john kerry and how he sees the conflict in syria
Last Updated : GMT 09:40:38
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Last Updated : GMT 09:40:38
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John Kerry and how he sees the conflict in Syria

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john kerry and how he sees the conflict in syria

Abdulrahman Al-Rashed

I have read the long 35,000-word script of the Senate hearing on the nomination of Sen. John Kerry to be the next US Secretary of State. This hearing was held before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee which had previously been chaired by Sen. Kerry himself. In order to understand the characteristics of the new US secretary of state, whose appointment is expected to be unanimously approved, we should know that he had previously testified before such a committee more than 40 years ago as a soldier returning from the Vietnam War. So Kerry is a veteran and experienced politician who is well-informed about our region to the extent that he had met with Syrian President Bashar Assad on six separate occasions. This means that Kerry knows our region and leaders very well. But despite all that, I am concerned about what I have read because Kerry did not show clear positions on fundamental issues, specifically Syria and Iran. Sen. John McCain urged Kerry to take a clear position that is in line with moral concepts and the national interest by opposing the actions of Bashar Assad’s regime. McCain said: “We are sowing the wind in Syria, and we’re going to reap the whirlwind. And that whirlwind will be the increased presence of Al-Qaeda and Islamist groups, which are now flooding into Syria, as you know. Sixty thousand dead and counting, and the fall of Assad is “inevitable.” You know that Assad is thinking about Plan B, and that’s going to the coast and doing some ethnic cleansing and having Alawites there.” McCain added in his address to Kerry: “We’ve had a lot of hearings. We haven’t done anything. And we’ve got, again, 60,000 dead and — after 22 months, and all I get, frankly, from the administration is, the fall of Assad is “inevitable”… I hope that — and I know that, from our previous conversations — that you will make this your highest priority.” Nevertheless, Kerry did not clearly reply to McCain; he spoke about his hope in collaborating with the Russians, and McCain responded saying Russians will cooperate. However, they provided the regime with arms. Kerry replied to McCain saying that “whatever judgments you make, they have to pass the test of whether or not, if you do them, they’re actually going to make things better… And you have to make a test of a cost analysis in doing that. And I mean all kinds of cost, human life cost, treasure, effect on other countries.” It was a long discussion and it was not limited to reviewing Kerry’s positions regarding Syria, but rather, it raised questions about many issues around the world, mainly of importance to superpower states. I realize the importance of other issues in this wide and troubled world, from Iran to North Korea, China and Latin America, but the Syrian situation is the key and immediate issue now. Ten months earlier, Al-Qaeda had not yet participated in the war in Syria, but today it became among the forces that are involved in the conflict, because of international hesitation to act as no one has prevented Assad’s regime from killing and destroying the country and terrorizing the peoples of the region. The US failure to positively intervene in Syria has ruined all what has been achieved with great difficulty in the war on extremist ideology and terrorist groups. A campaign launched over the past 10 years against armed groups and Al-Qaeda succeeded specifically at the grass roots and elites’ level, but here we are unfortunately returning to square one. I believe that Kerry, as a future secretary of state, is able to understand the nature of the conflict and the risks of Obama administration’s indifference over the past two years. The fall of the Syrian regime will cause the Iranians to lose their right hand in the implementation of their terror policies, especially if we were able to help the Syrian people establish a regime of their choice through a free vote. If Assad fled Damascus, and this is inevitable as McCain said, we will witness extremism on one side and thousands of Assad’s Shabiha on the another side doing ethnic cleansing in the coastal areas. This would be the outcome of allowing powers like Al-Qaeda and Iran operate freely in Syria. --- The views expressed by the author do not necessarily represent or reflect the editorial policy of Arabstoday.

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john kerry and how he sees the conflict in syria john kerry and how he sees the conflict in syria

 



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