By Michael Rozeff
Your recent views on Syria, expressed here, are mistaken and confused.
“If we withdrew our troops anytime soon ISIS would come back…” This 
prediction is mistaken. If ISIS reconstitutes, the Syrian coalition 
(Syria, Syrian Kurds, Hezbollah, Iran and Russia) will defeat it again. Remember,
 “ISIS has suffered consecutive defeats at the hands of separate but 
simultaneous offensives in Iraq and Syria by the Russian-backed Syrian 
forces and allied militias as well as U.S.-backed Iraqi and Syrian 
fighters.”
“If we withdrew our troops anytime soon…the war between Turkey and 
the Kurds would get out of hand…” You are confused and mistaken. You 
appear to have forgotten that the U.S. supplied arms to Kurds, while irking Turkey. You forget about the border force:
 “U.S.-led coalition helps to build new Syrian force, angering Turkey.” 
The U.S. precipitated the Turkish invasion against the Kurds in Syria. 
It is because U.S. troops are there aiding the Kurds that this facet of 
their long-running war began. This conflict has been going on since 1978. The U.S. presence has only made matters worse.
“If we withdrew our troops anytime soon…you would be giving Damascus 
to the Iranians without an American presence. Russia and Iran would 
dominate Syria.” This is wild exaggeration. If Americans leave Syria, 
then Assad can tone down the coalition, which means the Iranian presence
 will recede. Russia and Iran didn’t dominate Syria before 2011, even if
 they maintained friendly relations. Obama’s support for ending Assad’s 
reign facilitated the rise of ISIS and motivated the closer support and 
presence of both Russia and Iran. You have matters backwards, Senator 
Graham. The American presence draws both Russia and Iran in to Syria.
“We got ISIS on the ropes. You want to let them off the ropes, remove
 American soldiers.” It’s not true that “We [Americans] got ISIS on the 
ropes.” It was not a single-handed affair. Assad’s coalition forces did 
most of the vital heavy lifting. American soldiers can go home. If 
Assad’s battle-hardened military can clean up Ghouta, it can clean up 
remaining ISIS pockets.
Senator, you raise this concern: “There are over 3,000 ISIS fighters 
still roaming around Syria.” Maybe so, but they are out in desert areas.
 They are not currently strategic threats to the Assad regime or to the 
region. Assad’s using his forces where they count the most right now. 
ISIS is not such a big bad bogeyman that it calls for American forces to
 intervene in Syria indefinitely.
Senator, the statement of yours that most genuinely reflects your 
feelings is your allusion to Russia and Iran having a presence in Syria 
but not the U.S. You can’t stand the idea of somehow “losing” Syria or 
not “gaining” Syria or not breaking it up into pieces.
Senator, your attitude reflects a view that Syria is not a country of
 the Syrians, by the Syrians and for the Syrians. You treat it as land 
that’s up for grabs among other powers. You treat its peoples as pawns 
in a big power game. Syria, however, has a history that goes back thousands of years.
 “The Greek name appears to correspond to Phoenician ʾšr “Assur”, ʾšrym 
“Assyrians”, recorded in the 8th century BC Çineköy inscription. Writing
 in the 5th century BC, Herodotus stated that those called Syrians by 
the Greeks were called Assyrians by themselves and in the East.”
Senator, the U.S. loses nothing by leaving Syria. If you are really 
concerned about oil security, it doesn’t require invasions of Iraq, 
Libya, Yemen and Syria to obtain that. It doesn’t require arming Saudi 
Arabia or invading Iran. It doesn’t require utterly absurd amounts of money
 ($2 for each and every gallon of gasoline) spent supposedly to protect 
foreign oil. All that oil security from Saudi Arabia requires is a clear
 statement of U.S. protection of the oil-bearing territories and 
sovereignty over them, even if their cash flows go to the Saudis.
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