Syria: A Lose- Lose Situation
For the past two years we have watched the civil war in
Syria spiral into more and more human tragedy. As we go to press the death toll
stands at 90,000 (more by some estimates) and our government has announced that
Assad has crossed the “red line” as solid evidence mounts that he has used
chemical weapons on the rebels. For many of us it is very hard to be concerned-
Syria is an enemy of Israel- so we take some solace in the fact that our
enemies are on a course of self-destruction. Our solace will be very short
lived if we only take a look at the bigger picture. I would like to offer some
thoughts about why you, an American Jew, should be concerned about Syria.
First, as a human being, you should be concerned about the
loss of human life. There is nothing more precious than a single human life no
matter what his or her religion or politics. To tolerate a government that
murders its citizens with chemicals is wrong- the world should react quickly
and strongly to end Assad’s rule. He has joined the ranks of Hitler and Stalin
by killing his own people and ignoring the international consensus that
chemical warfare is immoral. Although it is not something that I say or write
lightly, I hope that America will lead the way in helping the rebels defend
themselves. I also recognize that that
too is a lose-lose situation because of another reality.
Everyone who calls himself a friend of Israel should be
concerned about the civil war in Syria. We cannot just stand back and watch
with the “let them kill themselves” attitude. If the lessons of the so-called
“Arab spring” have taught us anything it should warn us to be careful about
what we wish for – the Arab spring brought groups into power that are filled
with more hate than the governments that fell. It seems as if the Middle East
is on a non-stop course from bad to worse. Do not believe the naiveté of those
who speak about democracy and freedom in the Arab world- that is a dream that
will never happen. Assad has been a constant threat to Israel but there are
many indications that a rebel-lead government would be even worse. Again a
catch 22 – do we hope that Assad will survive the challenge because he is a
known quantity? Do we just sit back and hope that a new regime won’t be “that
much worse?”
Many Americans have grown war-weary. In retrospect we see
that Iraq was a mistake. We see that Afghanistan is a fiasco only waiting to
get worse. We are bitter about the loss of so many American lives that, in the
view of many, will have been for nothing. We are also bitter about the
economics of war- millions of dollars spent fighting wars and helping other
countries at a time in which our own country and our own people are in desperate
trouble. The money keeps getting printed. People make less. Everything costs
more. Against that background it is very hard for many of us to really worry
about a civil war in a country that most Americans could not find on a map.
Again a lose-lose situation. It is a little too late to become isolationists
but it is also a little too late to continue to believe that America can police
the entire globe.
Bottom line? We will have to take a terrible gamble- to
leave Assad in power is an insult to humanity. The world has to have a shared
voice and take a shared action against every regime that murders its own
people- it is a moral obligation. We must make the loss a power an immediate
threat to any government that sanctions murder. It is the only way we have of
protecting humanity against the tyranny of self-appointed rulers. We also have
the obligation to be alert – there is no promise that the new bully on the
block won’t be worse that his predecessor.
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