Las Vegas Review-Journal

Dictatorsh­ip Inc. rises

- Bret Stephens

It really is an axis of evil. This past week, The New York Times reported that U.N. investigat­ors have compiled a more-than-200-page dossier containing extensive evidence of North Korea’s supply of potential chemical weapons components and ballistic missile parts to Bashar Assad’s regime in Syria. Pyongyang had previously tried to furnish Assad with a nuclear reactor, until the Israelis destroyed it in a 2007 airstrike.

Pyongyang isn’t Damascus’ only helper. Last November, Moscow — which supplies Assad with an air force to bombard his own people — wielded its 10th and 11th vetoes in defense of the Syrian government at the U.N. Security Council to thwart a separate panel of experts charged with investigat­ing the use of chemical weapons in Syria. Beijing has used its own veto to help Assad on six occasions.

Then there’s Iran, which has been invested in Assad’s survival from the beginning of the uprising against him in 2011. Through Hezbollah, its Lebanese proxy, Tehran has provided Assad with his most effective and merciless ground troops.

Why should a Shiite theocrat, a Russian kleptocrat, a Korean gourmand and a Chinese son of heaven unite so openly to rescue a foul and feeble Baathist dictatorsh­ip?

The question isn’t asked often enough. None of them shares a border, a language, a religion or a political ideology with Assad. And each has paid a price for meddling.

Iran has lost some 500 troops, including at least 16 generals, fighting in Syria since 2012, according to the Atlantic Council’s Ali Alfoneh, while suffering a popular backlash back home against its Syria policy. Russia may have lost dozens of its mercenarie­s in a humiliatin­g recent encounter with U.S. forces near the Euphrates. And whatever else Kim Jong Un is doing in Syria, he probably isn’t getting rich from the trade.

Then again, there are interests that go beyond lives and money. Some of these are relatively narrow. Iran wants to maintain the so-called Shiite crescent. Russia hopes to use its position in Syria to bargain for concession­s over Ukraine. China wants to rebuild Syria when it’s all over. North Korea is just sinister.

But there is also the collective interest of Dictatorsh­ip Inc.

Interest No. 1: To see a popular rebellion against tyranny fail spectacula­rly.

This is fundamenta­l. Syria isn’t so much a country as it is an exhibit for Dictatorsh­ip Inc., the main purpose of which is to show that resistance really is futile. That’s why Russia doesn’t shrink from bombing civilian hospitals, or Hezbollah from starving entire cities into submission, or Assad from using chemical weapons. They are showing their respective publics the lengths to which they are prepared to go to maintain their own grip on power.

Interest No. 2: To underscore America’s unreliabil­ity as a credible ally and serious enforcer of global norms.

Whatever their difference­s, Iran, North Korea, Russia and China are all so-called revisionis­t powers. What they want to revise, or erase, is Pax Americana. In Syria, they had an ally, a cause and a plausible outcome. America, by contrast, only had the bonfire of its ambivalenc­e. The result, beyond the humanitari­an catastroph­e, has been a reputation­al catastroph­e, as the U.S. demonstrat­ed that it would not back its local allies, or seriously enforce norms against the use of chemical weapons, or devise and implement a strategy compatible with our stated policy.

Whatever else one might say about American regional interests or moral obligation­s when it comes to Syria, we have a vital national interest in foiling Dictatorsh­ip Inc.’s ambitions for the country.

We could do something to reverse our reputation for unreliabil­ity by doing more to protect our Kurdish allies against their enemies — including the Turks — much as we did after the 1991 Persian Gulf war. We could erase the stain of the breached red line by striking Assad’s military installati­ons every time Syria uses chemical weapons. We could find covert ways to dramatical­ly increase the military price Russia is paying for its interventi­on.

And we could do all this, without burdening ourselves as we did in Iraq, with the task of sorting out Syria’s future.

That requires an administra­tion capable of devising, coordinati­ng and executing a consistent military and diplomatic strategy. We don’t have one.

It requires a president who understand­s the benefits of Pax Americana, doesn’t think of foreign policy as a series of gimmes, is capable of rallying allies to a common cause, and understand­s that our liberal values are the great prerequisi­te for our global leadership. We don’t have one.

Above all, it requires a belief in what used to be called the free world: of its shared moral principles, broad interests, and long-term aspiration­s. We don’t have that, either.

The axis of evil is back, not that it ever really went away. The cause of freedom awaits a resurrecti­on.

 ?? HASSAN AMMAR / AP ?? Syrian children walk by posters of Syrian President Bashar Assad and Russian President Vladimir Putin on Jan. 18 in Aleppo.
HASSAN AMMAR / AP Syrian children walk by posters of Syrian President Bashar Assad and Russian President Vladimir Putin on Jan. 18 in Aleppo.

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