Obama
warns against responding to aircraft invading Syrian airspace?!
Obama: Assad Shooting At American Planes Would Lead To His Overthrow
14
September, 2014
US
President Barack Obama delivers a live televised address to the
nation on his plans for military action against the Islamic State,
from the Cross Hall of the White House in Washington September 10,
2014.
President
Barack Obama would seek to overthrow the regime of Bashar al-Assad if
American planes were attacked upon entering Syrian air space, Peter
Baker of The
New York Times reports .
If
Assad's troops f ired at American planes entering Syrian airspace,
"Obama said he would order American forces to wipe out
Syria’s air defense system," Baker reports. "He went on
to say that such an action by Mr. Assad would lead to his overthrow,
according to one account."
On
Wednesday, Obama announced that he had authorized US airstrikes in
Syria while laying out a
four-part strategy to
"destroy" and "eradicate" radical ISIS militants
who have captured roughly a third of Syria and a third of Iraq.
Since
August, US warplanes have backed Iraqi soldiers, Kurdish peshmerga
fighters, and Iranian-backed Shia militiamen as they attempt to roll
back ISIS gains in Iraq.
Baker,
who spoke with 10 people who spoke to the president leading up to his
speech on Wednesday, writes that Obama " struck his guests as
less certain about the endgame on the Syrian side, where he has
called for Mr. Assad to step down and must now rely on the same
moderate Syrian rebels he refused to arm in the past."
Syrian
rebels associated with the Western-backed Free Syrian Army (FSA) have
scoffed at Obama's plan, saying that it rushes to target ISIS while
ignoring Assad.
"I
don't really understand this sudden fuss about ISIS," one FSA
fighter told
The Guardian.
"They killed people, but Bashar has been killing for the last
three years. But nobody seems to be interested in that anymore."
Opposition
fighters note that simply bombing ISIS will
not stop the
criminal army and that a comprehensive plan is needed to deal with
both ISIS and Assad.
"Instead
of bombing ISIS from the air, we need support inside Syria to fight.
It's the only way," Mohammed Al Bakhour, 31, a senior commander
of an Aleppo-based FSA battalion, told the Guardian . "Once
Assad is gone, we'll deal with ISIS ourselves."
Mike
Nudelman/Business Insider
It's
unclear if the US would protect what it calls "the legitimate
opposition" near Aleppo, Syria's largest city and the last
place that the FSA has a significant foothold. FSA-aligned
revolutionaries are currently fighting
for their survival as
ISIS and Assad attack them from all sides.
Helping
FSA rebels against Assad's warplanes would force Obama to get
involved in "somebody
else's civil war "
while putting American planes in the sights of Syrian planes
and air defense systems.
"From
everything the administration has said and leaked to the press, we
know that it will not offer the FSA any meaningful protection from
the Syrian Air Force’s punishing aerial assaults, either in the
form of a no-fly zone or shoulder-launched surface-to-air missiles,"
journalist Michael
Weiss writes in Now .
" This means that the same rebels who ... were already fighting
six different enemies in Syria will only be equipped to carry on
fighting one. So what happens if Assad continues to bomb America’s
half-a-billion-dollar counterterrorism proxy force?"
The
New York Times editorial board argues that
without significant strengthening of Syrian rebels, " there is
no chance the fight against ISIS can be successful."
And
then there is the hovering question of Assad.
The
Obama administration has argued that US airstrikes on ISIS positions
wouldn't help Assad because he has lost legitimacy in the areas
currently under ISIS control. But without a strong nationalist
opposition — which both Assad and ISIS are trying
to destroy —
the Syrian regime stands to gain from airstrikes on ISIS.
"Assad
is the far stronger player in Syria; hitting ISIS necessarily helps
him consolidate power," geopolitical expert Ian Bremmer told
Business Insider in an email. "That’s a cause and effect that
the US is trying to avoid, but it’s the reality."
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