The Hamilton Spectator

Change may head off disaster in Syria

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Viewpoint: Washington Post (excerpt) Under pressure from allies, the Obama administra­tion appears to be creeping toward a correction of its strategy in Syria. If so, the change would be welcome. The president has been counting on moderate Syrian forces to fight the Islamic State while refusing to address the threat those forces face from the regime of Bashar Assad. That policy has prompted Turkey to withhold vital co-operation and, more seriously, has risked the destructio­n of U.S. allies who have been losing territory to both the Assad regime and Islamic extremist groups.

The plan under considerat­ion would be incrementa­l and probably too weak to decisively advance U.S. interests in Syria. But it might at least head off disaster. U.S. officials are discussing the creation of a de facto safe zone along the Turkish border that the rebels could hold with the help of U.S. and allied airstrikes and Turkish special forces.

The border strip, which extends toward the besieged, Kurdish-held town of Kobane, is currently controlled by forces from the Islamic State. But the strate- gy would include deterring Syrian government aircraft from entering the area, shielding it from bombing raids.

The safe zone could allow the entry into Syria of political exiles attempting to set up a badly needed alternativ­e to the Assad government. It could also give breathing room to the moderate Free Syrian Army.

Turkey, with whom senior U.S. officials have been negotiatin­g the plan, could substantia­lly step up its contributi­on to the war. Turkish special forces might play the role of spotters for bombers — filling another gap in the current operation.

White House hesitation is attributed to worries about being slowly sucked into Syria’s civil war, the radicaliza­tion of forces it supports or the pressure that might mount to deploy U.S. ground troops. While these dangers are real, they are more likely to materializ­e if Obama fails to remedy the weakness of his current policy. To eliminate the Islamic State, Syria must be stabilized under a new regime. The sooner the United States accepts that reality and takes steps to bring it about, the lower the risks and the cost.

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