Is Overthrowing the Syrian Government Worth Risking Nuclear War with Russia?
Interviewed
by Wolf Blitzer on CNN today, US Rep. Tulsi Gabbard clearly explained
how the U.S. fixation on overthrowing Syrian President Bashir
al-Assad is putting us in direct conflict with Russia which has been
an ally of Assad’s for 40 years. Tulsi asks: What is so important
about overthrowing the Syrian government of Assad that justifies
risking a nuclear war with Russia? She also said the U.S. needs to
pressure NATO member Turkey to become a full-fledged partner in the
war against Islamic extremists.
Tulsi Gabbard VS Obama's WW3
Tulsi
Gabbard slams Obama's Sec Def 'Ashes to Ashes' Carter for the Obama
policy of WW3 with Russia
Rohrabacher
Statement on Turkey’s Clash with Russia
Via Facebook
WASHINGTON
– Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
Subcommittee on Europe, Eurasia, and Emerging Threats, on Saturday
issued the following statement concerning Turkey’s shooting down of
a Russian jet fighter on the Turkey-Syria border:
It
is imperative that American decision-makers admit to themselves and
begin basing their decisions on the hard fact that Islamic terrorism
poses the primary threat to our safety and the peace of the world.
Our
president seems incapable of uttering the phrase Islamic terrorism,
much less of overseeing a policy that will defeat this evil. His
incoherence is ever more evident as events in Syria unfold.
Not
radical Islam, but the Russians have been portrayed to us as the
villains in this chapter of history. Yet our government demonstrates
a lack of will, incompetence, or both, in confronting the most
monstrous of the radical Islamic marauders now spilling vast
quantities of innocent blood in the Middle East -- as well as in
Africa and France.
When
Russia courageously stepped into the breach we should have been
applauding its willingness to confront ISIS. Instead, we continue to
denigrate Russians as if they were still the Soviet Union and Putin,
not Islamic terrorists, our most vicious enemy.
So
now we see the travesty of a harsh condemnation of the Russians for
introducing air strikes against terrorists who will murder Americans
if they get the chance.
Yes,
Russia does this to protect Syria’s authoritarian Assad regime,
which has close ties to Moscow. So what?
Assad,
like Iraq’s Saddam Hussein, is no threat to the United States or
the Western world. If Assad is forced out of power he will eventually
be replaced by an Islamic terrorist committed to raining down mayhem
on Western countries.
Today
we witness the spectacle of American decision- makers, in and out of
the Obama administration, joining forces with a Turkish regime that
grows more supportive of the radical Islamist movement. There is
ample evidence of President Erdogan’s complicity in ISIS’s
murderous rampage through Syria and Iraq.
Yet,
we hold our public rebukes for the Russians, who are battling those
terrorists. A Russian plane on an anti-terrorist mission did violate
Turkish airspace, just as Turkish planes have strayed into Greek
airspace hundreds of times over the last year. This overflight was no
threat to Turkey. Still, it was shot down, as was a Russian
helicopter on the way to rescue the downed Russian pilot.
Why
do Americans feel compelled to kick Russia in the teeth? Russia’s
military is attacking an enemy that would do us harm. Why ignore the
hostile pro-terrorist maneuvering of Turkish strongman Erdogan?
President
Obama is wrong. American politicians who try to sound tough at
Russia’s expense in this case are not watching out for the
long-term interests of the United States by undermining those
fighting our primary enemy, Islamic terrorists.
Russia
should be applauded. Instead, it is being castigated for doing what
our government is unwilling to do to confront the terrorist offensive
now butchering innocent human beings from Africa, to the Middle East,
to the streets of Paris.
If
being in NATO means protecting Erdogan in this situation, either he
shouldn’t be in NATO or we shouldn’t.
Meanwhile
Kerry is calling for boots on the ground
Serbia: Boots on ground needed to defeat IS in Syria - Kerry
United
States Secretary of State John Kerry was among foreign ministers
and delegates from the member states of the Organisation for
Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) gathered at the Kombank
Arena in Belgrade, Thursday, for the opening session of the 22nd
OSCE Ministerial Council.
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