General David Petraeus recently told Congress that the United
States is not doing enough in Syria. On the contrary, we have been doing too much.
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There is no such thing as an ideal foreign policy. An ideal world would have a universal government with no need to conduct foreign relations. Unfortunately, recent American foreign policy fails to achieve even the lesser evils allowed by an imperfect world.
There is no such thing as an ideal foreign policy. An ideal world would have a universal government with no need to conduct foreign relations. Unfortunately, recent American foreign policy fails to achieve even the lesser evils allowed by an imperfect world.
Much of the problem results from Americans’ failure to
understand that moral standards appropriate at the personal (or “micro”) level
cannot be applied uncritically at the “macro” level in which governments
operate.
America’s
approach to Syria
is a clear example of the problems caused by failure to understand this
distinction. Syrian president Bashar
al-Assad presides over a civil war which has killed hundreds of thousands and driven
crowds to flee. American policy is that
Assad is an evil man and has to go. Russian and Iranian support for his regime is considered
outrageous.
We need to reconsider.
Assad’s forces face several rebel groups and the Islamic State. Wholesale atrocities, committed by all sides,
will end only when the civil war ends. If rebel forces destroy Assad, war will continue while
the various groups fight to see who would rule. So the fastest way to end the war would be
victory by Assad’s loyalists
Whatever their reasons for supporting Assad, therefore,
Russia
and Iran are
promoting more humane results than is the U.S.
Our support for rebels prolongs the misery.
Assad, like Saddam
Hussein, has done terrible things , so evaluated
at the micro level he is indeed despicable.
But remember the actual consequences of removing Hussein: chaos,
large scale killings, the
Islamic State. The average Iraqi would be better off today if Hussein remained
in power.
When evaluating leaders remember, as Charles A. Beard noted, that “The bee
fertilizes the flower it robs.” Even
terrible leaders provide a valuable service if they can keep their people from
beating each other’s brains out.
As the U.S.
learned (or did we?) in Iraq,
it is much easier to destroy bad governments than to replace them with better
ones. Unless our national security
absolutely requires it we should therefore refrain from overthrowing even
terrible foreign leaders since the one thing worse for the people of a country than
a bad government is no government at all.
Thomas Friedman argues that our
planet is divided into areas of order and areas of disorder. Noting refugees pouring into Europe, he says
“we have only two ways to halt this refugee flood, and we don’t want to choose
either: build a wall and isolate these regions of disorder, or occupy them with
boots on the ground, crush the bad guys and build a new order based on real
citizenship, a vast project that would take two generations.”
We do have a third choice that could
minimize expanding the world of disorder:
stop military interventions to overthrow bad regimes, and stop
supporting domestic insurrections..
When he met with Vladimir Putin, President Obama was unable to endorse Russia’s
support for the Assad regime. Complete
reversals of policy are politically embarrassing. But at least we could stop our current
expensive and ineffective support for rebel groups. There are signs that we are
doing this in fact, despite continuing
rhetoric to the contrary.
Many recent commentaries about Syria
have lamented the high price of our foreign inaction. But Syria
is just one of many places where American inaction is the best possible action.
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