Bombing for show? Or for effect?
By Charles Krauthammer
During the 1944 Warsaw uprising, Stalin ordered the advancing Red Army
to stop at the outskirts of the city while the Nazis, for 63 days,
annihilated the non-Communist Polish partisans. Only then did Stalin
take Warsaw.
No one can match Stalin for merciless cynicism, but President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey is offering a determined echo by ordering
Turkish tanks massed on the Syrian border, within sight of the besieged
Syrian town of Kobane, to sit and do nothing.
For almost a month, Kobane Kurds have been trying to hold off Islamic
State fighters. Outgunned, outmanned and surrounded on three sides, the
defending Kurds have begged Turkey to allow weapons and reinforcements
through the border. Erdogan has refused even that, let alone intervening
directly. Infuriated Kurds have launched demonstrations throughout
Turkey protesting Erdogan's deadly callousness. At least 29
demonstrators have been killed.
Because Turkey has its own Kurdish problem — battling a Kurdish
insurgency on and off for decades — Erdogan appears to prefer letting
the Islamic State destroy the Kurdish enclave on the Syrian side of the
border rather than lift a finger to save it. Perhaps later he will move in to occupy the rubble.
Moreover, Erdogan entertains a larger vision:
making Turkey the hegemonic power over the Sunni Arabs, as in Ottoman
times. The Islamic State is too radical and uncontrollable to be an ally
in that mission. But it is Sunni. And it fights Shiites, Alawites and
Kurds. Erdogan's main regional adversary is the Shiite-dominated rule of
Syria's Bashar al-Assad. Erdogan demands that the United States take
the fight to Assad before Turkey will join the fight against the Islamic
State.
It took Vice President Biden to accidentally blurt out the truth when he
accused our alleged allies in the region of playing a double game —
supporting the jihadists in Syria and Iraq, then joining the U.S.-led
coalition against them. His abject apologies to the United Arab
Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Turkey notwithstanding, Biden was right.
The vaunted coalition that President Obama touts remains mostly
fictional. Yes, it puts a Sunni face on the war. Which is important for
show. But everyone knows that in real terms the operation remains almost
exclusively American.
As designed, the outer limit of its objective is to roll back the
Islamic State in Iraq and contain it in Syria. It is doing neither.
Despite State Department happy talk about advances in Iraq, our side is
suffering serious reverses near Baghdad and throughout Anbar province,
which is reportedly near collapse. Baghdad itself is ripe for
infiltration for a Tet-like offensive aimed at demoralizing both Iraq
and the United States.
As for Syria, what is Obama doing? First, he gives the enemy 12 days of
warning about impending air attacks. We end up hitting empty buildings
and evacuated training camps.
Next, we impose rules of engagement so rigid that we can't make tactical
adjustments. Our most reliable, friendly, battle-hardened "boots on the
ground" in the region are the Kurds. So what have we done to relieve
Kobane? About 20 airstrikes in a little more than 10 days, says Centcom.
That's barely two a day. On the day after the Islamic State entered
Kobane, we launched five airstrikes. Result? We hit three vehicles, one
artillery piece and one military "unit." And damaged a tank. This,
against perhaps 9,000 heavily armed Islamic State fighters. If this were
not so tragic, it would be farcical.
No one is asking for U.S. ground troops. But even as an air campaign,
this is astonishingly unserious. As former E.U. ambassador to Turkey
Marc Pierini told the Wall Street Journal,
"It [the siege] could have been meaningfully acted upon two weeks ago
or so" — when Islamic State reinforcements were streaming in the open
toward Kobane. "Now it is almost too late."
Obama has committed the United States to war on the Islamic State. To then allow within a month an allied enclave to be overrun — and perhaps annihilated — would be a major blow.
Guerrilla war is a test of wills. Obama's actual objectives — rollback
in Iraq, containment in Syria — are not unreasonable. But they require
commitment and determination. In other words, will. You can't just make
one speech declaring war, then disappear and go fundraising.
The indecisiveness and ambivalence so devastatingly described by both of
Obama's previous secretaries of defense, Leon Panetta and Bob Gates,
are already beginning to characterize the Syria campaign.
The Iraqis can see it. The Kurds can feel it. The jihadists are counting on it.
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