostly innocent civilians and Syrian grunts who had nothing to do with the āsuspectedā chemical attack, will die. People will be injured. Survivors will be traumatized. An attack could escalate and expand the current conflict, leading to more death and destruction.
The stakes are high, but U.S. policymakers are as glibly insouciant as if they were choosing between Hulu and Netflix. This is not new or Trumpian. Itās always been like this. American leaders donāt take these life-and-death decisions seriously.
If the United States were a sane country populated by rational, civically-engaged citizens, Americans would pour derision and ridicule on anyone who seriously considered raining bombs over a āsuspectedā anything. And the skepticism in this case ought to be exponentially greater considering that this is Syria.
Weāve already been down this āSyriaās Assad regime used chemical weapons against their own people so we should bomb his forcesā road. It happened under Obama. What is certain here is uncertainty: maybe itās true, maybe itās not. As legendary investigative journalist Seymour Hersh pointed out in 2014, the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) believed that at least one major faction of the Syrian opposition, the al-Nusra Front, possessed significant manufacturing facilities and stockpiles of sarin nerve agent and other proscribed toxic chemicals.
Whatever happened to innocent until proven guilty? Since when is āmaybe they did it, maybe they didnāt, oh wellā sufficient?
American political culture has devolved from the Vietnam era, when pacifists were marginalized, to a kneejerk bellicosity in which they donāt exist as part of the debate.
To its credit, The New York Times ā still with blood on its hands from its unwholesome publishing of Judith Millerās pro-Iraq War screeds ā has printed statements by those who oppose rushing into war with Syria. āWe would prefer to start with a proper investigation,ā the newspaper quoted Britainās ambassador to the United Nations. It also ran letters to the editor that expressed doubts about Syriaās motivations and Trumpās trustworthiness.
Nowhere to be found was a pacifist: someone who opposes war, all war, no matter what. Nor were there any anti-interventionists: people who say Syria is not our business and should be left to sort out its own affairs.
Itās the same at The Washington Post. Some writers there wonder aloud whether Trumpās sabre-rattling is more āWag the Dogā than āDoctor Strangeloveā: if he bombs Syria, will it be to take our minds off the Russia stuff? Also, weirdly, this headline: āSomething for Trump to keep in mind on Syria: His strikes last year were pretty popular.ā How does Amber Phillips sleep at night? Again: no pacifists. No anti-interventionists.
Itās not like theyāre not out there in Real America. The nativist America Firsters who formed the core of Team Trump in 2016 included a lot of isolationists ā and Trump ran on a no-more-nation-building platform. Theyāre disgusted more by the cost of the bombs we drop on Muslim countries than the lives they destroy; if thereās any nation-building to be done, they ask quite reasonably, why not start with Americaās own rusted-out, broken-down infrastructure?
Getting the paper out every day is a miracle. Editors can be forgiven for sometimes forgetting to cover all the bases by offering a wide spectrum of solutions to the problems covered by their news stories and debated in their opinion sections. The same goes for the producers laboring through cable newsā 24-7 news cycle. At a certain point, however, they ought to take a step back and consider the effect of their editorial decisions. Theyāve created a relentless culture of ultraviolence, a debate without diversity between those who want bombs and those who want even more wars, to the point that not going to war isnāt even something we get to consider as a legitimate option.
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