The Daily - A Foreseen Calamity in Syria
Episode Date: October 17, 2019The presence of U.S. troops in northern Syria was designed to protect America’s allies and keep its enemies there in check. President Trump’s unilateral withdrawal from the region quickly, and pre...dictably, unraveled a tenuous peace on the volatile border between Syria and Turkey. His decision handed a gift to four American adversaries: Iran, Russia, the Syrian government and the Islamic State. David E. Sanger of The Times explains why “the worst-case scenario is even worse than you can imagine.” Guest: David E. Sanger, a national security correspondent and a senior writer at The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background coverage:President Trump lashed out in defense of his decision to remove U.S. troops from northeastern Syria in response to rare bipartisan condemnation from Congress.Russian troops have already occupied abandoned American outposts in Syria as Moscow moves to fill the power vacuum.“Don't be a fool! I will call you later.” Read the letter President Trump sent to Turkey’s leader.
Transcript
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, the presence of U.S. troops in northern Syria
was designed to protect America's allies in the Middle East
and keep its enemies there in check.
David Sanger, on just how quickly and predictably that has all unraveled.
It's Thursday, October 17th.
David Sanger, good to actually sit across from you in a studio.
It's good to see you down here.
So it's been a little more than a week since President Trump is on the phone with Turkey's president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and says, if you want to conduct this big military operation that you have been contemplating for a while inside northern Syria, I'm not going to stand in your way.
In fact, I'm going to clear the way by removing some of the U.S. troops there.
And you have been tracking the aftermath of that phone call.
What has been your biggest takeaway?
Well, I guess my biggest takeaway is sometimes the worst case scenario is even worse than you can imagine. foreign policy experts, by Middle East experts, by regional studies experts, by diplomats,
by people surrounding the president of the United States, that if he removed the small
force that was sitting on the border between Turkey and Syria, that really bad things would
happen.
It's going to destabilize the region once again.
It's going to reinvigorate a civil war.
And it's going to give strength to some
of the most reactionary and chauvinistic forces
in the region.
We will see everything from the release of ISIS prisoners
to a humanitarian catastrophe.
It will damage US relations with Turkey.
And it turns out those predictions
were almost all right.
All this is playing out exactly as we predicted.
This was the predicted fallout after...
Things in Northern Syria are developing exactly as expected
in the sort of worst-case scenario for the U.S.
The only surprise so far has been
they've happened much faster than we anticipated.
So let's talk about these predictions one by one.
Where do you think we should start?
Well, how about with Russia?
The first prediction, Michael,
was that if the United States disappeared from the border,
it would be very, very good for Vladimir Putin.
And was it?
It's turning out to be better than Putin could possibly have imagined.
Good morning from Manbij.
I'm at the American base. have imagined. Right now, the Russians are occupying, as of today, parts of Syria that
the United States was in just a week ago. So just this week, you saw some video surface on the web
that appeared to be Russian soldiers walking around a base
that the United States had abandoned just a few days ago.
Now, that happens when you pull troops out,
but it certainly gives you a little bit of the chills
when you see another country occupying space
that the United States had spent a lot of blood and treasure on
to take
for its own. So what's the backstory of Russia's stake here in Syria and how this has helped them?
Well, you'll remember that back in 2011 during the Arab Spring, Bashar Assad, the dictator who
runs Syria, was really on the ropes, and we all
thought he'd be gone.
But the Russians saw an opportunity here.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, they had retreated to the space that is now the
Russian Federation.
And Vladimir Putin really wanted to see Russia
begin to expand again and be a power,
at least in the Middle East.
He knew he couldn't compete with the U.S. globally,
but he might be able to regionally.
And Syria was a great place for him to start
because they already had a naval base,
the only Russian naval base that has survived
outside of Russian territory on the Syrian coast. So he provided
more and more support. Russia is now openly sending military aid to the Syrian government
of Bashar al-Assad. In 2015, the Russians swooped in. Putin has deployed strike aircraft, T-90 tanks,
howitzers. Brought in all kinds of forces. You'll remember that moment when Barack Obama said,
good luck, you know, you'll get stuck in the Middle East
the way we all have.
President Obama did say last Friday afternoon,
good luck with that.
You will not have success in that part of the world.
And so suddenly, once the Americans are gone,
it becomes an opportunity for the Russians
to really establish a beachhead in the Middle East,
something they really had not had since back in Nixon's era.
It gives Putin the opportunity he needed, and he didn't waste a second.
He moved his forces in right away.
He was clearly ready for the moment.
You have to think about global power struggles in this post-Cold War era as a series of vacuums that someone's going to fill.
And for the Russians, they're seeking opportunities to go into places where the United States seeds the field.
So just to recap, Russia literally walked into areas of Syria that the U.S. was controlling and patrolling just a few days ago.
And they've now basically helped take them over because Russia is so close with Bashar al-Assad of Syria.
And without the U.S. being there anymore, Russia now has free reign over that area.
Exactly right.
And that brings us to the second prediction, which is that this would be really, really good for Bashar Assad.
So you remember, Michael, that Assad in 2011 thought he probably wouldn't get out of Syria alive.
Then for a long time, people said, well, his country is going to fracture. He's going to hold on to those small parts of the country where his political party and his ethnic group basically control.
But the rest of the place is going to break away.
Well, once the Russians came in in 2015, Assad actually was able to spread his wings, regain control, except in this one area.
gain control, except in this one area, in this one part near critical oil supplies,
near a lot of the other wealth that he needs for his regime that was being controlled by the Kurds and the Kurds were backed by the Americans. And the only thing standing between Assad and controlling this area was the fact that he would have to go take on the Americans who were in the region, even though it was a very small number.
So what exactly did Assad do once the U.S. pulls back from this part of Syria at the request of Turkey?
Well, he moves to get his country back.
He literally streams troops into the region.
Rolling in to a hero's welcome.
Troops of the Assad regime.
With Russian help.
Handed a victory without firing a shot.
And then, because the Kurds realize
they've got no one else to turn to,
they flip and join up with Assad's forces in facing off with Turkey.
Those Kurdish forces are going to partner with the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad
that was brokered by the Russians.
They literally change alliances within a few days.
So suddenly the force that he was fighting is on his side.
And Bashar Assad gets to make the rules about who's going to live there and where and when
and who will control the oil. So all of a sudden Assad has gone from having what has essentially
been a rebel-controlled region to having the rebels rely on him for support.
That's kind of astonishing.
It couldn't have worked out better for Bashar Assad
if he had called a national security meeting
and said to his generals,
give me blue sky of what's the best thing
that could happen to me this year.
Right, your enemy, the people fighting you
in your own country successfully with the help of the U.S., they are now your allies and they are inviting
you in to the rebel-held territory. And he got it for free. He didn't have to negotiate with the
Kurds. He didn't have to negotiate with Washington. He didn't have to make any concessions. The U.S.
just up and left. And that, of course, turned what had been just a festering political
issue into his great opportunity. Okay. So, David, what's our next prediction that came true?
Well, a lot of people in Washington said, this will help the Iranians, the one country that Donald Trump most despises, the one he most
wants to crush with sanctions, the one who he's worried about the most gaining influence in the
region. Yeah. So how is it helping Iran? It's helping Iran because their ally, Assad, gains power and territory, and the United States ends up pulling back.
So what was an opportunity to go keep an eye on the Iranians and perhaps push back on their influence inside Syria, that leverage is all gone.
The other thing it does for Iran, of course, is they use Syria as a pathway to get weapons to Hezbollah, a terrorist group that's threatening Israel, among others.
Now, those weapons didn't run through the Kurdish territory, but certainly if the United States is pulling back and is no longer going to be a presence in the country, the Iranians have to take that as one less toll on the highway.
And so in that way, President Trump's decision here may make life more difficult and more dangerous for one of our allies, Israel.
That's right.
The ally he talks the most about defending.
Now, let's not overestimate this because there were vast parts of Syria that Iran had free reign in before this happened.
But certainly the image of the United States not having the stomach to keep a really small investment inside Syria sends a message to Tehran that rings loud and clear.
There's a psychological element to this. The Middle East is all about power. And
if you are detected to be weak, others are going to go make a move. So for all the United States
has done to make life miserable for Iran, sanctions, sabotage, cyber attacks, the one
thing they do with a physical military presence is they pick
up and they pull back from contested territory. So they signal weakness. They
signal that they can be taken.
We'll be right back.
Okay, so at this point, David, you have ticked through three predictions involving three of our greatest adversaries in the world and how they are benefiting from this decision by the president.
But you haven't yet brought up what may be our greatest adversary and its impact on them, which is ISIS.
And the whole reason we were in Syria in the first place
was to try to contain ISIS.
That's right.
And the prediction was if the United States pulled back,
we would re-empower ISIS and give them another shot at survival. And?
We have reports that hundreds of ISIS prisoners are escaping as militias
backed by Turkey pushed deeper into Syria. Well, that looks like what's happening.
Three prisons holding thousands of ISIS members have come under attack in the last
24 hours. There were thousands of ISIS fighters who were being kept in camps in this Kurdish
controlled area of Syria. And as the Kurds have spent their time fighting Turkey, suddenly they
don't have the time to go focus on keeping ISIS contained in these camps.
We visited a prison packed with 5,000 ISIS detainees.
The warden told me if the guards need to leave and fight, they'll just lock the cells and go.
You know, there was one case where there was a camp that had thousands of family members of ISIS fighters, women, children.
And about 500 of them just walked away,
walked out of the camp earlier this week.
And that's basically because the Kurds, under attack by Turkey,
just didn't have the bandwidth to guard this place anymore.
They had more important priorities.
So the reality is that the prediction has largely come true, that ISIS members are either out or on their way out or have a good prospect of getting out, and that they have their best chance in a long time to go retake some territory or at least reestablish their power, and a base from which they could begin to plan attacks again on the West.
David, of all the predictions and outcomes that you have talked about so far,
this one seems the hardest to comprehend.
Because it's somewhat understandable that the U.S. might not have a plan to deal with great powers like Russia and Iran and Syria
and how they might be empowered by what President Trump just did in northern Syria.
But when it comes to just making sure that a few prisons that hold a group of people
who are devoted to the destruction of the United States
and Americans, you would just have to think that there's a plan to make sure that prisons
keep people imprisoned. That's right. I mean, what you're talking about are two different
kinds of planning. Planning to contain Russia and divert or contain Iran, that's grand strategy.
Holding on to prisoners, that's basic tactics. And what's astounding about this particular
presidential decision, this action by President Erdogan, is that it actually revealed that we're bad at the strategy and we're worse at the tactics,
that we didn't have a plan B to go handle these prisoners if we turned our backs on the Kurds
who were acting essentially as the jail wardens here.
And of course, not to take away your predictions here, David,
And of course, not to take away your predictions here, David, but perhaps the most foreseeable prediction slash outcome was that this was going to be bad for the Kurds, bad for the people occupying this part of northeastern Syria that President Trump more or less invited Turkey to invade.
But I wonder just how bad has it actually been? Just how accurate was that prediction? Well, here the prediction was off because it turned out to be much worse than we
imagined. There were some who said, you know, Erdogan is just going to bring his forces in
and sort of a faux invasion and that, you know, there'd be a big show of jets and there would be
some troops on the ground, but they wouldn't really go in that far
and they wouldn't really engage. It would be about flexing muscles more than really taking territory.
But it turned out that once the forces moved in, it uncorked all of the worst demons that
have been sitting around in this region. And you've seen the results on TV.
sitting around in this region, and you've seen the results on TV.
A convoy packed with civilians and journalists trying to enter a border town was struck by a Turkish airstrike.
11 killed, more than 70 wounded.
This video today appears to show Arab militias executing a Kurd by the roadside
as they shout, Allahu Akbar, and proudly saying, film me, film me.
You've seen horrible scenes of rape, including of a prominent politician.
Among those slain, one leading Kurdish political leader
apparently dragged from her car and shot in the head.
You've seen stonings happening. You've seen houses being burned. This is a war
crime if verified. You've seen people with children trying to flee. Nearly 70,000 children
have been displaced since hostilities in northeast Syria escalated nearly a week ago. And they've got
no place to go. It's not clear that they can go anyplace else in Syria.
I have four children, two girls and two boys. Where should I go? I'm so tired.
I left the house a week ago. Where should I go now?
And so the prediction was this would be really bad for the Kurds.
But what it turned into was carnage for the Kurds.
David, we started this conversation with you saying that a series of predictions had come true.
And talking to you, it's clear that they didn't just come true.
They came true faster and in a bigger way than anybody even imagined.
true, they came true faster and in a bigger way than anybody even imagined. I wonder if you think that President Trump was aware of these predictions at the time that he had this phone call with
Erdogan and just disregarded them, basically decided that the outcomes wouldn't matter that
much. Or if he genuinely thought that the predictions were just wrong and that there would be a different set of outcomes in each of these cases.
Well, it's hard to know, but certainly he heard the predictions and he didn't just hear them
in the past few weeks. This was exactly the debate that took place in the White House last December
when the president somewhat impetuously said, we're pulling all our troops
out of Syria. And you'll remember that this is when General Mattis resigned as the defense
secretary. You'll remember that this is when the Joint Chiefs came and said, sir, you can't do this.
Right. So why did he do this, Michael? I think it goes to a conflation in his mind between the concept of endless war.
A phrase he uses a lot.
A phrase he uses all the time in the Middle East.
And the concept of keeping a small number of essentially peacekeepers to keep bad forces in the bottle.
And the conflation here is particularly damaging.
We have a lot of places in the world, Michael,
where we keep troops largely to keep the peace.
It's the reason we've got thousands along the border in South Korea
to keep the North from coming.
It's the reason that we keep troops in Japan to put at least some parameters around the Chinese.
It's the reason we still have troops in Germany and elsewhere in Europe
to be able to contain Putin's aggressions elsewhere.
The concept is you keep Americans at strategic places around the world
as a preventative for conflict. That in the end, it costs you a whole lot less to keep a small
force that prevents conflict from erupting than to have to send in a big force and act after a huge terror attack,
some kind of calamity hitting an American ally.
But David, would that mean keeping some kind of American force there
in perpetuity, basically forever?
Well, it might.
I don't think that that's what anybody had in mind for the Turkish-Syrian border. But if you
were going to pull them out, you pull them out slowly in a coordinated way that does not allow
the Russians and Bashar Assad to fill the vacuum that doesn't benefit the Iranians and that you
get something in return for the slow pullout. It's not an endless war.
It's a persistent presence that enables you to act a bit as the world's policeman.
And that simply is not Donald Trump's vision of American power.
So you're saying that he was not unaware of all of these potential outcomes.
He, in fact, it sounds like because there was this debate in the White House, was very aware of them.
He simply, instead, he just prioritized the return of U.S. troops,
his vision of American foreign policy above any of those predictable strategic shifts,
human costs, and the empowering of our enemies.
In the Trump administration, humanitarian intervention and peacekeeping is not what
America First is all about. But the cumulative impact of every outcome that we have talked about
in this conversation, David, feels like it has been bad for the United States in this moment.
So unless you believe that bringing home U.S. troops is the highest possible value, that it's the most important thing to do in a situation like this, then it's hard to understand the decision that was made.
It's almost impossible to.
hard to understand the decision that was made. It's almost impossible to. And you know, Michael,
it's hard to find almost anyone in Washington other than the president, Vice President Pence,
Mike Pompeo, the National Security Advisor, Robert O'Brien, who will defend this decision. This was a case where we had a system that was working.
We had essentially an American protectorate going on in these Kurdish areas.
We were doing it at low cost and nearly zero casualties.
And in one week, we undid what was essentially seven years of effort to try to make this work.
Thank you, David.
Thank you.
So I view the situation on the Turkish border with Syria to be for the United States strategically brilliant.
Our soldiers are out of there. Our soldiers are totally safe. They've got to work it out.
During a news conference on Wednesday, President Trump celebrated his decision to withdraw American troops from northern Syria and argued that the conflict it has unleashed is not America's problem.
Our soldiers are not in harm's way, as they shouldn't be,
as two countries fight over land.
That has nothing to do with us.
The president went on to unexpectedly criticize Kurdish forces
who have fought alongside U.S. troops for years.
The Kurds know how to fight.
And as I said, they're not angels.
They're not angels.
If you take a look, you have to go back and take a look.
A few hours later, the House of Representatives approved a bipartisan resolution condemning
the president's decision, with every Democrat and 129 Republicans supporting the measure.
Because of this decision and all the actions and inactions that led up to this decision,
we have let our friends down, we have hurt our national security, and we have ceded leadership
in the region to Russia and Iran. I hope we can change our course, but I fear it may be too late.
We'll be right back.
Hi, guys. Hi. Hi, Julie. Hi, how are you? Good, how are you? Good. Hi. Hi. Busy? A little.
So what do we need to know? So on Wednesday we learned that Fiona Hill, former top official
at the National Security Council who has since left, told investigators when she testified
to the impeachment inquiry that Gordon Sondland, the United States ambassador to the European Union,
was potentially a national security risk because of the role he was playing on Ukraine
that she didn't feel he was qualified to play.
Ambassador Sondland is a really important witness that they are going to hear from on Thursday
because of the role that he played sort of at the center of this whole pressure campaign on Ukraine.
Also on Wednesday, there was a big meeting at the White House between the president and the congressional leaders on Syria.
You're going to hear the president say we walked out.
We were offended deeply by his treatment of the Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Which led to a huge blow up between the president and the Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, and the other Democratic leaders, where he lashed out at everyone, very upset about the fact that the House had just voted
resoundingly to condemn his decision to pull U.S. troops back from northern Syria and allow what is
now a massacre going on with the Kurds. So it was a really nasty confrontation. He was insulting,
particularly to the speaker. She kept her cool completely.
But he called her a third-rate politician.
He said that there are communists involved and you guys might like that.
I mean, this was not a dialogue.
It was sort of a diatribe, a nasty diatribe, not focused on the facts.
It was clearly a blow up.
The Democrats ended up walking out and the president was basically saying,
see you at the polls and very indignant as they left.
Thanks, Julie.
Sure, thank you.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Julie Davis.
See you tomorrow.
I guess you won't see us.'m Julie Davis. See you tomorrow.