US mulls ‘coordinated’ response to Syria gas attack

FILE – This photo released by the Syrian Civil Defense White Helmets, which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows smoke rising after Syrian government airstrikes hit in the town of Douma, in the eastern Ghouta region east of Damascus, Syria, April. 7, 2018. (Photo Courtesy of AP)

The United States on Tuesday consulted with allies in preparation for possible expanded military action in Syria following the latest suspected deadly chemical weapons attack on a Syrian rebel-held village.

“We are looking for a coordinated response, whatever that response might be,” said State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert about possible U.S. military action in Syria.

President Donald Trump has warned those responsible will pay a “big price” for Saturday’s attack in eastern Ghouta that killed at least 40 people. Over the past day, Trump has talked repeatedly with his British and French counterparts about a possible response to the attack.

FILE – In a photo released by the official Facebook page of the Syrian presidency, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad speaks to Syrian diplomats, in Damascus, Aug. 20, 2017. (Photo Courtesy of AP)

Trump has blamed the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, as well as Assad’s backers in Iran and Russia. Assad denies the allegation. A global chemical weapons watchdog on Tuesday said it would send a team to investigate the incident.

At the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday, Russia vetoed a U.S.-drafted plan that would have set up a commission to investigate and assign blame for the chemical weapons attack.

As the U.S. mulled its response, the White House said Trump canceled a trip to Latin America, which was to begin Friday, so that he could “oversee the American response to Syria.” Defense Secretary Jim Mattis also called off domestic travel plans.

No details

White House officials refused to say whether the response included the possibility of prolonged U.S. military action in Syria or would amount to more than just a “one-off” airstrike.

FILE – U.S. troops drive on a road leading to the tense front line with Turkish-backed fighters, in Manbij, north Syria, March 31, 2018. (Photo Courtesy of AP)

“The president and his national security team thought it was best that he stay in the United States while all these developments are taking place,” said press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders.

The U.S. is already deeply involved in the seven-year-old Syrian civil war. Over 2,000 U.S. troops are in Syria. A U.S.-led coalition has launched thousands of airstrikes there, mostly against Islamic State and other extremist rebels.

Almost exactly a year ago, the U.S. launched 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles at a Syrian government airbase in retaliation for another chemical weapons attack.

But too intense a response to the latest attack risks escalating the Syrian civil war and exacerbating military tensions between major world powers that all have proxies on the ground, according to analysts.

“There’s no easy answer here,” retired Admiral Michael Mullen told VOA contributor Greta van Susteren on Tuesday. “It’s delicate, it’s dangerous. I worry that it could expand fairly rapidly.”

FILE – Then-Joint Chiefs Chairman Admiral Michael Mullen testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Sept. 22, 2011, before a Senate committee. (Photo Courtesy of AP)

Trump has said he would like to pull U.S. troops from Syria, citing progress in fighting Islamic State. Many in the U.S. foreign policy community, including Mullen, disagree with such a withdrawal.

“The couple thousand troops that we have there are a stabilizing force,” Mullen said. “I think [they] need to be there until it’s very obvious that they shouldn’t be there or that they don’t need to be there anymore.”

It’s unclear what an expanded U.S. military campaign in Syria would look like, including what the targets would be or which U.S. allies would be involved.

Options appear few

But the U.S. appears incapable of substantially altering the direction of the conflict, said Andreas Krieg, a Middle East specialist at King’s College London.

“Unlike 2013, the West no longer has the leverage to shape or determine outcomes in Syria’s civil war,” Krieg said. “Punitive air or missile strikes will have limited effect, and neither deter Assad nor deny his ability to use chemical weapons again.”

Trump has for years warned of the dangers of the U.S. becoming too involved in Syria.

“What will we get for bombing Syria besides more debt and a possible long term conflict?” Trump said in a 2013 tweet. “[Former President Barack] Obama needs Congressional approval.”

FILE – A Russian military helicopter flies over a desert in Deir el-Zour province, Syria, Sept. 15, 2017. (Photo Courtesy of AP)

More recently, Trump has changed course. In a tweet this week, Trump said that if Obama had pursued more vigorous military action in Syria, “Animal Assad would have been history.”

Daniel Davis, a retired U.S. Army lieutenant colonel who is now a senior fellow and military expert at the Washington-based think tank Defense Priorities, said he thought Trump should follow his earlier inclination.

“This would profoundly worsen our situation here,” Davis said. “We cannot take that kind of risk of escalating a contained civil war. We’ve also got the possibility of armed conflict with Russia, which isn’t in our interest at all.”

Russia has warned of “grave repercussions” if the U.S. strikes Assad. | via Voice of America

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