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JAISAL NOOR: Welcome to The Real News Network. I'm Jaisal Noor in Baltimore. And welcome
to this week's edition of The Bennis Report with Phyllis Bennis, who is now joining us
from Washington, D.C.
Phyllis is a fellow and the director of the New Internationalist Project at the Institute
for Policy Studies in Washington. She's the author of the books Before and After: U.S.
Foreign Policy and the War on Terrorism and Understanding the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict:
A Primer.
Thank you for joining us, Phyllis.
PHYLLIS BENNIS: Good to be with you.
NOOR: So, Phyllis, what's your response to this latest news reported by the Associated
Press that the Obama administration is getting closer to arming Syrian rebels?
BENNIS: It's a very dangerous development. This has been in the works for a while. The
Obama administration is quite divided. And the fact that the latest appointees to the
new administration--Susan Rice as the new national security adviser and Samantha Power
as United Nations ambassador--both of those two are at the core of the component of the
Obama administration and its supporters who have supported from the beginning a much more
aggressive military role for the U.S. in Syria. They were the ones who led the campaign to
get the U.S. involved militarily in Libya, and they're up to the same thing in Syria.
There's other developments that are quite dangerous. The fact that the European Union
voted--well, they didn't actually vote that way, but since every country has a veto, they
were not able to vote to maintain their embargo on military aid, direct military aid to arm
the rebels. And so as of July, European Union countries will be legally allowed to send
weapons to whoever they want in Syria.
More recently, just in the last few days, we've seen 5,000 U.S. troops, as well as a
group of Patriot missiles, sent off to Jordan on the Syrian border for a long-planned but
conveniently timed, let's say, military exercise that's involving troops from a number of countries.
But it's quite likely that at least some of those troops and all of the Patriot missiles
that are being sent will be remaining in Jordan after the two-week long exercise is over as
part of the preparation for a possible direct military intervention.
The problem here, of course, is that they're acting as if there is a military solution
in Syria when in fact there is no military solution. And the possibility of negotiations
in Geneva, something that the U.S. and Russia jointly have been working towards and calling
for, is now looking less and less likely, with moves towards escalating the arms sales
on both sides.
Russia is of course saying that it is going ahead with sending the S-300 antiaircraft
missiles to Syria, although it's clear that the fact that they have not sent them yet--they
are saying that it will be September or so before they are sent; it will be another several
months before Syrians are fully trained in how to use them. In that context, it means
that the Russians are not rushing ahead to continue arming and to escalate their arming
of the Syrian government. That's a moment when the U.S. could move to escalate the diplomacy
instead of escalating the militarization. Unfortunately, it doesn't look like that's
the position of the Obama administration right now.
NOOR: So, Phyllis, if E.U. countries, the United States, and Russia are all to send
weapons to Syria in the next few months, what might the situation on the ground look there?
Already you're seeing reports daily of dozens of people killed. Could it get any worse?
BENNIS: It can absolutely get worse. And it probably will, unfortunately. The reality
is that civil wars--and this is partly a civil war. It's also now a proxy war. There's actually
five separate wars being waged in Syria. But part of it is a civil war. Civil wars, if
one side doesn't qualitatively destroy the other, end with negotiated settlements. The
question is: do those negotiations begin now, or do we wait until there's another 70,000
or 80,000 or 100,000 Syrian casualties before going ahead with negotiations?
The idea that the U.S. can make things better by sending more arms to this unaccountable,
divided, and not particularly competent set of rebel forces when they have essentially
wiped out the voices of the original indigenous Syrian opposition, those who started the uprising
against a terribly repressive regime but who said from the beginning they don't want this
to be an armed struggle, they don't want U.S. or any foreign intervention militarily. Those
people, those voices have largely been sidelined by the noise of the military battle. But the
idea that somehow there is going to be a definitive victory for the rebels against a far better
armed army of the Syrian regime is simply wishful thinking. It's just not going to work
that way.
The lesson of Libya, which is probably the closest immediate precedent to this, is that
the situation in Libya right now is a disaster. The newly opened porous borders of Libya have
seen massive numbers of fighters on all sides of all kinds of militias, and especially of
weapons, throughout Mali, Niger, Algeria. The entire swath of the Sahel in northwest
Africa is at risk now as a result of the US-NATO intervention and the overthrow of Gaddafi
in Libya. That's the best that they can hope for, that it will be that kind of chaos. And
that's in a scenario where the actual fighting and the forces involved were internal to Libya.
What we now have is major engagement from Saudi Arabia and Qatar supporting opposing
sides of the Islamist opposition, the British and the French saying they plan to arm and
the U.S. saying maybe will arm the supposedly secular opposition, who are by far not the
good fighters. The good fighters are the various Islamist forces.
So this is a war that has already spilled over its borders. You're seeing massive destabilization
in Lebanon, in Jordan, refugee crises in those two countries, as well as in Turkey and the
entire area surrounding Syria. So this is already a regional and indeed a global crisis.
Further escalation of the military fighting is certainly not going to make it any better.
NOOR: So, Phyllis, we see members of the Democrat and Republican Party beating the drums for
war and intervention in Syria. The Obama administration says they've ruled out boots on the ground
in Syria. But what role can grassroots activists play in helping promote a diplomatic solution?
BENNIS: I think the key thing is to keep focusing on the fact that already about 68 percent
or more of the American people are saying no to military intervention. There's a recognition
that this is not going to make us any safer the world and it's not going to make any Syrians
any safer in the world. This is a political move. It's not one that has the support of
the American people.
What we need is real diplomacy. We need a new foreign policy that is not based on military
intervention and arming either governments or militias as a way of maintaining U.S. power.
The danger we have right now is that U.S. power in the diplomatic arena, in the political
arena, even in the economic arena is on the decline in the Middle East. U.S. influence
is on the decline in the Middle East. The only arena of power in which the U.S. is by
far the only--the unchallengeable superpower is in the military arena. And so the danger
is that's what they're going to use. It's the old hammer and nail argument. If you're
a hammer, everything looks like a nail. If all of your instruments except the military
have defunded and as a result have collapsed, you're going to think that every problem needs
a military solution. The problem is thinking that doesn't make it so.
We need to demand an end to the militarization, working closely with Russia to make sure that
Russia does the same thing, stops arming the regime, and make sure that the U.S. position
of the moment, which is that Iran is not allowed to participate, that that decision is changed,
because if Iran is excluded, it means that you're guaranteeing that any diplomatic solution
reached won't work, because Iran will not have skin in the game. They will not have
any reason to abide by a decision that they were not allowed to participate in.
So I think that we need to keep the focus on demanding a diplomatic rather than a military
solution, no U.S. militarization. Saying there won't be troops on the ground is not good
enough.
There will be massive bombing. The Syrian antiaircraft capacity right now is far greater
and stronger than that in Libya. It's divided and spread out around the country. And that
means that there will be massive numbers of potential casualties, civilian casualties
when the U.S. bombs those antiaircraft batteries wherever they may be throughout the country.
We have to say no to that.
This is not going to be fought with drones. This is going to be fought with planes, with
bombers, with missiles, with helicopters. And when the first pilot is shot down and
is captured, there will be boots on the ground. Maybe it will be sneakers rather than boots,
because special forces guys wear sneakers. They don't wear boots. So maybe that's the
technicality where they say there won't be boots on the ground. But this is a risk that
is already underway.
It also has to be clear that it's not enough to say no troops on the ground, no boots on
the ground. We cannot be involved militarily by bombing, by sending missiles in another
war in the Middle East--or anywhere else, for that matter, but right now we're talking
about in the Middle East. This is the heart of the Middle East. This is a disaster that
is already underway and that threatens to become far worse as it spreads regionally.
Saying that there won't be U.S. soldiers is not good enough when the whole world knows
that it will be U.S. bombs dropped by U.S. planes, hellfire missiles fired by U.S. helicopters.
This is not acceptable. This is illegal without a United Nations resolution. There's no way
anyone can argue that this has anything to do with self-defense. And the argument that
this is supposedly humanitarian is grounded in the need for a United Nations Security
Council resolution authorizing military force. There has been no such resolution, and there
will be no such resolution. This will be one more example of the United States directly
violating international law.
NOOR: Thank you for joining us, Phyllis.
BENNIS: Thank you. It's always a pleasure.
NOOR: And thank you for joining us on The Real News Network.