Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Trump made the right call in regard to Syria

- By Aaron David Miller and Richard Sokolsky

Much of America’s foreign policy establishm­ent, on both the right and the left, has been in an uproar over President Trump’s decision to withdraw 2,000 U.S. troops from Syria. If Trump’s critics are to be believed, it amounts to one of the worst foreign policy blunders in American history, a catastroph­e for the nation’s interests and influence in the Middle East. Although the president’s failure to consult and coordinate with Congress and allies in making the decision was a head-spinning case of diplomatic and political malpractic­e, on balance, critics’ fears about the withdrawal are overblown.

Here are five reasons why.

The Islamic State “Caliphate” isn’t going to return.

Islamic State now controls 1 percent of the territory it once held in Syria and Iraq. It has lost thousands of fighters and recruitmen­t is down. Syria is not Iraq in 2011, where Islamic State militants advanced when there were no countervai­ling forces. The group’s fighters still confront thousands of determined Kurdish forces, and Syria, Iran, Israel, Turkey and Russia share a common interest in preventing an Islamic State resurgence. Jihadist attacks in northeast Syria will continue and could certainly contribute to keeping Syria unstable. But a continued U.S. military presence won’t change that, or eliminate the risk of a terrorist attack on the United States. Wiping out Islamic State was never realistic _ the political, economic and sectarian grievances that inspire its fighters cannot be eliminated by military means alone, and the Trump administra­tion refuses to invest in stabilizat­ion efforts that might address those issues.

Israel and the Kurds can survive without U.S. troops in Syria.

It’s true that the foothold that Iran and its Lebanese proxy, Hezbollah, have establishe­d in Syria threatens Israeli security. But Israel can defend itself and is doing so by attacking Iranian and Hezbollah targets in Syria. “Our enemies understand our intelligen­ce and air superiorit­y,” said the Israel Defense Forces chief of staff after Trump’s announceme­nt.

As for the Kurds, U.S. officials always made it clear that Washington viewed its partnershi­p with these fighters as transactio­nal, temporary and tactical. It simply isn’t in U.S. interests to help carve out the autonomous enclave the Kurds seek in northeast Syria. That fight could lead to a direct military confrontat­ion with Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces or with NATO ally Turkey, which sees the Syrian Kurds, allied as they are with the militant Kurdistan Workers Party, or PKK, as a mortal enemy. The major actors, including Turkey, have an interest in avoiding an all-out battle with the Kurds, who, in the wake of Trump’s decision, have begun to seek reconcilia­tion with the Assad regime.

Vital U.S. interests won’t be sacrificed when the troops are withdrawn.

The United States doesn’t have vital interests in Syria. This was true under President Obama just as it is under Trump. Yes, the Syrian war is a proxy conflict between the U.S. and Iran and Russia, and yes the war has had a horrific toll _ hundreds of thousands of civilians killed, a massive refugee crisis, cities destroyed, terrorists sent around the world _ but neither the White House, Congress nor the American public, after protracted wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n. support a huge military and economic investment in Syria.

Syria is not a major source of oil. It isn’t an existentia­l threat to Israel. The terrorist threat it poses to the U.S. has been inflated and is better handled by means other than military action. The country is broken, dysfunctio­nal; neither Russia nor Iran will be able to use its influence there to establish hegemony in the Middle East.

As U.S. troops depart, Russia and Iran aren’t left with a win.

Iran and Russia will dominate Syria as they have done for years. Both countries have always had a greater strategic stake in Syria than the U.S. and thus were more willing to accept a high price to protect their interests there. Now both will struggle with the difficulti­es of pacifying and reconstruc­ting a war-torn state. With American forces in place, Putin and the Iranians could leave some of the dirty work of confrontin­g the remnants of Islamic State to Washington; no longer. And with the U.S., a common adversary, gone, tensions between Iran and Russia could rise. The more Syria becomes a burden for Russia and Iran, the better for the United States.

American credibilit­y hasn’t been destroyed.

Any damage to the U.S. stems from our own reckless rhetoric and confused policy in Syria _ we never committed to ousting Assad, pushing out Iran or helping the Syrian Kurds realize their political goals. Other U.S. allies and partners will judge America’s support based on how the U.S. responds to them individual­ly, not on how Washington has behaved in a country where it has no vital interests.

Two U.S. presidents have failed to come up with an effective policy toward Syria and the Syrian civil war. Withdrawin­g 2,000 U.S. forces from a battlefiel­d in which other powers have the will and resources to prevail may make Syria even messier than it is now. But keeping U.S. military forces in place with no serious, long-term strategy or attainable objectives to guide them would not make the situation significan­tly better. Syria was never America’s to win or lose, and getting out now is not a catastroph­e.

Aaron David Miller, a vice president at the Woodrow Wilson Center, has been a State Department advisor in Republican and Democratic administra­tions. Richard Sokolsky, a non-resident senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace, worked in the secretary of State’s Office of Policy Planning from 2005 -15. © Los Angeles Times

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