Via FLC
'National funeral for former Syrian Defence
Minister General Hassan Ali Turkmani, Defence Minister Daoud Rajha and Assef
Shawkat,'
"The WSJ has a fascinating
account of how President Obama’s efforts to extend our will without
military intervention failed in Syria. Early in the article, it describes that, as the
Administration was debating intervening directly last summer, senior officials
“misjudged” the situation because rebels “appeared” to be getting close to
killing Bashar al-Assad.
Many paragraphs later, the article elaborates on what caused this “misjudgment” about Assad’s resilience. It describes how in this period last summer, the Obama Administration was focused on post-Assad planning, rather than on getting rid of Assad, because the intelligence had “created a sense” that Assad would be ousted by the rebels acting alone."... Just as pressure to intervene grew last summer, White House officials were buoyed by a series of attacks where rebels appeared to be getting close to killing Mr. Assad. Several senior officials now acknowledge the U.S. misjudged how long Mr. Assad could hold on...."
The administration committee charged with Syria policy
was kept on a tight leash by Mr. McDonough, then the deputy national security
adviser and a close confidante to Mr. Obama, participants say. They said
Mr. McDonough made
clear that Mr. Obama wasn’t interested in proposals that could lead the U.S.
down a slippery slope to military intervention; instead, he had
the committee focus mostly on post-Assad planning. “It was clear to all participants that this was what
the White House wanted, as
opposed to really focusing on key questions of how do you get to the post-Assad
period,” one participant said. Administration officials said one of the reasons the
committee was told to focus on post-Assad planning was because intelligence at the time created “a
sense” in the White House that Mr. Assad could be killed by
rebels or his own people, eliminating the need for riskier
measures to support the rebel campaign.
... Likewise, high-level White House national security
meetings on Syria focused
on what participants called “strategic messaging,” how administration policy
should be presented to the public, according to current and former
officials who took part in the meetings. Another administration official disputed that account,
saying there were multiple cabinet-level meetings “with extensive and rigorous
analysis presented” and that he
didn’t recall strategic messaging ever being a “central topic of
discussion at senior levels.” [my emphasis] messaging.”
I find it telling that WSJ so closely follows a
description of some kind of problem with intelligence with the (disputed)
suggestion that even as the Administration was acting on faulty intelligence, it
was focusing on its own “strategic messaging.”
Go skim Moon of Alabama’s archive
from last July. It’s a very good read not only of the abundant open
source evidence Assad might not be ousted so easily (and if he was, the problems
that would create), but also of how much western propaganda was spinning what
was going on in Syria.
That’s the thing: much of what was being reported — in
public western reports, at least — was propaganda. Perhaps Israeli, perhaps
rebel, perhaps Turkish, perhaps American. But obviously propaganda.
Now, the article presents a different chronology: the
Administration got faulty intelligence (or misread what it got), and in response
moved onto spinning what they were doing in Syria.
But I can’t help but wonder whether the Administration
fell for its own propaganda about what it was doing in Syria?
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian
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