Recent Airstrikes Are Our Periodic Reminder That We're Fighting a War in Syria
Four years after IS was officially defeated, the U.S. continues to keep hundreds of troops in Syria to fight the vanquished terrorist group.

It's easy to forget that the U.S. has hundreds of troops stationed in Syria whose official mission is to prevent the resurgence of the defeated Islamic State (IS) terrorist group. The American public received its periodic reminder of their presence when those troops were attacked by an "Iranian-backed militia" that's also dead set on preventing an IS resurgence.
Late last night, the Department of Defense (DOD) announced that one U.S. contractor was killed and five service members were injured when a drone of reported Iranian origin attacked a maintenance facility in northeastern Syria.
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said the U.S. launched retaliatory airstrikes against groups "affiliated with Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps."
The U.K.-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that U.S. air raids on three different militia posts in the country killed 11 fighters, reported Al Jazeera. Iranian state media claim the raids hit not military posts, but a rural development center and a grain facility.
"We will take all necessary measures to defend our people and will always respond at a time and place of our choosing," said Austin in a statement. "No group will strike our troops with impunity."
No group in Syria would even have the opportunity to strike U.S. forces if they weren't there. Given that IS lost its last piece of territory roughly four years ago, that would seem to eliminate the stated justification for maintaining an active anti-IS mission there.
The argument now is that we have to keep troops in Syria so that IS stays defeated.
"If you completely ignore and turn your back, then you're setting the conditions for a resurgence," Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told The New York Times during a recent visit to Syria.
What exactly the U.S. interest is in further suppressing a rump remnant of a vanquished terrorist group goes unexplained. As yesterday's hostilities illustrate, a byproduct of keeping U.S. military personnel in Syria is that we periodically will bomb other forces who also have a keen interest in suppressing the return of IS.
Foreign policy experts and administration officials say that the "unofficial" reason U.S. troops have to stay in Syria is to forestall a fight for influence over the vacuum we'd leave behind.
"The way the experts and the administration see it, maintaining fewer than 1,000 troops in Syria is worth the occasional risk and minimal cost," reported Politico last year.
The recent deadly attack on U.S. forces shows that the cost is still not zero. One contractor won't be coming home to their family. Five other Americans are injured.
The frenzied diplomacy following yesterday's strikes illustrates how much risk there is for much greater loss of American lives. U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan put in an immediate call to the Qatari foreign minister, according to Qatari state media, who in turn was in contact with Iran's foreign minister in an attempt to prevent any escalation.
A similar tit-for-tat cycle of violence preceded the 2020 U.S. assassination of Iranian general Qasem Soleimani, which came very close to sparking a wider conflict between America and Iran.
It certainly doesn't seem like preserving a tiny sphere of influence in far-off Syria is worth the constant risk of U.S. casualties and America being plunged into a wider regional conflict with Iran. At a minimum, it would be nice to have an open, democratic debate about the pros and cons of keeping troops in Syria.
Regrettably, it seems like we won't ever get that debate.
Congress never voted to authorize U.S. hostilities in Syria, as the Constitution would seem to demand. Presidents Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden have all made war in that country on their own initiative.
A proposal from Sen. Lindsey Graham (R–S.C.) to authorize military force against Iranian-backed militias in Iraq was resoundingly voted down yesterday, notes Brianna Rosen at Just Security, "suggesting there may be little support for broadening authorities to Syria."
Direct U.S. military involvement in the region lumbers on as if on autopilot without any real democratic discussion or debate. Absent that debate, we can expect our contradictory presence in Syria to continue.
From that same Politico article last year: "No one we spoke to could describe the conditions under which U.S. troops could leave Syria. It's hard to predict when ISIS would be thoroughly unable to reconstitute its ranks or when the Iraqi government no longer needs cross-border help fending off Iranian militias, experts and officials said."
It would be unfair to call this a "forever war" in that the inevitable heat death of the universe will eventually end the possibility of kinetic action in Syria. Odds are we'll go back to forgetting it's happening until the next American gets killed, and/or it escalates very quickly.
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Who was that guy who wanted us out of Syria?
Certainly not one of these 3, right?
"Congress never voted to authorize U.S. hostilities in Syria, as the Constitution would seem to demand. Presidents Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden have all made war in that country on their own initiative."
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You’re not in a war if you need a reminder.
Using remote control bombs entirely on foreign land with zero risk at your own is aggression pure and simple.
Sad.
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Well, ISIS, Hezbollah, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, and Assad’s Ba’athists all hate Jews, so it’s all good for you, right?
I'd rather leave them all to killing each other so none of them are killing us. You're welcome to go there and offer your services to any of them.
Fuck Off, Nazi!
Americans should know as you claim that they’re fighting wars of aggression as proxy for Jews.
So why weren’t Americans fighting proxy wars for Jews in 1948, 1956, 1967, 1973, and 1982, as well as other minor skirmishes?
Israel has got it’s own back on fighting wars and they’ll get you too if you go over there to assist your fellow Jew-haters in the Islamic world, as your Nazi brethren have done in times past,!
Fuck Off, Nazi!
Israel that stolen shithole apartheid state has received more aid most of it military from the U.S. than any other nation, 250 billion, since its theft in 1948 which started the last 75 years of conflict in the Middle East.
But that’s not anywhere near the total cost all the theft of Palestine.
The Balfour declaration was a promise of Palestine to Jews for bringing the anti war US into WW1 on the side of Britain that resulted in two more years of war and millions of lives.
Jewish Bolsheviks led by Lenin also overthrew the Russian monarchy in 1917 creating communism, the KGB and ensuring Russias continued participation in the war. How much has Russian communism cost?
In 1932 Jews were becoming impatient for their promised land, Palestine, and coordinated global boycotts against Germany to drive the world into WW2. How much did that cost?
In 1948 Jews finally stole Palestine referencing the Balfour Declaration and initiated the Middle East conflict that has raged and grown ever since. How much has that mess cost the world?
Stand on their own! Hahaha
Fuck off Kol Nidre boy.
The OPEC nations of the Islamic world have received far more $Biliions in. oil purchases and foreign aid than Israel and Israel didn't start receiving aid from the U.S. until 1973.
Even so, Israel always did it’s own fighting, more than can be said for Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.
Fuck Off, Nazi!
You’re lying again Kol Nidre boy.
U.S. aid to Israel recorded in 1949.
The Costs to American Taxpayers of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: $3 Trillion
https://ifamericansknew.org/stat/cost.html
Oh, and the Communists got Russia out of WWI and into Russia's Civil War between the Communists and Czarists.
And funny, Stalin, Khrushchev, Kosygin, Mao, Tito, Nasser, Ho Chi Minh, Pol Pot, Quadaffi, Ceauçescu, the Kim's in North Korea, Mengistu, and Mugabe don't look Jewish!
You'd think an Aryan Pure Superman would know all this!
Fuck Off, Nazi!
“However, the provisional government made the decision to continue the war, which helped the Bolsheviks launch a second revolution against the Provisional Government. After the Bolsheviks took over the government, they signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, pulling Russia out of the First World War.”
“With a civil war between the Bolsheviks and a coalition of their enemies raging, the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk formalized Russia's exit from the war in 1918.“
Lenin left ww1 to continue his civil war creating the communist Soviet Union.
These are the principles of the provisional government that Lenin and his Jewish Bolsheviks were fighting against to create the communist Soviet Union, kgb etc.
It’s what Russia would have looked like if it wasn’t for Jews.
On March 3rd the Provisional Government issued a manifesto containing eight principles by which it would function. The first four of these were the most significant:
1. An immediate and complete amnesty in all cases of a political and religious nature, including terrorist acts, military revolts and agrarian offences, etc.
2. Freedom of speech, press, and assembly, and the right to form unions and to strike and the extension of political freedom to persons serving in the armed forces limited only by the demands of military and technical circumstances.
3. The abolition of all restrictions based on class, religion, and nationality.
4. The immediate arrangements for the calling on the Constituent Assembly on the basis of universal, equal and direct suffrage and secret ballot, which will determine the form of government and the constitution of the country.
Lenin left the war after signing a treaty with Germany.
So Jews brought the US into the war, for the promise of Palestine, then left the war themselves letting American dead achieve their purpose for them.
https://reason.com/2018/12/19/trump-syria-troops-wthdrawal-authorizati/
https://reason.com/2018/12/20/trump-commits-to-syria-withdrawal/
Well I am glad Trump withdrew troops from Syria in 2018 thus proving that nothing happened today.
Whoever he was, he was literally worse than Hitler!
FTFY.
Any bets on how long this one's gonna last?
Or will it just be subsumed into the conflagration of WW3 once that finally gets started in earnest?
>> eliminate the stated justification for maintaining an active anti-IS mission there.
hate to make the common sense military control argument, but doesn't the attack warrant mission maintenance?
We're fighting a war in Syria, to to protct our arch-enemy, Assad, from his arch-enemy.
Go figure.
Weren’t we his arch-enemy not that long ago? Kinda reminds me of the “dad jokes” from this very site.
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Whether our main air defense system was “not fully operational” or whether we underestimated Iran’s capabilities is something we might never be told. One thing is for sure: Future conflicts will be fought with drones that fly longer and further. The only way they can do this is with hydrogen. It is wise, therefore, for every country to develop its hydrogen fuel cell technology early. This proved prudent in the case of the internal combustion engine. The countries that had the most experience with the ICE engine were able to use it to their advantage — and in all sorts of things during WWII.
Not really. The first is a quote from the article, which both-sides it in a pretty standard way, and the second is 2 examples of Trump trying to end our involvement. Which as far as I can tell, neither of the other two made any sort of move toward.
Sarcasm doesn't always translate well in text I guess, but my point was 'one of these things is not like the others'.
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