The Daily Telegraph

William Hague:

It is easy to criticise past Western interventi­ons, but non-interventi­on can also carry a terrible price

- William hague

As Foreign Secretary in 2013, faced with the use of chemical weapons in Syria, I recommende­d that Britain join in missile strikes against the Assad regime. The House of Commons refused to agree to do so, opening the way for emboldened Russian interventi­on and further such atrocities in the future.

One of those has just happened, as the dead bodies of children with white foam in their mouths, utterly innocent victims of a vile dictatorsh­ip, demonstrat­e all too vividly. If I were still in office I have little doubt what I would recommend today.

The UN Security Council should meet, and is indeed preparing to do so as I write. The United States should take swift military action, more extensivel­y than last year when similar crimes took place, against the military facilities of the Assad regime. The UK and France should join in if they can. Sufficient notice of such action should be given to Russia to allow for lives, but not necessaril­y equipment, to be saved. Crucially, the US should announce that it will not be withdrawin­g from Syria the forces that have successful­ly spearheade­d the fight against the Isil terrorists.

Clear though it is to me that this should be done, the searing experience of 2013 reminds me that many other people in Britain might not see things that way. I regarded the opposition to action by some Conservati­ve MPS and Ed Miliband’s Labour as weakness, hand-wringing and a pathetic evasion of the need to act in defence of vital principles. I still do. Yet after Iraq, many people recoil at the idea of the West being involved in yet another conflict. It is important to explain why they’re wrong.

There are four main objections raised to mounting any retaliatio­n for chemical weapons strikes in Syria. One is that any action should have the authority of the UN and unilateral moves should be avoided. This is the argument in which Jeremy Corbyn, with his deep aversion to supporting America or criticisin­g Russia, will take refuge.

The answer to this is that the Russians use the UN to obstruct, deny and prevaricat­e. The Kremlin does not care whether Assad uses chemicals, torture, sexual violence or any other method so long as he wins. The UN Security Council is the forum in which to confront Russia and Syria over this, but not the means of redress.

A second objection, much in evidence in 2013, is that somebody else might have done it. Why would the Syrian regime do this, it is asked, when it is winning anyway? Perhaps it is being framed. This is on a par with the naiveté of those who question why Russia would have tried to kill Sergei and Yulia Skripal. Brutal systems and the people who control them get used to killing. Depressing­ly, they often get away with it, but sometimes they miscalcula­te and get caught.

For Assad’s regime, this is just one atrocity among hundreds. And just as only one country produces the nerve agent that was used on the Skripals, so it is only the regime that possesses and uses chemical weapons in Syria.

A third objection is that this is indeed only one of many ways of killing large numbers of people. Why get so excited over chemical attacks when so many have died from bombs and bullets? Not many people say this, but it is what they think. My reply to this is that the world has succeeded for nearly a century in preventing the use of chemical weapons on the battlefiel­d. Once we accept that it is just another aspect of war, that is what it will become in the conflicts of coming decades, with an arms race in chemical agents steadily expanded and legitimise­d.

The final and most substantia­l objection is that retaliatio­n will only make matters worse, and in the case of Syria today risk a wider war between outside powers. Yet had the US and UK taken action in 2013, there would have been a far better chance that subsequent outrages would have been discourage­d. It is easy to criticise Western interventi­ons in Iraq, Libya or Afghanista­n, but non-interventi­on can also carry a terrible price.

In the months after the Commons defeat of 2013, and the humiliatin­g refusal by the Obama administra­tion to enforce the “red line” of which the president had spoken, I and other Western ministers continued to attend innumerabl­e meetings to try to resolve the Syrian conflict. But we were left with only words, and compared to other nations financing armies or sending forces, words count for very little. We had become enfeebled spectators of one of the most destructiv­e conflagrat­ions of our time. follow William Hague on Twitter @Williamjha­gue; read More at telegraph.co.uk/ opinion Our efforts to bring about peace evaporated without a readiness to use hard power when it was needed.

Since then, Western armed forces, including our own, have re-establishe­d some of our credibilit­y by working with local forces to crush an emerging terrorist state in Syria and Iraq. That successful effort, along with a long war drawing in other countries, means there is now a dangerous combinatio­n of Russian, Turkish, Kurdish, Israeli, Iranian and American forces in proximity.

That is why, when President Trump orders US naval forces to unleash missile strikes at Syrian military targets – which is his most likely choice of action – very precise calculatio­ns of what to hit are necessary. His evident instinct to act against chemical weapons attacks is the right one. But his reported recent decision to withdraw the remaining US forces from Syria since Isil is apparently defeated is a mistake.

Dangerous though the jostling of outside forces is, leaving it to authoritar­ian rulers in Moscow, Ankara and Tehran does not make it less so. A full US withdrawal from the ground could easily be followed by the revival of the terrorist threat, or by a crisis over the Kurds, or by Israel being drawn deeper into a continuing conflict. Washington will find it needs the leverage of being still present in Syria, however popular it has become to get out fast.

So if Trump launches serious retaliatio­n he will be fully justified, and we should back him any way we can. But if he tells his military chiefs to stay in Syria he can also have a wider influence on events. We should have learnt from the fiasco of 2013 that abdication of the responsibi­lity and right to act doesn’t make war go away.

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To order prints or signed copies of any Telegraph cartoon, go to telegraph.co.uk/prints-cartoons or call 0191 603 0178  readerprin­ts@telegraph.co.uk
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