Obama Needs To Convince the World; What Is the Weinberger Doctrine?
http://watchingamerica.com/News/220217/obama-needs-to-convince-the-world-what-is-the-weinberger-doctrine/
Obama Needs To Convince the World; What Is the Weinberger Doctrine?
Polityka, Poland
By Marek Ostrowski
31 August 2013
Edited by Gillian Palmer
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, with almost 100 percent certainty, presented evidence of the war crime committed by the Syrian regime; he gave the exact number of chemical victims and he even presented down to the meter a map of places in the suburbs of Damascus where the explosions took place.
American diplomatic posts throughout the world have sent out a summary of the details to the media. They have also presented rather sound arguments for blaming Bashar al-Assad and not his opponents, who could have indeed fabricated evidence or tried some fraudulent manipulation.
However, most public opinion in Europe and even in America is quite skeptical about the evidence, and definitely doesnt support an attack against the Syrian army. Nowadays, what counts is not what really happens but what people think of it. Obama has just found himself in a deadlock. After such a violent chemical attack, he should react accordingly. The U.S. highlights its leading role in the world very often. The U.S. president cannot follow Vladimir Putin, who has kept his lips sealed over the last few days. On the other hand, Washington, in the face of the current wave of anti-Americanism, shouldnt risk retaliation if there are no clear targets and necessary consequences.
The current events are ironically observed from beyond the grave by Caspar Weinberger, the secretary of defense in Nixons and Reagans days. After a severe and bloody defeat in the Vietnam War, the U.S. was considering pros and cons of an intervention in Lebanon. At that time, Weinberger formulated for the U.S. Congress six relatively precise conditions to be met in order to send U.S. soldiers on any trip abroad. The criteria were named the Weinberger doctrine. Since that time, it should have been clear that democracy shouldnt resort to rockets and planes without support from the media, and especially without the support of public opinion. In fact, the Weinberger doctrine from 1985 was later edited by Gen. Colin Powell, later the U.S. secretary of state, the same person who presented to the world the evidence for the existence of nuclear weapons in Iraq. This evidence rather, the lack of it is now having damaging effects on the current situation in Syria.