Another story of Syria
4/9/13 11:32Jon Stewart returned last night, and the talk of the day was, of course, Syria (and he, of course, tried to inject a little humor into the situation.) However, the interview segment with which he closed out the show was anything but humorous, bringing in Andrew Harper, the head of the United Nations Refugee Agency in Jordan. This is the important story, in my opinion: the story of millions of people displaced from their homes, many of them women and children. It's also the story of nations such as Jordan who are doing what they can to provide a safe haven for some of these people, and the incredible work being done by the UN, an organization that is so often derided by folks here in the U.S., but which does certain things very well; this is one of them.
Any discussion of our response to the situation in Syria should involve the discussion of how we can help these people. While we're talking about what message we should send to the Assad regime, or whether or not we should act militarily, and in which way, here is an obvious human crisis where we could all put our money where our mouths are. I'd prefer to see this story given the lion's share of airtime on our cable news stations, over constant redundant talking heads debating back and forth on questions of chemical weapons and factions and military responses and political calculus.
Here's the interview, in two parts:
If the embedding doesn't work for some reason, here are direct links:
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-september-3-2013/exclusive---andrew-harper-extended-interview-pt--1
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-september-3-2013/exclusive---andrew-harper-extended-interview-pt--2
Any discussion of our response to the situation in Syria should involve the discussion of how we can help these people. While we're talking about what message we should send to the Assad regime, or whether or not we should act militarily, and in which way, here is an obvious human crisis where we could all put our money where our mouths are. I'd prefer to see this story given the lion's share of airtime on our cable news stations, over constant redundant talking heads debating back and forth on questions of chemical weapons and factions and military responses and political calculus.
Here's the interview, in two parts:
If the embedding doesn't work for some reason, here are direct links:
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-september-3-2013/exclusive---andrew-harper-extended-interview-pt--1
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-september-3-2013/exclusive---andrew-harper-extended-interview-pt--2
(no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 16:42 (UTC)No but the Idea that it's US's duty to act as world superhero/policeman certainly is. If this were really about the plight of the refugees we wouldn't be talking about cruise missiles, we'd be talking about peace-keepers, and large-scale evacuations/amnesty.
As for the rest of your argument, Progressives may not be chanting "Bomb Syria" but they aint exactly protesting it either. The coffee shop's got NPR on right now and majority of their callers and talking heads are supportive. In short where are all the posters labeled Chimpy-McHitler with Obama's face on them? If they are out there I haven't seen one. The moral side of the argument might have held water if we were actually talking about deposing Assad but we're not. What the president has proposed is tossing a live grenade into a crowded room and then walking away, and I suspect that the only reason he want to do that is that he painted himself into a corner with talk of "red lines". That such a proposal is being seriously considered is in my opinion very telling.
Finally even if you disagree with the characterization and values I think that wanting to take a side in a supposed battle of good vs evil is an easier sell than killing to make a political point. I don't think you realize just how bad arguing for option B in that equation makes after spending so many years lecturing everyone about the need to claim the moral high ground looks.
(no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 17:06 (UTC)A good question that supports your questioning is this: why are the supporters so trusting of THIS administration's evidence when the government has been shown to lie (or at least be wrong) about war before (Iraq, Tonkin, Iran-Iraq War?) Are they more trusting this time because it's their man in the big chair? Maybe there's a small amount of that partisan favoritism of which we're all guilty.
Overall, though, I think it's important to remember that many of those supporting Obama now DID support Bush back then at first, until it was shown that the information we were given was false.
If this were really about the plight of the refugees we wouldn't be talking about cruise missiles, we'd be talking about peace-keepers, and large-scale evacuations/amnesty.
I think a valid point can be made that this should be our only business over there right now. I'm not saying I agree with that point (because I am still so torn between the various arguments of what is best, and how best to - and whether we must - respond to the use of chemical weapons) but at the very least, this should be a HUGE part of our focus.
(no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 17:32 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 17:29 (UTC)Let's face it, it's a hard sell. That fucker did use gas and it IS a humanitarian crisis. It was hard to protest against an asshole like Saddam, and its hard to protest when it can be effectively be pro-Assad. I hate Assad, wouldn't like his authoritarian crap even without the bloodshed. I hate the right wing rebels too. I just don't think bombing stuff fixes much, quite the opposite.
There are some who are now pro US-Israeli-Saudi. They basically prefer American imperialism over Iranian imperialism. There are some who who support the Syrian regimes more progressive Baathists, the ones Assad marginalized, and they love capitalism and hate the rebels. Then there are those (like me) who dislike both the Syrian regime and the reactionary rebels.
All three groups have to be isolationist to oppose intervention at this point.
(no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 21:21 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 21:25 (UTC)Yet they had no problem with protesting the former, but seem to be suddenly concerned about protesting the latter.
I can understand moving from pro-Iraq to anti-Syria. I don't agree with the logic, but if you think war is expensive and costly and the lesson you pulled from Iraq is that we made a mistake, okay. But there's no logical consistency from being anti-Iraq to pro-Syria. Iraq was worse off, in worse shape, needing more help.
(no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 22:06 (UTC)Syria shape isn't so good.
" With an estimated 5,000 desperate Syrians fleeing their homes every day, the spiralling violence in the country has now created more than 2 million refugees, the United Nations refugee agency announced today, adding that there is no sign the “humanitarian calamity” will end anytime soon."
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=45757
And:
"[..] at least 96,431 people have lost their lives in the more than two years of violence that’s wracked Syria. Of those, Syrian soldiers and members of the government’s security forces account for 24,617, while members of pro-government militias make up 17,031. Taken together, those deaths account for 43.2 percent of the total recorded. Civilian noncombatants are the next largest group of the dead – 35,479, or 36.8 percent of the total, according to the human rights group. Deaths among anti-Assad fighters total 16,699, or 17.3 percent, according to the new numbers. Of those, 12,615 were Syrian civilians who’d picked up arms against the regime, 1,965 were rebel fighters who’d defected from the Syrian military and 2,119 were foreigners who were killed fighting on the Syrian rebels’ behalf.""
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2013/06/03/192881/assad-backers-reportedly-make.html
(no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 22:08 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 5/9/13 22:10 (UTC)We'll have a hard time finding the right side, one that doesn't want us and our children dead:
(no subject)
Date: 6/9/13 04:53 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 6/9/13 08:55 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 6/9/13 18:40 (UTC)This times a thousand.
(no subject)
Date: 7/9/13 04:16 (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 7/9/13 21:22 (UTC)ETA:
That someone who started off supporting military intervention on humanitarian grounds might change their mind after seeing the aftermath makes sense to me. Supporting military intervention in Syria without supporting it in other theaters does not.
EETA:
As jeff pointed out...
there's no logical consistency in going from being anti-Iraq to pro-Syria. Iraq was worse off, in worse shape, needing more help.
(no subject)
Date: 8/9/13 02:09 (UTC)And had that been the case made by the Bush administration, as opposed to false information about WMD, false connections to al-Qaeda, and false fear-mongering about immanent threats to the U.S., maybe those who were in favor or Iraq intervention wouldn't have done such a 180 on it when that false information was revealed to be, well, false.
(no subject)
Date: 8/9/13 09:16 (UTC)Syria has 2 million refugees and a hot civil war today.
This seems more personal than logical.