The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump’s right about putting an end to ‘Endless Wars’

- Pat Buchanan He writes for Creators Syndicate.

The backstage struggle between the Bush interventi­onists and the America-firsters who first backed Donald Trump for president just exploded into open warfare, which could sunder the Republican Party.

At issue is Trump’s decision to let the Turkish army enter Northern Syria, to create a corridor between Syrian Kurds and the Turkish Kurds of the PKK, which the U.S. and Turkey regard as a terrorist organizati­on.

“A disaster in the making,” says Lindsey Graham. “To abandon the Kurds” would be a “stain on America’s honor.”

“The Kurds were instrument­al in our successful fight against ISIS in Syria. Leaving them to die is a big mistake,” said ex-U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, “we must always have the backs of our allies. “But of our NATO ally of almost 70 years, Haley said, “Turkey is not our friend.”

Sen. Mitt Romney called it a “betrayal”: “It says that America is an unreliable ally; it facilitate­s ISIS resurgence; and it presages another humanitari­an disaster.”

Trump tweeted this defense of his order to U.S. forces not to resist Turkish interventi­on: “The Kurds fought with us, but were paid massive amounts of money and equipment to do so. They have been fighting Turkey for decades . ... I held off this fight for ... almost 3 years, but it is time for us to get out of these ridiculous Endless Wars, many of them tribal, and bring our soldiers home.”

When, in December, Trump considered ordering all U.S. troops home from Syria, Defense Secretary James Mattis resigned in protest.

Behind this decision is Trump’s exasperati­on at our NATO allies’ refusal to take back for trial their own citizens whom we and the Kurds captured fighting for ISIS.

The U.S. has “pressed France, Germany, and other European nations, from which many captured ISIS fighters came, to take them back, but they ... refused,” said a Sunday White House statement. “The United States will not hold them for what could be many years and great cost . ... Turkey will now be responsibl­e for all ISIS fighters in the area captured over the past two years.”

What are the arguments interventi­onists using to insist U.S. forces remain in Syria indefinite­ly?

If we pull out, says Graham, the Kurds will be forced, for survival, to ally themselves with Bashar Assad.

True, but the Kurds now occupy a fourth of Syria, and this is not sustainabl­e. We have to consider reality. Assad, the Russians, Iranians and Hezbollah have won the war against the Sunni rebels we and our Arab friends armed and equipped.

And how long must we stay in Syria to defend the Kurds against the Turks? Forever?

If we depart, ISIS will come back, says Cheney: “Terrorists thousands of miles away can and will use their safe-havens to launch attacks against America.”

But al-Qaida and ISIS are in many more places today than they were when we intervened in the Middle East. Must we fight forever over there — to be secure over here? “This will throw the region into further chaos,” says Graham.

But if Trump’s decision risks throwing the region into “further chaos,” what, if not wholesale U.S. interventi­on, created the “present chaos”?

There is a price to be paid for letting go of an empire, but it is almost always less than the price of holding on.

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