The Trump Administration鈥檚 strikes last week on the Shayrat airfield to punish Syrian president Bashar al-Assad for using sarin gas divided the political establishment鈥攏ot the left from the right, but the mainstream from the fringe. The divide is less about policy than about America鈥檚 role in the world.
Chuck Schumer joined of the Republican establishment, like John McCain, Lindsey Graham, and Marco Rubioto in praising the strikes. Hillary Clinton was in favor of Trump鈥檚 action, as was Clinton ally and Barack Obama鈥檚 former Pentagon chief and CIA director Leon Panetta. Anne-Marie Slaughter, head of the Obama Administration鈥檚 State Department鈥檚 policy planning, , 鈥淒onald Trump has done the right thing on Syria. Finally!! After years of useless handwringing in the face of hideous atrocities.鈥�
Assad supporter Tulsi Gabbard, a Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii, joined a number of Trump supporters who were disappointed in their man to express dismay at the strikes, and displeasure. Radio host Laura Ingraham was , along with a number of figures from the alt-right, like white nationalist ideologue Richard Spencer, and others who now think Trump is just another 鈥�.鈥�
Former Obama officials have proven themselves just as adept as the alt-right in working up conspiracy theories. Phillip Gordon, a former White House aide who worked on the Middle East, that Trump used the resources of the American government as a messaging ploy to distract attention from 鈥渢he possible Trump campaign collusion with Russian efforts to influence the U.S. presidential election.鈥� That is, Trump bombed Putin鈥檚 allies to prove he isn鈥檛 a Putin ally.
Some of Gordon鈥檚 former colleagues are covering their tracks. A number of former Obama hands are saying that even after Obama boasted of a diplomatic triumph in getting Assad to give up his chemical weapons in a 2013 deal with Russia, the wise men in the White House knew all along that the Syrian regime had not given up the entirety of its chemical weapons. That is, they weren鈥檛 suckered by Russia鈥檚 bogus promise to strip the Syrian dictator of his unconventional arsenal鈥攖hey just lied.
鈥淲e always knew we had not gotten everything, that the Syrians had not been fully forthcoming in their declaration,鈥� Anthony Blinken, Obama鈥檚 former deputy national security adviser. That鈥檚 right, Daniel Shapiro, the Obama Administration鈥檚 ambassador to Israel. 鈥淲e always knew Syria likely squirreled away some residual undeclared stocks and/or production capability, now proven by Idlib strike.鈥�
That鈥檚 not what Obama hands said at the time. As late as January, national security adviser Susan Rice boasted that 鈥渨e were able to get the Syrian government to voluntarily and verifiably give up its chemical weapons stockpile.鈥� In October, Obama : 鈥淚t continues to puzzle me, the degree to which people seem to forget that we actually got the chemical weapons out of Syria.鈥�
Assad鈥檚 attacks last week that killed 85 people in Idlib province showed Obama was wrong.
John Kerry that Assad had given up 100 percent of Syria鈥檚 chemical weapons. And yet Kerry is also the most prominent former Obama official who applauded last week鈥檚 action. These two things are not unrelated. According to , he was 鈥渁bsolutely supportive鈥� of Trump鈥檚 strike and 鈥済ratified to see that it happened quickly.鈥�
Kerry had wanted to retaliate for the August 2013 chemical weapons attack on Ghouta that killed 1,500 people. On August 26, Kerry gave a in which he said: 鈥淎s a father, I can鈥檛 get the image out of my head of a man who held up his dead child, wailing, while chaos swirled around him, the images of entire families dead in their beds without a drop of blood or even a visible wound, bodies contorting in spasms, human suffering that we can never ignore or forget.鈥�
Of course Kerry would eventually come to say that they got 100 percent of Assad鈥檚 weapons. The man who spoke those words would likely have trouble reliving the same scene in his memory, never mind a reality in which Assad continued to kill people with chemical weapons. But it wouldn鈥檛 happen again, Kerry told himself and others, it couldn鈥檛 happen again because Assad no longer had any chemical weapons at all.
Kerry will likely go down in history as the American diplomat who struck an arms agreement with a state sponsor of terror that virtually guaranteed it a nuclear weapons program within a little more than a decade. It might have been otherwise鈥攈e wanted to do the right thing but was pointed in the wrong direction. It鈥檚 tragic. Kerry might have been known for the stand he took to drum up support for a strike after the attack on Ghouta.
On August 30, Kerry gave another speech, where he :
We are the United States of America. We are the country that has tried, not always successfully, but always tried to honor a set of universal values around which we have organized our lives and our aspirations. This crime against conscience, this crime against humanity, this crime against the most fundamental principles of international community, against the norm of the international community, this matters to us, and it matters to who we are.
Some referred to this as Kerry鈥檚 鈥淐hurchillian moment,鈥� but in reality, it was a relatively simple, modest, and moving formulation of an American ethos, stated with the humility expected of a man who first came to prominence as an opponent of a foreign war in which he served. It鈥檚 not a policy, it鈥檚 a sensibility. Hell yes, if there鈥檚 a monster in front of you, you shoot first and ask questions later. Or, what kind of American thinks FDR鈥檚 greatest moment was not bombing the trains to Auschwitz?
The foreign policy establishment that Obama was , when he walked back his plan to strike at Assad targets and made a phony deal with Russia, is a function of American reality. It is the same with every nation, whose interactions with foreigners can be nothing other of than a reflection of the habits, morals, and beliefs that sustain it. Americans shoot at monsters. This is the central story we tell ourselves, from our high literature, to pop culture, from Ahab to Batman. Trump did the right thing, but ordering strikes on a Syrian airfield hardly makes him the hero of Shane.