More than 50 US Department of State diplomats have signed an internal memo sharply critical of US policy in Syria, calling for military strikes against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government to stop alleged violations of a civil war ceasefire.
The “dissent channel cable” was signed by 51 State Department officers involved with advising on Syria policy. It was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.
The cable calls for “targeted military strikes” against the Syrian government in light of the near-collapse of the ceasefire brokered earlier this year, the Journal reported, citing copies of the cable it had seen.
Military strikes against the al-Assad government would represent a major change in the longstanding policy of the administration of US President Barack Obama not to intervene directly in the Syrian civil war, even as it has called for a political transition that would see al-Assad leave power.
One US official, who did not sign the cable, but has read it, told reporters that the White House remained opposed to deeper US military involvement in the Syrian conflict.
The official said the cable was unlikely to alter that or shift Obama’s focus from the battle against the persistent and spreading threat posed by the Islamic State group.
A second source who had read the cable said it reflected the views of US officials who have worked on Syria, some of them for years, and who believe the current policy is ineffective.
“In a nutshell, the group would like to see a military option put forward to put some pressure ... on the [Syrian] regime,” said the second source, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
While dissent cables are not unusual, the number of signatures on the document is large.
“That is an astonishingly high number,” said Robert Ford, who resigned in 2014 as US ambassador to Syria over policy disagreements and is now at the Middle East Institute, a Washington think tank.
“For the last four years, the working level at the State Department has been urging that there be more pressure on Bashar al-Assad’s government to move to a negotiated solution” to Syria’s civil war, Ford said.
He said that this is not the first time the State Department has argued for a more activist Syria policy.
In the summer of 2012, then US-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton proposed arming and training anti-al-Assad rebels. The plan, which had backing from other US officials, was rejected by Obama and his White House aides.
The dissenting cable discussed the possibility of airstrikes, but made no mention of adding US ground troops to Syria. The US has about 300 special operations personnel in Syria carrying out a counterterrorism mission against the Islamic State group, but not targeting the al-Assad government.
“We are aware of a dissent channel cable written by a group of State Department employees regarding the situation in Syria,” State Department spokesman John Kirby said in an e-mail. “We are reviewing the cable now, which came up very recently, and I am not going to comment on the contents.”
Kirby said the “dissent channel” was an official forum that allows State Department employees to express alternative views.
CIA Director John Brennan told a congressional hearing on Thursday that al-Assad was in a stronger position than he was a year ago, bolstered by Russian airstrikes against the moderate opposition.
Brennan also said that the Islamic State’s “terrorism capacity and global reach” had not been reduced.
The names on the memo are almost all mid-level officials — many of them career diplomats — who have been involved in the administration’s Syria policy over the past five years, at home or abroad, the New York Times said.
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