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Bush
Stance on Syria Hit Shows Neocons Still Hold Sway
by
Jim Lobe
October
9, 2003
The
neo-conservatives in and around the administration of U.S. President George W.
Bush may be on the defensive, but Washington's reaction to the Israeli attack on
Syria Sunday shows that they remain in the driver's seat at the White House.
The
fact that Bush has himself refused to in any way criticize the Israeli attack –
the first on Syria since the 1973 Arab-Israeli war – shows how far the neo-cons
have succeeded in aligning U.S. policy with the right-wing government in
Israel, a key goal going back to the first Likud government of the late Menahem
Begin and, more recently, since Prime Minister Ariel Sharon won elections in
early 2001.
It
was the neo-cons who in 1982 defended Israel's invasion of Lebanon and the
bloody siege of Beirut that followed. While then-President Ronald Reagan went
along with the original invasion, his administration never publicly endorsed
the invasion and eventually distanced itself from the Israelis as the siege
wore on.
Bush's
explicit embrace of Israel's attack on an alleged Palestinian training camp in
Syria, on the other hand, is a striking departure from decades of U.S. Middle
Eastern diplomacy. Washington even denounced Israel's 1991 attack on the Osirak
nuclear reactor in Iraq and, unlike the present, joined with other members of
the U.N. Security Council in condemning it.
Indeed,
Bush's statement Monday that he had told Sharon that "Israel must not feel
constrained defending the homeland" was almost breathtaking in its implied
license, particularly considering that it was Sharon who not only led the
invasion of Lebanon but is also widely believed to have rolled all the way to
Beirut without Begin's approval. Many experts and historians believe that Begin
was intending a more limited military action and that Sharon took the
initiative to take it much further.
The
neo-cons, one of whose core beliefs is that the United States and Israel
confront the same enemies and share the same values, have had Syria in their
sights for quite a long time. Israel, particularly Likud, has seen Damascus as
the most steadfast and potentially the most dangerous of its Arab antagonists.
Many
of the same people both in and out of the administration who have favored
making Syria a primary target in the U.S. "war on terrorism" signed a
report released four years ago that called explicitly for using military force
to disarm Syria of supposed weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and end its
military presence in Lebanon.
Among
the signers of the report, which was released by a pro-Likud research group
called The Middle East Forum (MEF) and the United States Committee for a Free
Lebanon (USCFL), were Bush's chief deputy on the Middle East on the National
Security Council, Elliott Abrams; Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas
Feith; Undersecretary of State for Global Affairs, Paula Dobriansky; and two
special consultants associated with the neo-conservative American Enterprise
Institute (AEI) who have been working on Mideast policy in the Pentagon and
State Department, respectively, Michael Rubin and David Wurmser.
The
signers also included Richard Perle, the powerful former chairman of the
Pentagon's Defense Policy Board, his colleague at AEI, former U.N. ambassador
Jeane Kirkpatrick; Michael Ledeen, another AEI fellow; Frank Gaffney, a former
Perle aide in the Reagan administration who now heads the Centre for Defence
Policy; and David Steinmann, chairman of the Jewish Institute for National
Security Affairs (JINSA). With the exception of Kirkpatrick, all of these
figures outside the administration played key roles in urging Bush to go to war
in Iraq.
The
study, 'Ending Syria's Occupation of Lebanon: The U.S. Role?', was co-authored
by MEF president Daniel Pipes, who was just named by Bush to a post at the U.S.
Institute of Peace despite widespread charges that he has promoted
Islamaphobia, and Ziad Abdelnour, who heads the USCFL.
The
study stressed that "Syrian rule in Lebanon stands in direct opposition to
American ideals", and it rued Washington's habit since its disastrous
withdrawal from Beirut in 1983 of engaging rather than confronting the regime,
the only government on the State Department's "terrorism list" with
which Washington has full diplomatic relations.
The
group urged a policy of confrontation, beginning with tough economic and
diplomatic sanctions that could not be waived by the president, and, if
necessary, military force.
Not
surprisingly, the same general provisions have been incorporated into a new
bill that is presently being debated in Congress, and Sharon's actions,
according to many observers, may have been intended in part to promote the
bill's chances of becoming law soon.
Syria
was also cited as a target in a public letter to Bush on Sep. 20, 2001 – just 9
days after the terrorist attacks on New York and the Pentagon – by associates
of the Project for the New American Century (PNAC), a think tank closely
related to AEI whose director, William Kristol, also edits the neo-conservative
Weekly Standard.
Among
other measures, it called for Bush to take military action in Afghanistan to
remove the Taliban and destroy al Qaeda, to remove Saddam Hussein in Iraq
"even if the evidence does not link Iraq directly to the (Sep. 11) attacks;
and cut off aid to the Palestinian Authority unless it puts a stop to all
terrorist acts emanating from territory under its control."
But
it also called for the United States to target Hezbollah in Lebanon, and added,
"We believe the administration should demand that Iran and Syria
immediately cease all military, financial, and political support for Hezbollah
and its operations. Should Iran and Syria refuse to comply, the administration
should consider appropriate measures of retaliation against these known state
sponsors of terrorism."
The
letter was signed by 39 prominent right-wingers, almost all of them
neo-conservatives, such as Kristol himself, Perle, Kirkpatrick, and Gaffney.
"Israel has been and remains America's staunchest ally against international
terrorism, especially in the Middle East," they wrote. "The United
States should fully support our fellow democracy in its fight against
terrorism."
Throughout
the Iraq war, many of these same people, as well as their close associates in
the administration, such as Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz and
Feith, argued that Syria represented a serious threat to the United States and
its troops in Iraq, at one point asserting that Damascus was sheltering senior
Iraqi leaders and its WMD.
"There's
got to be a change in Syria," Wolfowitz said in April, adding that the
government was a "strange regime, one of extreme ruthlessness". At
the same time, another prominent conservative closely associated with Wolfowitz
and Perle, in particular, former CIA director James Woolsey, was widely quoted
on television as saying that the "war on terrorism" should be seen as
"World War IV" that should include as targets "fascists of Iraq
and Syria".
Within
this context, Sharon's decision to attack Syria appears designed to shine the
spotlight once again on Syria as a key target in the war on terrorism. Coming
at a time when the neo-cons in Washington are on the defensive over their
pre-war claims about the dangers posed by Hussein in Iraq and the welcome which
U.S. troops were supposed to have been accorded by the Iraqi population, the
renewed focus on Syria conveniently changes the subject.
The
fact that Bush appears to have endorsed the attack and justified it publicly as
self-defense also confirms that Bush sees the strategic relationship with
Israel in much the same way as the neo-cons have long wanted U.S. president to
do.
Jim Lobe is a political
analyst with Foreign Policy in Focus (online at www.fpif.org).
He also writes regularly for Inter Press Service. He can be reached at: jlobe@starpower.net
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