E.J. Dionne: Syria and the Return of Dissent
from truthdig:
Syria and the Return of Dissent
Posted on Sep 4, 2013
By E.J. Dionne, Jr.
The debate over Syria is a jumble of metaphors, proof that every discussion of military action involves an argument about the last war. Yet beneath the surface, the fight in Congress over President Obamas proposed strike against Bashar al-Assads regime is a struggle to break free from earlier syndromes to set a new course.
Obama himself is using the imperative that he back up his red line against chemical weapons as an occasion for revisiting his Syrian strategy. And both of our political parties are emerging from a post-9/11 period of frozen foreign policy thinking to a more natural and intellectually honest exchange over Americas long-term role in the world.
The mood of the public and of many in Congress is summarized easily: No more Iraqs. Its a sensible impulse because the Iraq War never delivered on the promises of those who urged the country to battle. Especially among Democrats who initially endorsed the war, there is a lingering guilt that they never asked the Bush administration the questions that needed to be posed. Belatedly, those queriesabout what the intelligence shows and what our goals areare now being directed to Obama on Syria.
Still, there is another reaction among Democrats and liberals, including Obama. It is a return to a pre-Iraq view that shaped the Clinton administrations policies in Bosnia and Kosovo after it failed to stop the Rwandan genocide: There are times when American power can be used to keep local wars from flying out of control, to prevent or limit humanitarian catastrophes and, yes, to advance the countrys interests. ...................(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/syria_and_the_return_of_dissent_20130904/