1) You made a direct complaint about the President going back on his word about military intervention in Syria. You are either on board with the concept of intervention in the face of chemical attacks or you are not.
Dun, my complaint regarding the president is because doing that undermined his word to the entire goddamn world, after he spent something approaching a half a decade saying to everyone and anyone that intervention of this nature was the wrong thing to do --
he explicitly said this in regards to the last time chemical weapons were used in syria. You'll note
again. My point with him is that
he was stridently against the concept of intervention, even in the face of chemical attacks, for years, and this about-face turn is going to screw what credibility he might have had with the world on the subject of military intervention into the ground. Frankly, while I
do agree chemical attacks are something worthy of intervention, I don't agree the cost involved with a response like this was worth its effects. In one unhesitating violation of his stated principles, Trump has done something that is almost certainly going to make it more difficult in the future to
prevent things like that gas attack, because he's shown that any word he makes on the negotiating table in regards to what he will or will not do with the american military
is worth less than shit.I am not against the concept of intervention in the face of chemical attacks. I am against the concept of fucking stupidity and expending political capital and trust when it's not even remotely necessary and the desired results can be achieved without it, particularly when there's functionally no material guarantee results
are going to be achieved with it.
2) It was not a surprise attack. Advance notice was given. The point is to give enough notice to move human personnel out while also not giving them enough time to move everything valuable out of the spot you want to blow up.
Advance notice was given. Maybe a day before the attack, with no allowance for recourse, communication, explanation, nothing. You can quibble over the exact terminology if you really want, but regardless this was an attack that was done in a way to intentionally limit the ability to respond (militarily or
otherwise). If it's not strictly speaking a surprise attack it's close enough to barely bloody matters, and it was done in the face of not actually being in a state of open goddamn conflict with the nation in question. That. Is a good way to start a war.
And that's not getting into, again, that some of the definitions involved in this as to what counts as advanced warning was basically nothing.
3) We gathered allies, we identified the terms of stopping their chemical attacks, and took action that proved we were willing to act. This is diplomacy. Explicitly stating that we are going to destroy your ability to make war is actually war. I can't think of a more damaging military action than the one that was taken that does not amount to this.
The damage was barely existent by accounts both american and otherwise. We gathered no allies (our attempts at communicating apparently boiled down the political equivalent of, "Yolo motherfuckers, we're going in."), we stated no terms save stop and offered no means of demonstrating the intent to, and our action shat upon the reliability of the american word. As for better targets, hey. Maybe actually identify and hit a production facility,
stop capability of use rather than maybe blowing up some planes and doing some damage to a single air base. Hell, that would have been even less of an attack on their ability to make war than what we did, which was actually attack their ability to make war,
and it would have actually impacted their ability to produce and deploy the weapons in question.
4) Chemical weapons are internationally illegal. Immediate retribution of some kind is implied after their use, regardless of other existing treaties.
Odd, that isn't what happened last time. Or, near as I can recall, just about any other time it's been used, including when the US was overtly supporting it. That last time bought us, what, three, four years from a regime in near constant conflict of refraining from use, and making overt (if apparently insufficient) material motions to display a reduction in capability? Seriously, the existing agreement being spoken of was literally one about refraining from using chemical weapons and working to disarm the stocks. There would have been stipulations as to what to do in the face of a violation, that would have allowed for retribution
without most of the negative issues political and otherwise this particular attempt did.
You seem to have a problem with the person who carried out the strike, rather than the strike itself.
I've got a serious goddamn problem with how the strike was done, since to all appearances it basically cocked up on every level except managing to land some bombs on an air base -- basically
every other thing about it could have been done better, and generally significantly so. So far as this attack goes, my problems with trump are only to the extent he's the sort of shit that would go forward with a clusterfuck of this nature.
Point I've been making, isn't that a strike was a bad idea (it may have been, it may not have been, but that's not my immediate and largest issue with it), it was that a strike done
in this manner was a bloody terrible idea. This was not a victory on the net. It was not an objective achieved, unless you for some reason consider wrecking a few runways and some planes as an objective worth mentioning. It was a symbolic expenditure of munitions that probably set us back on about a dozen fronts, for a gain that is quite possibly going to functionally be
nothing. If it's not obvious at this point what my problem with this mess is, I'm not sure how to better communicate it.