Sunday Independent (Ireland)

US will now come under

- Julien Barnes-Dacey in London

US PRESIDENT Donald Trump’s decision to intervene in Syria, sweeping aside the efforts of his predecesso­r to keep the US out of the conflict, will reverberat­e far wider than issues of chemical weapons alone.

The strikes sent a powerful message that use of these deadly weapons won’t be tolerated, but they risk fuelling a new escalatory cycle in the civil war and pulling the US, slowly but surely, deeper into the fighting.

At first glance these missile strikes appear largely symbolic. Not only was Russia — and therefore Bashar al-Assad — warned, but the Tomahawk cruise missiles took out a number of Syrian fighter jets without destroying the airport’s runways. New Syrian combat missions were being flown from the same base the very next day.

Mr Trump reinforced this interpreta­tion by emphasisin­g that the key aim — beyond the self-evident desire to show strength at home — was to ensure that Assad refrained from further use of chemical weapons. However, the US is likely to have unleashed far more than it anticipate­d, particular­ly given the lack of any meaningful political strategy to follow the military attacks.

Once the US wades in, it rarely succeeds in containing its own ambitions, let alone those of its allies. In the context of a brutal six-year conflict driven by zero-sum

ambitions on all sides, this is a heady cocktail.

On the ground, and across the region, the warring parties will be betting on renewed US interventi­on. The air strikes thus risk re-energising all parties for intensifie­d war at a moment when some were hoping for a denouement given widening fatigue and an overdue acceptance that Assad will not be militarily defeated.

The rebels, long intent on drawing the US into the conflict on their side, already see these initial strikes as the thin end of the wedge. They, and their regional allies, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar, will do all they can to draw Washington in deeper.

Assad and his key backers, Iran and Russia, will in turn double down on their own positions. They will certainly not fold in response to the US show of force, with Assad’s position on the ground stronger than ever. The regime in Damascus remains committed to total military victory.

Much will now depend on whether or not Mr Trump is able to hold back and transmit a clear message that the US will take no further military action.

But he will face intense pressure to escalate US involvemen­t, having tied his own credibilit­y to the outcome. Despite efforts by UK foreign secretary Boris Johnson to tie the G7 to a co-ordinated response, the odds are stacked against any new political process without the buy-in of Russia and Iran.

Mr Trump is increasing­ly defining himself in opposition to Barack Obama — this response to the use of chemical weapons being the clearest example — and he will struggle to resist escalating the United States’ involvemen­t as he seeks to differenti­ate himself from the perceived weakness of his predecesso­r in shaping an outcome in Syria.

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