(We) urge the U.S. government
• to support a mediated process of cessation of violence by all perpetrators, including the Assad regime and armed opposition groups;
• to call for all outside parties to cease all forms of intervention in Syria;
• to support a strong and necessary role for the United Nations, possibly including observers and peacekeeping forces; and
• to refrain from military intervention in Syria.”
(We) support full, public congressional debate of any potential U.S. military intervention, including cyber war, weapons supply, training (as is already reported), and drone warfare, to examine carefully the possible humanitarian benefits, costs, and outcomes of such intervention, including its impacts on the Syrian people, and to support review of the impacts of sanctions and other pressure on both Syrian society and the regime.”
The Washington Post on the bombing.
Steven Zunes recently wrote noting the lack of good reason for US to go into Syria (beyond its indirect help to the Gulf States and CIA training of some rebels).
Given the possibility that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapons and that it may be used as an excuse for foreign military intervention, Zunes (a US Christian Professor of Middle East Studies) has provided a little history about the United States and chemical weapons, particularly in relation to the Middle East.
The 2012 General Assembly also addressed this kind of eventuality, given the regular misuse of ‘intelligence’ in the run-up to military action:
In addition to a public letter calling for efforts towards a cease-fire sent by Presbyterian Stated Clerk Gradye Parsons to John Kerry, the international group Religions for Peace has worked with some Syrian religious groups to promote an Inter-religious Council that would, among other tasks, seek nonviolence, healing, and dialogue (http://www.religionsforpeace.org) The challenges before religious leaders may be seen in the assassination of regime-friendly Muslim leaders and the abduction two weeks ago of two senior Christian bishops (for which the Presbyterian Church also joined in appeal).
In a decidedly unfunny collage of video clips of US political figures urging US war with Syria, Jon Stewart illustrates the lack of clear US strategy, beyond concern for a heart-breaking situation.The lessons of Iraq and Afghanistan, and the danger of war with Iran, seem ignored by those favoring more US or Israeli involvement. Larry Derfner, an Israeli observer, warns that Israel is seeking to maintain its military ability to hit other nations with impunity in a way that may have its own blowback:
Thus it remains Unbound’s position that the US should not intervene unless it can contribute to a reduction rather than an escalation of hostilities, and should discourage allies from engaging in proxy wars that contribute to long term sectarian hatred. It would seem preferable to back truce initiatives by Egypt and Turkey, that consult with Russia and China, rather than further bombing by Israel, which has long occupied Syria’s Golan province and has previously bombed Syrian weapons targets. The complications of power-balancing in relation to Syria are real, but the root idea that the insecurity of others makes one more secure is always an illusion.