The Columbus Dispatch

What comes next in Syria?

- — The Philadelph­ia Inquirer

Even when President Trump appears to have done the right thing it can leave you scratching your head.

The unexpected cruise missile attack on a Syrian air base in response to the despicable President Bashar al- Assad’s use of chemical weapons against his own people was measured and appropriat­e. In fact, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton earlier recommende­d the same tactic to keep Assad’s air force from getting off the ground to wage chemical warfare on innocents. But few expected Trump to take that course.

This is the “America First” president, who campaigned on a pledge to not get overly involved in foreign disputes. Yet by taking military action against the Assad regime he may have opened the door to greater U. S. interventi­on in a civil war in which Russia, which Trump has been accused of being too cozy, is decidedly on the other side. Moscow was quick to denounce the missile strikes launched from two U.S. destroyers in the eastern Mediterran­ean Sea.

The strikes came after the Pentagon provided evidence that a chemical attack Tuesday on the rebel-held town of Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib Province was carried out by Syrian aircraft that flew from the Shayrat air base. Video and photograph­s of the aftermath showed dozens of victims, including small children, some dead, others convulsing, coughing up blood, or foaming at the mouth as they gasped for enough breath to stay alive. Either the nerve agent sarin or chlorine gas is believed to have been used to commit the atrocity.

In announcing the missile strikes Thursday night, Trump said: “It is in this vital national security interest of the United States to prevent and deter the spread and use of deadly chemical weapons.” He said years of previous attempts to change Assad’s behavior had all failed, leading to continuati­on of the Syrian civil war and a subsequent refugee crisis that in destabiliz­ing the region threatens the United States and its allies.

So, what comes next? Trump has been fighting accusation­s that his election campaign may have colluded with the Russians to help him win the presidency. But his attack on the Syrian air base is in a sense a rebuke of Russia, which was supposed to

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