Following allegations of chemical weapons use by the Syrian regime against the Syrian people, the U.S. is considering a military response. Steven Heydemann, special advisor for Middle East Initiatives at USIP, looks at some basic concerns and common questions that have been raised in the debate and offers his analysis. The views expressed are strictly his own

20130904-US_SYRIA_2-OTI.jpg
Photo courtesy of NY Times

Concern: Without a mandate from the U.N. Security Council (UNSC), military action against Syria is illegal. 

Heydemann: The consensus among legal experts is that U.S. action in the absence of a UNSC mandate is illegal under current international law.  Whether this is sufficient justification to prevent U.S. action is less clear.  President Obama’s administration must make the case that the need to respond to the Assad regime’s alleged use of chemical weapons overrides the absence of a UNSC mandate.  The administration can do so on a number of grounds.  Direct threats to national security take precedent over the UNSC.  There are also established precedents for the use of force in the absence of a UNSC mandate.  The international norm that states have a collective “responsibility to protect” (R2P) populations that are subject to atrocities or crimes against humanity at the hands of their own governments is widely accepted, even if not yet a legal requirement.  In this view, sovereignty does not render governments immune from accountability in the event they are responsible for crimes against humanity, mass atrocities, or genocide.  Under R2P, the U.S. has a legitimate basis for military action, even if such action is not legal under current international law.  Further, when members of the UNSC are themselves parties to a conflict and the UNSC thus becomes deadlocked, mechanisms other than the UNSC may be needed to establish the legality, legitimacy, or necessity of military action by some member states of the U.N.

Concern: The U.S. does not have clear objectives in Syria.

Heydemann: U.S. objectives are actually pretty clear.  The stated U.S. objective is to hold the Assad regime accountable for its alleged use of chemical weapons and prevent future uses.  Accountability requires that the regime pay a price for its use of chemical weapons.  The intent of imposing a price on the regime is to deter the future use of such weapons, to reinforce international law concerning the inadmissibility of the use of chemical weapons, and to maintain the credibility of the U.S. that it will respond when certain lines are crossed.  There is debate about whether these objectives are adequate, appropriate, or too difficult to achieve.  Yet the objective as defined by the administration is fairly straightforward. 

Concern: The U.S. will make mistakes and innocent people will be killed.

Heydemann: The goal of military action is to deter the Assad regime from using weapons that disproportionately and indiscriminately kill civilians.  It is possible, if not likely, that U.S. military action will also kill innocent people, individuals whose lives are every bit as worthy as mine or yours.  We should not kid ourselves or others about this.  We should not pretend that it cannot happen, or that such deaths would not undermine the “benefits” of military action. 

Concern: Attacking the Assad regime means the U.S. will be helping al-Qaida.

Heydemann: This claim rests on the presence of al-Qaida affiliated groups active in the struggle to overthrow the Assad regime, and the possibility that weakening the Assad regime will empower such groups.  The link between a limited military strike on select regime targets and the strengthening of al-Qaida in Syria, however, is at best dubious.  Salafist armed groups among the Syrian opposition oppose U.S. military strikes out of fear that they will become secondary targets.  They are also aware that U.S. and Western efforts to bolster moderate groups within the armed opposition pose a threat to their influence and future role in Syria.  Militant Islamist armed groups in Syria have benefitted from the perception that the West does not care about what happens in Syria and does not support the opposition.  A shift in U.S. policy in which limited strikes are combined with more active support for the moderate opposition is a threat to al-Qaida’s power.

Concern: Maintaining U.S. credibility is not adequate justification for a military strike.

Heydemann: Credibility is one of many forms of currency that affect a state’s influence and power in the international system.  Permitting it to erode has negative consequences; acting to prevent its erosion is a legitimate factor in foreign policy decision making.    There is a risk that a failure to follow through on explicit commitments will have negative consequences. 

Question: Why single out the use of chemical weapons as justification for military action when the Assad regime has killed tens of thousands using conventional weapons?

Heydemann:  Chemical weapons are different, and are recognized as different by international law.  Their use is widely agreed to require a different set of responses than the use of conventional weapons.  It is true that Syria’s experience highlights the absurdity of the distinction between conventional and chemical weapons.  In a conflict marked by repeated atrocities and crimes against humanity carried out using conventional weapons, waiting to act until the use of chemical weapons provides justification for doing so is a dubious position, morally and strategically.  Nonetheless, the distinction between chemical and conventional weapons is real, and it should be taken into account in determining how the U.S. and other states respond to their use.

Concern: The U.S. is behaving hypocritically.  It is proposing military action in Syria when it has not done so in other cases of atrocities and mass violence by other governments.

Heydemann: U.S. responses to mass violence are not consistent.  In some cases, the U.S. does nothing.  In others, in varying degrees, it acts.  The arguments used to support action or inaction are often inconsistent.  Is this hypocrisy?  Not necessarily.  The factors that lead to a decision to intervene in one case and not in others are complex.  They include whether military action will work, whether a specific conflict is important to U.S. interests, and what price the U.S. will pay if it does not act.  Each circumstance should be judged on it unique conditions.
As an aside, we should not exaggerate the benefits of consistency.  Flexibility in the management of foreign policy is not a bad thing.

Concern: The U.S. can’t be sure that military action will be effective.

Heydemann: True, the U.S. can’t be sure that military action will be effective.  What “effective” means, however, depends on what the U.S. is trying to achieve.  Given its stated objectives, we will know whether military action has been effective only by monitoring whether the Assad regime uses chemical weapons afterwards.  If it does, we will know that military action has not worked, and we will need to determine whether additional actions are required. 

Public debate about the consequences of military action has raised many questions.  Will it bring about the fall of the Assad regime?  Will it advance or erode prospects for negotiation?  Will it accelerate or stem Syria’s drift toward fragmentation? Will it help or harm terrorist groups associated with the Syrian opposition?  All of these questions are worth asking.  However, none are directly relevant to the question of whether military action will be effective in achieving the stated goals of the operation as defined by the Obama administration. 

Concern: The U.S. cannot define success and does not have an exit strategy or end game.

Heydemann: The U.S. can define success: deterring future use of chemical weapons by the Assad regime.  What the U.S. will do in the event an initial military strike fails to achieve this objective is less clear.  The administration will need to balance its promise to limit U.S. involvement in Syria against the consequences of expanding its military campaign against the Assad regime.  However, preserving flexibility to adjust U.S. options as conditions unfold does not make it inevitable that the U.S. will expand its military efforts, or that the U.S. has placed itself on a ‘slippery slope’ that will ineluctably lead to full-scale intervention.   In addition, imposing arbitrary constraints on U.S. options may be self-defeating.  Under conditions of uncertainty, there are limits to how much clarity the administration can or should provide about what it will do.  What is feasible, however, is to define the outer boundaries of a U.S. commitment—which at the moment are defined in terms of “boots on the ground,” and the scale of force that would be used—without requiring an unrealistic level of clarity about how a U.S. military effort will unfold.


Related Research & Analysis

The Element of Surprise: Space and Cyber Warfare in U.S.-China Rivalry

The Element of Surprise: Space and Cyber Warfare in U.S.-China Rivalry

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

The 2024 revelations over China’s effort to implant malware in critical U.S. infrastructure by the Volt Typhoon hacking group — as well as the Salt Typhoon group’s successful breaching of at least nine major U.S. telecoms — have renewed concern over Beijing’s constant, ongoing efforts to hack Western companies, governments and non-governmental organizations. Unlike past incidents, like those involving Chinese military unit 61398, which were largely about cyber espionage, the Volt Typhoon group was actively implanting malware designed to disrupt critical infrastructure such as water and power systems.

Type: Analysis

What Do Changes in China’s Nuclear Program Mean for India?

What Do Changes in China’s Nuclear Program Mean for India?

Thursday, March 13, 2025

At the end of 2024, the annual U.S. Department of Defense report on military and security developments in China reinforced evolving assessments of China’s rapid nuclear expansion with an alarming projection: The U.S. expects China to have 1,000 nuclear warheads by 2030 despite having maintained a nuclear arsenal of approximately 300 warheads for decades.

Type: Analysis

Taiwan Stronger: Ramping Up Defense Resilience to Counter China

Taiwan Stronger: Ramping Up Defense Resilience to Counter China

Monday, March 10, 2025

The direct threat that China poses to Taiwan continues to rise and is far more severe and serious today than ever before. In addition to the increasing daily tempo of gray-zone coercion and armed provocations all around Taiwan, the specter of an outright attack or naval blockade by China looms larger than at any other time in the post-Cold War era.

Type: Analysis

Sectarian Violence Threatens Syria’s Shaky Transition

Sectarian Violence Threatens Syria’s Shaky Transition

Monday, March 10, 2025

Syria is witnessing the most significant sectarian violence since the fall of the Assad regime on December 8, 2024. Unverified estimates put the death toll over 1,000, with civilians comprising the vast majority of those killed. Clashes have largely been centered in Alawite strongholds along Syria’s Mediterranean coast, from the city of Tartus north to Latakia. The violence prompted large-scale protests in Damascus and other cities, while many anxious Alawite families have fled their homes along the coast. Syria’s interim president, Ahmed al-Shara, has called for “civil peace” and announced the launching of an independent committee to investigate the killings.

Type: Question and Answer

View All Research & Analysis