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| Fuente: AP |
The
military had been preparing options for a strike against President Bashar Assad
since well before 2013, when the Syrian dictator killed more than 1,000 of his
own people in a devastating nerve agent attack.
A chemical
attack Tuesday blamed on the Assad regime killed scores of civilians and has
triggered a response from the Pentagon, which launched approximately 50 cruise
missiles at a Syrian military airfield late on Thursday.
"The
basic questions haven't changed," said Phil Gordon, a senior official in
the Obama White House who took part in many earlier debates about how to punish
Assad. "Is there a set of military strikes that you can use to degrade the
Syrians' ability to deliver chemical weapons and, if you do that, what do they
do in response?"
The biggest
difference between 2013, when President Barack Obama last threatened airstrikes
against Assad, and today is that the risks of widening the conflict are much
greater.
The initial
American war plans to punish Assad in 2013 were aimed largely at his chemical
weapons capability, said former U.S.
officials involved in those deliberations. A direct strike on the Assad
regime's chemical weapons storage facilities was seen as too risky to
civilians, because it would have produced a plume of noxious gas.
Instead
military planners drew up a target list that included Assad's chemical weapons
units, and the aircraft and artillery that the regime would need to deliver the
ordnance. "The intent was to strike the various chemical weapons
units," said a former U.S.
official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss military planning.
"We had postured our intelligence units to give us bomb damage assessments
- and if we didn't get the effect we were looking for, we would have hit them
again."
The biggest
difference that Trump and his commanders confront now is the presence of
Russian troops on the battlefield and Russian air defense systems that are
capable of shooting down U.S.
planes. Today, Russian troops are intermingled with Syrian forces, and any
strike on a Syrian military target could also produce Russian military
casualties.
Retired
Marine Gen. John Allen, who coordinated the campaign against the Islamic State
in Iraq and Syria during the Obama administration, said that the military
strikes could have had a "decisive" impact on the war had they been
launched in 2013. He described Obama's decision not to strike as devastating.
"It is
much harder now," Allen said. "The United States has to ask itself a
question: How angry do we want to be on this issue? Are we enraged enough morally
that we are ready to take action even with the possibility of dead
Russians?"
The other
big worries are the Syrian and Russian air defense systems that have not
targeted U.S. planes because
the American aircraft are largely focused on fighting the Islamic State, a
common enemy of the United
States and the Syrian regime.
"Both
the Syrians and Russians can act as a spoiler," said Andrew Exum, a former
senior defense official in the Obama administration. "American and
coalition aircraft have flown around and through their air defense systems for
the last two years. If you launched a strike against the regime, it would have
every excuse to start lighting up coalition planes with antiaircraft
systems."
At a
minimum, such a move by the Syrians and Russians could spook some U.S. coalition
partners and cause them to pull out of the fight, Exum said.
If U.S. aircraft were shot down or forced to fire
back at the Syrian and Russian radar, the United
States could get pulled into the middle of Syria's messy
civil war. Such an outcome would not only put American lives at further risk,
it would make the U.S.
war against the Islamic State, which Trump has declared his top foreign policy
priority, far more difficult.
Trump could
mitigate some of those risks by assuring the Russians that the strikes are
designed solely to punish Assad for using chemical weapons and not to tip the
balance in the broader civil war. It is also possible that the strikes could
give the United States
added leverage to broker a compromise with the Russians that would end the
civil war, some analysts said.
"The
political message a strike would send is that you are using an approach that is
completely different than the previous administration," said Andrew
Tabler, a Syria
expert at the Washington Institute. Such a move would probably induce anxiety
inside the Syrian regime that the United States could use to its
advantage.
"Creating
uncertainty and being unpredictable might get you a lot more than what the
Obama administration was willing to do, which was nothing," Tabler said.
Even as
they acknowledged the big risks of a strike and their concerns about Trump's
erratic nature, some Obama administration officials urged action.

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