Sp Anderson cooper took my suggestion (
) and asked about the Russians in Syria. Clinton's response:
Quote
Well, first of all, we got a lot of business done with the Russians when Medvedev was the president, and not Putin. We got a nuclear arms deal, we got the Iranian sanctions, we got an ability to bring important material and equipment to our soldiers in Afghanistan.
There's no doubt that when Putin came back in and said he was going to be President, that did change the relationship. We have to stand up to his bullying, and specifically in Syria, it is important -- and I applaud the administration because they are engaged in talks right now with the Russians to make it clear that they've got to be part of the solution to try to end that bloody conflict.
And, to -- provide safe zones so that people are not going to have to be flooding out of Syria at the rate they are. And, I think it's important too that the United States make it very clear to Putin that it's not acceptable for him to be in Syria creating more chaos, bombing people on behalf of Assad, and we can't do that if we don't take more of a leadership position, which is what I'm advocating.
I think that the issue is important on its own, and as for politics I think it will surely be a factor in 2016. The first election I voted in had Kennedy and Nixon squaring off over the missile gap. Vietnam was important in several elections. Then Carter was probably doomed in 1980 for many reasons, not all of them his fault, but the Iran hostage crisis made it tough, and after his embarrassing failure launching a rescue, he would have lost to Donald Duck. And so on.
With the usual disclaimer of limited knowledge, here is my thought about what is happening.
The Putin-Assad alliance has two planned stages.
Stage 1: Wipe out (or degrade and destroy to use current phrasing) the US backed rebels.
Stage 2:: Wipe out ISIS.
Few things go as planned in the Middle East, but I don't think we should write this off as doomed to failure. For example, we seem to have the idea (well, we have the policy, I don't have much faith in it) that we can degrade and destroy ISIS while simultaneously backing groups that oppose Assad. Russia will be working with Assad. Additionally, we (properly) worry if we inadvertently wipe out a hospital. Putin does not worry about such things and, importantly, he will have Assad's forces to do the really ugly slaughtering.
There are other features. The Russians have a strong direct interest in dealing with Islamic terrorism. We deplore it, everyone deplores it, but (again acknowledging my lack of expertise) I think the demographics of Russia make this a more immediate threat to them. So there is strong motivation for them to stick with the effort.
They will need money. True enough. But there are a lot of rich states in the Middle East and many of them have great and realistic fears about ISIS. They may not like Assad, no one does, and they may not be fond of Putin either, but they have an intense fear of ISIS and the movement that it represents. If Putin-Assad seem to have a more realistic approach than they see from the US, money could be forthcoming.
Perhaps it is so that a year from now it will be clear that Putin made a grave mistake. We can hope so, and hoping so appears to be our policy. If this hope does not go as hoped, the Middle East will be changed.
The answer given by Ms. Clinton has promise, but if she is to carry it into the general election it will need more substance. .For example, Putin has "made it clear" that he doesn't give a damn that his actions are "not acceptable". Now?