Monday, September 2, 2013
Monday, September 2, 2013 by DXTR corporation
Syria missile strike: What would happen next?
By Josh Levs, CNN
August 31, 2013 -- Updated 1116 GMT (1916 HKT)
A U.N. arms expert
collects samples during an inspection of a suspected chemical weapons
strike site in the Ghouta area outside Damascus on Thursday, August 29.
Syria has warned the United States against taking any military action
after international outrage over the country's suspected use of chemical
weapons. Tensions in Syria began to flare in March 2011 and have
escalated into an ongoing civil war. Click through to view the most
compelling images taken since the start of the conflict.
HIDE CAPTION
Syrian civil war in photos
STORY HIGHLIGHT
- A missile strike could worsen the war and usher in new problems
- "Supporting the opposition at this point would be like French-kissing al Qaeda," analyst says
- Hezbollah could attack Israel in retaliation, analysts say
- Iran could sponsor attacks against Western assets, analyst says
A broad cross-section of
experts on the region agree: A missile strike could worsen the war in
Syria and usher in a host of new problems.
"The key issue is not the
tactics of the strikes, but the strategic aftermath," says Anthony
Cordesman, a former Defense Department official now with the Center for
Strategic and International Studies.
Gulf's appetite for war against Syria
Labott: U.S. response expected in days
White House push for strike on Syria
Most experts believe a
strike would target the Syrian regime's weapons arsenal -- not suspected
sites of chemical weapons stockpiles. The latter would be "the worst
possible option," and could spread chemicals downwind, says Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, a former commander of the British military's chemical defense regiment.
U.S. officials have said
strikes on command bunkers, airfields or the artillery batteries and
rocket launchers used to fire chemical projectiles are among the
possibilities being considered.
CNN asked analysts to discuss what could follow.
Al Qaeda, extremists emboldened?
"A limited attack could
suppress morale among regime forces and encourage defections and
splits," says Jeffrey White of the Washington Institute for Near East
Policy.
The opposition would be emboldened -- including the al Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front, analysts say.
"Supporting the
opposition at this point would be like French-kissing al Qaeda," says
Michael Rubin, a former Pentagon official now with the American
Enterprise Institute. "If the opposition wins, al Qaeda will win power."
"There is a real risk
that destabilizing the Assad regime could enable the jihadist and al
Qaeda-affiliated rebel groups," agrees Erica Borghard, author of the
policy analysis "Arms and Influence in Syria: The Pitfalls of Greater
U.S. Involvement."
"These groups are militarily more capable than the rebels currently receiving U.S. support. "
It would be difficult
for the United States to target al-Nusra infrastructure as part of a
missile strike campaign because al-Nusra does not operate with clear
"command-and-control assets" like the regime of Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad, Borghard says.
How will Assad react to the U.S. threat?
Next steps if the U.S. acts in Syria
Ajami: This is Assad's country
Syria steps up attacks?
Many analysts believe a
U.S. attack would be aimed largely at making a statement that using
chemical weapons in the Syrian civil war is unacceptable -- and that
President Barack Obama is serious about his "red line."
The attack would be unlikely to severely damage al-Assad, analysts say. But a limited attack brings its own dangers.
"Doing something
cosmetic would be worse than doing nothing at all," says Christopher
Harmer, senior naval analyst at the Institute for the Study of War.
It would send a message
to al-Assad "that he has relative immunity from us, that he can continue
to do whatever he wants short of massive chemical attacks on
civilians," Harmer said in a CNN interview.
Some other analysts fear al-Assad would respond with new chemical weapons attacks.
"Damaging his air force
and known military installations would force him to consider his more
extreme options for regime survival," including chemical weapons to
quell rebellions, says Ed Husain of the Council on Foreign Relations.
"Syria is now a fight to the death for both sides."
More than 100,000 people
have been killed in the Syrian conflict -- the vast majority through
conventional weapons, according to the United Nations. Rebels officials
have said 1,300 people were killed in a recent chemical weapons attack;
the United Nations has said hundreds, perhaps more than a thousand, were
killed.
The United States insists Syria was behind the attack, but "there is no absolute certainty," Husain notes in a CNN Opinion column.
Syria insists it has not used chemical weapons, and blames rebels.
If rebels did carry out
the attack "to bait America into the conflict, then U.S. firepower would
be futile," says Husain. "No amount of surgical strikes on government
facilities will prevent non-state actors from further use of these
weapons."
Retaliation -- against Israel?
It's unlikely Syria would attack U.S. assets, analysts say.
"They could try to shoot
down U.S. bombers, if they are used, but have little hope against
cruise missiles," says Benjamin Friedman of the Cato Institute. "The
regime's forces are tied down against rebels, and it lacks an air force
or missiles that can hit any important U.S. targets with reliability."
And if Syria did manage
to hit a U.S. target, "it would only help shift U.S. opinion toward war
and invite greater U.S. military involvement" -- the last thing the
Syrian regime wants.
"It's easier for Syria to target Israel, but Israel's retaliation would bring similarly dire consequences," Friedman says.
"The nightmare scenario
is that Assad will respond by launching chemical weapons into Israel or
another neighbor," says Rubin, of the American Enterprise Institute.
"After all, if he hasn't batted an eye at gassing sleeping Syrians, why
worry about killing Turks, Jordanians, or Lebanese?"
Israelis have lined up in recent days for gas masks.
But a more likely scenario, says Friedman, is that Hezbollah would attack Israel.
"The Lebanon-based
terrorist militia might fire rockets into Israel, as they did in 2006,
in response to an attack on their Syria patrons. That could draw the
United States more deeply into the war. On the other hand, the memory of
Israel's 2006 response might deter Hezbollah."
International ramifications: Protests, unrest, attacks?
A missile strike on
Syria could lead to new violence in other parts of the Middle East and
around the world, says Firas Abi Ali, head of Middle East and North
Africa Country Risk and Forecasting at IHS.
In Lebanon, Hezbollah
supporters would be more likely to attack Sunnis "due to the increased
perception that Sunni communities are supporting Western-Israeli
targeting of Hezbollah and Syria," he says. In several Middle Eastern
countries, protests could arise -- some of them potentially violent. In
Jordan, Syria "would likely sponsor groups" to attack malls, hotels, and
government targets, Abi Ali says.
And there will be a
"high risk" of attacks, sponsored by Iran, against Western assets around
the world, from India to Thailand to Brazil, Abi Ali says.
Russia would also likely take action against companies based in the United States and some other countries, he says.
Syria becomes 'Obama's War'?
The repercussions for the United States, in the eyes of the world, could be tremendous, analysts say.
"By intervening, Syria
may well prove to be Obama's war, bequeathed to a new president in 2016.
Civilian casualties are inevitable. The images on our screens will not
be Syrians using chemical weapons to kill each other, but American bombs
creating carnage and killings in yet another Muslim country," says
Husain of the Council on Foreign Relations.
There would be "real and
false claims of collateral damage and civilian deaths,"and at the
United Nations, Syria would accuse the United States of "illegal
aggression," adds Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and
International Studies.
"No amount of spin and
victory claims can get around these issues. Nothing can stop critics
from validly raising every past U.S. mistake in past interventions in
the region and the world."
"The worry here is that
the U.S. could be drawn into even more extensive involvement in Syria,"
says author Borghard. "This could involve a number of things, including
imposing a no-fly zone over Syrian airspace and/or more extensive arming
and training of rebels... This would be a far more resource-intense
operation than the 2011 NATO operation in Libya and would involve
greater risks."
Still, "Doing nothing is
not an answer," says Cordesman. "... Simply standing by and letting
Syria drift into armed, violent partition will threaten every U.S.
interest in the region."
At the least, there
should be a new international humanitarian effort, increased support for
moderate factions in the opposition and a willingness to say the "U.S.
will consider collective action in terms of some no fly zone or use of
airpower to both protect and empower the rebels if they can show they
really have moderate leadership, can control the flow of arms and
support, and will give full rights and protection to their Sunni
opponents," he says.
But in examining the
possible repercussions of a missile strike, Rubin of the American
Enterprise Institute says, "There is no scenario that will end violence
and improve the situation. The time for preventive medicine was two
years ago."
"When one side finally
wins, the United States will have to craft a strategy to address a whole
new set of problems that such a victory will bring," he says. "Let's
call where we are now Phase I of the Syrian civil war. We have yet to
see Phase II and Phase III but they are coming."
Source:CNN News International
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