A realist grapples with his doubts on intervention in Syria.
Unlike neoconservatives, who never admit error no matter how often they are wrong, I spend a fair bit of time thinking about whether my diagnoses of key world events have been off the mark. (For examples of this sort of "self-criticism," see here, here, and here.) I’ll stand by the vast majority of what I've written in my scholarly work and my FP commentary, but I find it useful — indeed, necessary — to occasionally ponder whether I got something wrong and, if so, to try to figure out why.
Case in point: the increasingly awful situation in Syria. Ever since the initial protests broke out, I've believed this conflict was not of vital strategic interest to the United States and that overt U.S. intervention was likely to cause more harm than good. What has emerged since then is a relentless and gut-wrenching tragedy, but I've uncomfortably concluded that my original judgment was correct. And yet I continue to wonder.
To be sure, the Obama administration has not handled Syria well at all....
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Walt, Stephen. “Could We Have Stopped This Tragedy?.” Foreign Policy, September 21, 2015