Perhaps it鈥檚 because Obama鈥檚 term is winding down, but in the wake of the recent siege of Aleppo, which brought injury, exile, and death to thousands of Syrian civilians, a late-breaking consensus seems to have emerged that the White House鈥檚 Syria policy is a tragic failure. Even opinion makers who generally admire Obama vie to outdo each other in soulfully condemning his Syria policy, while administration officials past and present echo the president鈥檚 line that there is little the United States could have done to stop the bloodshed. You could call it virtue-signaling or Kabuki theater鈥攅xcept the president鈥檚 critics really do seem authentically baffled by how a man they authentically admire could be guilty of such a terrible blunder.
鈥淚 admire Obama for expanding health care and averting a nuclear crisis with Iran, but allowing Syria鈥檚 civil war and suffering to drag on unchallenged has been his worst mistake, casting a shadow over his legacy,鈥� New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof.
His Times colleague Roger Cohen agrees. 鈥淪yria has been Obama鈥檚 worst mistake,鈥� he . 鈥淚t鈥檚 a disaster that cannot provoke any trace of pride; and within that overall blunder the worst error was the last-minute 鈥榬ed line鈥� wobble that undermined America鈥檚 word, emboldened [Vladimir] Putin and empowered [Bashar al-]Assad.鈥�
Putin and Assad鈥檚 aerial bombing of Aleppo illustrated for many just how bad Syria had become, as Beltway tweeters vied to express their horror at the image of a 5-year-old boy, Omran Daqneesh, pulled from the rubble with his face bloodied and covered in dust and his eyes insensible. 鈥淏roke my heart to write this,鈥� Robin Wright to promote her New Yorker on Putin and Assad鈥檚 aerial campaign, 鈥淭he Babies Are Dying in Aleppo.鈥� If Wright doesn鈥檛 exactly lay the blame with the White House, she marshals enough evidence from doctors and U.N. officials who discretely point that way. 鈥淭he existential plight of Syria鈥檚 kids is the worst in the world,鈥� she writes. A UNICEF spokesman says about the children born since the opposition uprising began in March 2011 that 鈥渟ome 3.7 million Syrian children under the age of 5 have known nothing but displacement, violence, and uncertainty.鈥�
If anything, Wright, Cohen, Kristof, and their colleagues are guilty of understatement: Bashar al-Assad鈥檚 five-year-long war against his own people is the worst humanitarian crisis of the 21st century. In addition to the half a million killed in Syria, millions of refugees have fled to Jordan, Turkey, and Lebanon, and many more millions are internally displaced. The overflow from the Syrian refugee crisis now threatens to destabilize Europe. The war is also a strategic nightmare, primarily affecting American allies on Syria鈥檚 borders, including Israel, which is most concerned about keeping Iran and Hezbollah from opening a new front on the Syrian side of the Golan Heights.
So why didn鈥檛 the White House enforce its own red line back in 2012? Why haven鈥檛 we done anything since to stop Bashar al-Assad? Why won鈥檛 we do anything now, aside from fighting a phony war against ISIS? Because of Libya, say some. Obama saw how the unintended consequences of that engagement came out and doesn鈥檛 want a replay. Then there鈥檚 Iraq, the very war that Obama campaigned against in 2008 to win the White House. His mandate was to get America out of a stupid war, and the last thing he鈥檚 going to do is commit his country to more conflict in the Middle East. Life is complicated, folks.
What Kristof, Cohen, Wright, and their colleagues apparently can鈥檛 see, even at this late date, is that Obama鈥檚 inaction in Syria is not simply part of the hangover from the failed American war in Iraq, or of the president鈥檚 personal psychology. There is something entirely practical at stake here, too鈥攏amely, the Iran deal. The explanation is, in fact, a simple one: U.S. intervention in Syria against Assad would have made the Iran deal impossible. In fact, U.S. support for Iran鈥檚 continuing presence in Syria was a precondition of the deal, according to no less an authority than the president himself. In a December press conference, Obama of 鈥渞especting鈥� Iranian 鈥渆quities鈥� in Syria鈥攚hich, translated into plain English, means leaving Assad alone in order to keep the Iranians happy.
The connection between Syria and the Iran deal was not particularly hard to spot for anyone in the administration. 鈥淚ranian officials told me that even had the diplomats doing the negotiations wanted to stay in talks, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps would have pulled the plug,鈥� says Jay Solomon, author of the just published ____, an account of U.S.-Iran . 鈥淥bama sent a to Khamenei saying he wouldn鈥檛 target Assad,鈥� Solomon continues. 鈥淎nd Pentagon officials told us they were concerned that operations in Syria risked undermining the nuclear negotiations.鈥�
Former State Department official Frederic C. Hof agrees. 鈥淭he administration鈥檚 policy toward Assad Syria,鈥� Hof, 鈥渞ests on its desire to accommodate Iran鈥攁 full partner in Assad鈥檚 collective punishment survival strategy鈥攕o that the July 14, 2015, nuclear agreement can survive the Obama presidency.鈥�
Hof, the State Department鈥檚 point man on Syria until he resigned in 2012 in of the White House鈥檚 handling of the war, thinks the president should be honest about his decision. Imagining a version of what Obama might have said, Hof writes, in the president鈥檚 voice:
What I want people to understand is that I鈥檝e had to make the hardest of calls. I think the nuclear agreement with Iran prevented a war and opens a door. I鈥檓 afraid that if I use cruise missiles or supply anti-aircraft weapons to make Assad pay a price for mass murder, Iran鈥檚 supreme leader鈥攚ho sees Assad as an invaluable agent鈥攚ill scuttle the nuclear deal. I may be wrong, but that鈥檚 the call I鈥檝e made.
In short, the Iran deal wasn鈥檛 just about limits on uranium enrichment, inspections of nuclear facilities, and sanctions relief, etc., it was also about the Syrian conflict鈥攊n particular, about the United States agreeing to step back and let Iran protect its 鈥渆quities鈥� in Syria, by whatever means its gruesome proxy saw fit.
It鈥檚 curious, then, that many of the voices that are now so critical of the administration鈥檚 Syria policy were also among the most vocal supporters of the JCPOA. Here鈥檚 Nicholas Kristof shortly after the JCPOA was signed the White House with talking points to sell the deal: 鈥淚f the U.S. rejects this landmark deal, then we get the worst of both worlds: an erosion of sanctions and also an immediate revival of the Iran nuclear program.鈥� Nowhere does he mention the fate of children in Syria. Nor does he in with more talking points two weeks later. Recently he arguing that Anne Frank today is a Syrian girl鈥攚ithout noting that the Nazi equivalents here are funded and armed by Iran.
Robin Wright the JCPOA as 鈥渢he Obama administration鈥檚 boldest foreign-policy initiative. It marks the first success in dealing with Iran since its 1979 revolution and the prolonged seizure of the American embassy in Tehran.鈥� She , 鈥淲hat鈥檚 been unleashed here is a different kind of process. It鈥檚 the beginning of a healing process.鈥�
During U.S.-Iran talks, Wright spent a lot of time speaking with Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, whom she says she has known for three decades. She interviewed him several times during negotiations. 鈥淶arif is an affable man with a disarmingly unrevolutionary grin, a quick wit, and the steely tenacity of a debater,鈥� she wrote in a 2014 for The New Yorker. But she neglected to ask him about Iran鈥檚 war in Syria, which Tehran has been financing since Assad started shooting at unarmed protesters in 2011. Instead, she queried him in a later about Iran鈥檚 potential role in Syrian peace talks. To her credit, she notes that most of the 鈥渁dvisers鈥� Iran has sent to Syria 鈥渉ave been helping the [Assad regime] fight the opposition.鈥� But in her 鈥淭he Babies Are Dying in Aleppo鈥� article, there is no mention of Iran or its role in helping kill them.
Roger Cohen, who has rightly outraged the last few years about the administration鈥檚 Syria policy, advocated for the Iran deal and criticized those who didn鈥檛 as warmongers lined up behind Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. 鈥淚t鈥檚 no service to Jews or Israel or Middle Eastern peace, for major Jewish organizations,鈥� Cohen, 鈥渢o give airtime to Netanyahu on Iran rather than Obama. The alternative to this deal, as Obama said, is war.鈥�
For Cohen, it seems the opposite of conflict is cultural exchange and commerce, which is perhaps why he serves as one of the featured tour guides in the Times' Travels to Persia . The JCPOA reopened Iran for investment, as Cohen , when the deal was implemented in January. 鈥淔or Iran, the arrival of 鈥榠mplementation day鈥� means the lifting of all nuclear-related sanctions and access to about $100 billion in frozen assets. A big nation is open for business again, back in the global financial system and world oil market.鈥�
Here, Cohen has unintentionally put his finger on why those who supported the Iran deal and criticize Obama鈥檚 Syria policy see no connection between the two. It is because business is frequently not the opposite of war. In fact, the reality is that giving money to a state at war means funding that state鈥檚 wars.
The reason that so many journalists and opinion-makers of good conscience cannot make the connection between the Iran deal and the Syrian war is because the truth is too awful. The president鈥檚 policy is not simply a matter of a lack of vision or political will. The money Iran received through the JCPOA, as well as the $1.7 billion paid in ransom for American hostages, has helped fund Iran鈥檚 war in Syria鈥攚hich the president proclaimed to be Iran鈥檚 business and not ours.
I have no doubt that the people tweeting pictures of Omran Daqneesh and all the other children who have died in Syria and will continue to die there are sincere in their horror at the suffering of innocents, just as they were sincere in their belief that the JCPOA was the best available hedge against a future war or the specter of an Iranian bomb. In Obama鈥檚 defense, he at least understood the price of an agreement. Sadly, his supporters-turned-critics didn鈥檛鈥攁nd they still don鈥檛.