Austin American-Statesman

Syria attack or no, Trump has backed us into a corner

- Pat Buchanan He writes for Creators Syndicate.

With his Sunday tweet that Bashar Assad, “Animal Assad,” ordered a gas attack on Syrian civilians, and Vladimir Putin was morally complicit in the atrocity, President Donald Trump just painted himself and us into a corner.

“Many dead, including women and children, in mindless CHEMICAL attack in Syria,” tweeted Trump, “President Putin, Russia and Iran are responsibl­e for backing Animal Assad. Big price... to pay.”

“Big price... to pay,” said the president.

Now, either Trump launches an attack that could drag us deeper into a seven-year civil war from which he promised to extricate us last week, or Trump is mocked as being a man of bluster and bluff.

For Trump on Sunday accused Barack Obama of being a weakling for failing to strike Syria after an earlier chemical attack.

Trump’s credibilit­y is now on the line, and he is being goaded by the war hawks to man up. On Sunday, John McCain implied that Trump’s comments about leaving Syria “very soon” actually “emboldened” Assad:

“President Trump last week signaled to the world that the United States would prematurel­y withdraw from Syria. Bashar Assad and his Russian and Iranian backers have heard him, and emboldened by American inaction, Assad has reportedly launched another chemical attack against innocent men, women and children, this time in Douma.”

Pronouncin­g Assad a “war criminal,” Lindsey Graham said Sunday the entire Syrian air force should be destroyed.

On John Bolton’s first day as national security adviser, Trump is being pushed to embrace a policy of Cold War confrontat­ion with Russia and a U.S. war with Syria. Yet candidate Trump campaigned against both.

Lest we forget, there was a reason Obama did not strike Syria for a previous gas attack. Americans rose up as one and said we do not want another Middle East war.

When John Kerry went to Capitol Hill for authorizat­ion, Congress, sensing the national mood, declined to support any such attack.

Trump’s strike, a year ago, with 59 cruise missiles, on the air base that allegedly launched a sarin gas attack, was supported only because Trump was new in office and the strike was not seen as the beginning of a longer and deeper involvemen­t in a war Americans did not want to fight.

Does Trump believe that his base is more up for a major U.S. war in Syria today than it was then?

Before any U.S. attack, Trump should make sure there is more hard evidence that Assad launched this poison gas attack than there is that Russia launched that poison gas attack in Salisbury, England.

One month after that attack, which Prime Minister Theresa May ascribed to Russia and Foreign Minister Boris Johnson laid at the feet of Putin himself, questions have arisen:

Why would Putin, with the prestige of hosting the World Cup in June on the line, perpetrate an atrocity that might have killed hundreds and caused nations not only to pull out of the games, but to break diplomatic relations?

U.S. foreign policy elites claim Putin wanted Trump to win the 2016 election. But if Putin indeed wanted to deal with Trump, why abort all such prospects with a poison gas murder of a has-been KGB agent in Britain, our foremost ally?

The sole beneficiar­ies of the gas attacks in Salisbury and Syria appear to be the War Party.

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