If I can be permitted to set aside, just for this moment, the overpowering grip that temporizing has on him, never seen more clearly than in his first debate with M. Romney during the 2012 election, I think that, if he isn’t, B. Obama should be deeply sorry that nearly a year ago he didn't take my advice to go with a U.S. strike in Syria, right after he revealed that it was in the wind, in whatever unknown form that his military experts proposed it to him. And they must've had something out of the ordinary and even brilliant in mind, otherwise what good are all those Pentagon types with all the scrambled egg on the bills of their caps? Instead in September 2013 he took the easy route in which a large part of the country was sloshing and wallowing, and he decided to bring Congress in on it, with the all too predictable blah results that you always get whenever those 535 drags on the country are brought into anything.
(For more, hopefully, see below the "fold.")
At the time there was a non-stop torrent of blather about all the dreadful things that would happen, should Obama give the order -- outcomes for which not one of these doomsayers had reasonable evidence, whereas Obama could have pointed out how, with his assistance, NATO intervention had prevented a Gaddafi bloodbath in Libya. But that didn’t stop those negators from endlessly belching out fiddle-faddle that amounted to nothing except essentially saying what a bad idea it would be to try to slow down and even stop the wholesale slaughter of Syrians that had already been going on with hardly a pause for the previous two and a half years. These “wise heads” had no eyes or putting themselves out for some brown people in the Middle East, who, moreover, weren’t sitting on top of as much oil as some of their neighbors.
Bobby Fischer, the late, great Brooklyn-bred chess grandmaster, said, "Timing is everything," and he demonstrated that in game after remarkable game. One of the things he meant was that a player shouldn't hem and haw, once the idea for a sharp, hard-hitting combination takes shape in his head. The sacrifice that can't be refused must be made while it's sitting there to be made and even when the ultimate success of that combination isn't quite clear as yet.
That opportunity, like all those lives, was squandered in Syria, with Congress likewise trumpeting and braying, “Nay,” and the wise heads went back to scratching their butts and throwing back a few, while congratulating themselves for having been on the side of something that they were pleased to call “prudence and peace." It didn’t matter to them that thus, unhindered by the international world and instead feeling themselves being cheered on by Russians, Chinese, and a host of "sometimey" American progressives, Syrians kept on killing other Syrians by a great variety of means, for no more reason than to keep the government in Damascus headed by an Assad.
Having missed the boat on Iraq, everyone was determined to avoid making that blunder again, though only complete dummies could have missed seeing from the start that the GWBush drive into Iraq was a large-scale exercise in sexual bravado and nothing else. But Syria was more a mess in 2013 than Iraq was in 2003, despite Saddam's constant misfires and the attentions Iraq had been shown by American sanctions and air power. Iraq’s water, electrical, and health systems were all still working, and for a long time Saddam had been spending most of his days huddled quietly in his palaces and doing much more stewing than brewing, with not one weapon of mass destruction to his name.
Now, in 2014, Saddam is long gone from this life, and until very recently the Americans were also gone -- trying to stitch their minds back together in V.A. hospitals -- and the bubbling in the Iraq pot had been nearly drowned out by other drum beats. But the mix in that pot never really simmered down, and in the past few months things there have started popping and crackling and boiling over again. A new version of Al Qaeda, called “ISIS” and seemingly arisen from almost out of nowhere, went on the move in Iraq and captured cities and started closing in on oilfields in the Kurdish areas. and this time, Obama hardly hesitated, nor did he talk much in advance about what he was going to do.
In the interest of doing a “Bobby Fischer” for a change, though his game is basketball, not chess, he didn’t let himself get hung up on the possibility that, after he acted, the U.S. might once again get its brogans mired deeply in the Iraqi mud. Instead I think he saw this as good timing, and he must’ve been relieved at being given the chance to hit ISIS with some air sorties that, among other things, allowed the Kurds to re-take two of their towns, while at the same time he ordered other American airmen to drop badly needed supplies and later some personnel to aid an Iraqi minority called the Yazidi, who were bottled up in the mountains while having suffered as many as 500 deaths at the hands of the murderous ISIS forces.
Also these moves were forms of redemption, for, in a notable instance of bad timing, Obama had screwed up on Gaza just a few days earlier, when he and his advisers bought in on the Yahus’ assertion that one of their soldiers, one man, had been kidnapped during the Israeli assault on Gaza, and -- just as B. Netanyahu had also charged Hamas with kidnapping and murdering three Israeli teenagers, which he used as his excuse for unleashing the pitbulls of war on the whole captive population of Gaza – Obama quickly charged Hamas with grabbing that soldier, only to find out that the man had been killed in combat. But that didn’t stop an instant Israeli operation that resulted in no less than 50 Palestinian deaths in one day. Fifty for each one Israeli death! But oh no, Gaza can never be likened to Lidice! So say the Yahu apologists.
Ironically, there is a movement in that same Congress that opposed Obama’s acting in Syria in 2013 that is attacking him for not intervening in Syria now with much more force than he has exerted so far.
But the trouble is that now the good guys are not so easily distinguished from the bad guys as they seemed to be a year ago. On the part of the former “good guys,” the insurgents, things went to pot pretty fast while no one was looking, and now those insurgents who chose to join the “Islamic State of Iraq and Syria” (ISIS) look even worse than the original “bad guys,” Assad’s forces. This suggests that there’s hardly any room left in Syria for good guys, for, in addition to the slaughters that have remorselessly been carried out by ISIS, Assad can proudly point to a total of over 200,000 Syrians killed so far on his behalf.
So whose side should a government ostensibly on the side of ordinary human decency take? Definitely not ISIS. Assad’s then? But there is also the UN declaration just a few days ago that, added to all those deaths, 3,000,000 people, fully half of Syria's population, have now been displaced and are refugees.
For the White House this is a very sad and sticky state of affairs that just maybe could have been averted or at least transformed in some way, earlier in the day, before the borders were obliterated and militants in Iraq, taking new heart, joined forces with like-minded extremists next door in Syria. “Saddam’s revenge,” I think you would call this situation with its lack of feasible alternatives.
So far Obama has taken the same course that he chose a year ago, which is to do nothing sweeping, just yet, if ever.
That thing about "timing" is only one of many chess principles that bear directly and profitably on human affairs and their difficulties. --Not that anyone else in Obama’s position far into the future would be any better equipped to see a sufficient number of moves ahead. Still, in a situation like this, whether the Presidential game is poker, bridge, rugby, space invaders, monopoly, football, or (GWBush's apparent favorite) tiddly winks, it just might be that familiarity with the Royal Game is much to be preferred above all others.