The Costs of U.S.
Retreat
From the Wall Street
Journal
Americans want to
forget about Iraq and Syria, especially since President Obama walked back from
his bombing threat in September, but Syria and Iraq haven't forgotten America.
The contagion from Syria's civil war is spilling across borders in ways that
are already requiring U.S. involvement and may eventually cost American lives.
The casualties include
the stability of Lebanon, which like Syria is riven by Shiite-Sunni divisions.
Thousands of Shiite Hezbollah militia have joined the war on behalf of Syrian
strongman Bashar Assad, and the opposition is retaliating with a terror
campaign inside Lebanon.
An al Qaeda affiliate
took credit for the car bomb that exploded on Thursday in a residential
neighborhood of Beirut that is a Hezbollah stronghold. This followed the
car-bombing murder of Sunni moderate Mohamad Chatah a week earlier that had the
hallmarks of Hezbollah. The Saudis recently pledged $3 billion to turn the
Lebanon military into a viable counterforce to Hezbollah.
Meanwhile, our Journal
colleagues report that Hezbollah has smuggled advanced antiship missile systems
into Lebanon from Syria. The missiles are intended for use against Israel,
which has attacked arms shipments headed for Lebanon at least five times in the
last year.
The dangers are that
the violence in Lebanon devolves into another civil war, or that Hezbollah
provokes Israel into a response like the 2006 war. Hezbollah already has
upwards of 100,000 missiles, many of them unsophisticated Katyushas, but two or
three times the number it had in 2006. Hezbollah may be stockpiling
higher-quality missiles in order to retaliate after an Israeli attack on Iran's
nuclear program or on another arms shipment. This could escalate into another
war.
Syria's contagion is
also spilling into Iraq with the revival of al Qaeda in neighboring Anbar
province. Anbar was the heart of the Sunni insurgency in Iraq after the U.S.
invasion in 2003, and American soldiers paid dearly to reclaim cities like
Ramadi and Fallujah. Al Qaeda was defeated when Sunni tribal chiefs turned on
them amid the U.S. troop surge in 2007.
But now al Qaeda is
coming back, thanks to the heavy-handed sectarian rule of Shiite Iraqi Prime
Minister Nouri al-Maliki and to the rise of jihadists in Syria. The U.S.
refusal to help the moderate Syrian opposition has given the advantage to Sunni
jihadists, including many from Europe and probably the U.S. too. Much of eastern
Syria is now controlled by the al-Nusrah front or the Islamic State of Iraq and
Syria, and they move with ease back and forth into Iraq. Men flying the flag of
al Qaeda took over large parts of Ramadi and Fallujah last week, ousting the
Iraq army.
The Iraqis are
promising a counterattack to retake Fallujah, but insurgencies aren't easily
beaten when they have support in the local population. Many local Sunni leaders
no longer trust the Maliki government, which may not be able to protect them
against al Qaeda reprisals.
The U.S. recently
supplied Mr. Maliki with Hellfire missiles to use against the insurgency, and
he wants American intelligence and drone support. It's clearly in the U.S.
interest to defeat the jihadists. If al Qaeda can operate with impunity in
Anbar, it could develop safe havens from which it can plot attacks outside
Iraq. As we learned from Afghanistan before 2001, that includes attacks on the
U.S.
The best use of such
aid would be as part of a counterinsurgency campaign to win back the Sunni
population. But the U.S. gave up most of its leverage with Mr. Maliki when
President Obama chose to leave Iraq in toto to serve his re-election theme that
"the tide of war is receding." It would have been far better for U.S.
security to have kept 5,000 or 10,000 troops, as well as air and intelligence
assets, as a bulwark against al Qaeda's revival and Iran's regional dominance.
Mr. Obama's retreat
has squandered the gains of the surge, and now we're slowly being dragged back
in. Secretary of State John Kerry said on Sunday that the U.S. is "very,
very concerned" about events in Iraq but that the U.S. won't send troops
because "this is their fight." That's true until jihadists based in
Iraq attack U.S. targets. If the Iraq insurgency grows, don't be surprised if
Mr. Obama is urged to send in military advisers.
President Obama and
the Rand
Paul Republicans want
Americans to believe we can avoid the world's conflicts with good intentions
and strategic retreat. The costs and consequences of that retreat are now
becoming clear in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and beyond. Those costs may end up being
far greater than if we had stayed engaged in Iraq and attempted to help the
moderate opposition in Syria.
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