Heard an ex-government official, from the US, say something very interesting today regarding the legality of a military strike. He said that Syria was
not a signatory to any treaty preventing the use of chemical weapons
within its own borders. Therefore, as heinous as their usage is, there really isn't a legal basis for an attack simply because the weapons were used.
Also, something that seems to get lost in all of the rhetoric every time -- even if a member nation of the UN violates international law in some way, this, alone, does not legally authorize any one nation, or group of nations, to take it upon themselves to exact punishment on the transgressor. Any action to be take is supposed to be approved by the UN Security Council.
However, in the world of politics and, even more importantly, security, protecting one's own interests trumps practical law any day. The US and its allies can make a case on many other means -- their own proof, moral grounds, etc. Not legal, technically, but close enough, which, in international events, may be good enough.
Still, little if any good will come from a limited strike; and it could make things much worse.
If we back the rebels then we're giving arms to terrorists
Not all of the rebel groups in Syria are affiliated with al Quaeda. Some are simply home-grown moderates who want a western-style democratic government. In fact, those are the groups that originally started the insurrection against the Assad government. Unfortunately, al Quaeda took advantage of the situation and supplanted most of the local groups. The local and al Quaeda groups don't get along and rarely cooperate.
The Administration wants to back the local groups without inadvertently back the al Quaeda groups. Much more easily said than done, though.
We should be spending our money on helping the vets and others here.
We treat our returned vets appallingly in the US. There's a lot of government spending I wouldn't mind seeing cut, but, if someone is going to go somewhere and put themselves in harm's way so I can stay at home and continue to tweet every insipid aspect of my life, it's my belief that they should get anything they damn need, no matter what it costs -- especially with regard to physical
and mental health care. It's an absolute disgrace and dishonor to us as a nation when this doesn't occur.
Maybe if we had to fork-up the
true cost of taking care of our vets, we wouldn't get into so many damned conflicts. ;)
Syria needs to sort this out for themselves.
Agreed. The only issue, however, is if their conflict continues to spread beyond their borders. This a real and very serious concern, right now.