Why Are American Troops Still in Iraq and Syria?
Our troops are just sitting there with targets on their backs. Why?

On November 7, President Biden spoke of the "truly sacred obligation" Americans have to take care of our troops. He's right about that obligation, but his policy in Iraq and Syria is violating his most sacred duty as their commander in chief: to give his troops a clear, attainable mission and not to leave them as sitting ducks.
There's no other way to describe the role the 900 U.S. troops in Syria are playing, for example. With the collapse of the ISIS caliphate in 2018, then-President Donald Trump announced that "we have defeated ISIS in Syria, my only reason for being there," adding that there would be a "full" and "rapid" withdrawal of U.S. forces from the country. His defense secretary, Jim Mattis, and his Middle East guru Brett McGurk—who is now Biden's Middle East guru—resigned in protest.
After the resignations, the Pentagon, National Security Adviser John Bolton, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and Jordanian King Abdullah pressed Trump to leave troops in Syria, and he did. His Syria envoy then repeatedly lied to him about how many troops were in the country, and Trump somehow settled on the idea that "We're out of Syria, other than we kept the oil. I kept the oil." But we were not out of Syria, and we did not keep the oil. The troops were left in Syria with no domestic or international legal authorization.
Similarly, after the Iraqi government fought ferociously to stick to the terms of the Status of Forces Agreement with the United States rather than give U.S. forces immunity from prosecution, the Obama administration wound the U.S. presence down to roughly 5,000 troops in the country by the time it left office. A few thousand troops remain there now, officially under the pretense of combating ISIS, but in truth, they are there for the purpose of trying to limit Iran's influence. As a March Associated Press article somewhat archly put it: ISIS is "the much-stated reason for the continued U.S. troop presence…but a key reason is Iran."
And in that context, U.S. troops in Syria and Iraq find themselves under steady rocket fire from militias, mostly backed by Iran. The small numbers of U.S. forces are dotted across vast expanses, in some cases in remote areas, to disrupt Iranian influence and supply lines across the region. Just in the past three weeks, there have been at least 40 attacks on U.S. troops, with reports of traumatic brain and other injuries affecting 45 Americans.
So why does the Biden administration, which solemnly intones about sacred obligations to servicemembers, have these troops tied down as bait for regional militias? The entire region is furious at U.S. support for the Israeli campaign in Gaza. Biden and his administration know very well that as long as they back that war, U.S. forces deployed in remote areas might as well have targets on their backs. Why not bring them home?
The answer may lie in a 2019 report Congress funded to examine U.S. policy in Syria. The authors, which included scholars who now serve as Biden's deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East and his acting deputy undersecretary of defense for policy, argued that the United States has "key national security interests at stake" in Syria, and called on the government to "defend the rules-based international order" in that country and to "maintain pressure" on Iran, "lest [it] build up its strategic capabilities."
Biden's Middle East team—the authors of the Syria report who now run Middle East policy for him, and McGurk, who is the leader of Biden's Middle East policy—view the region as divided between Iran and its partners and everyone else, and believe the U.S. role is to back the everyone-else coalition against Iran. In this view, these small deployments, though militarily insignificant, are an annoyance to Iran, and therefore virtuous. As a senior defense official said while gloating about the militia attacks' lack of success, "Iran's objective for a long time has been to force a withdrawal of the US military from the region. What I would note is, we're still there."
We are still there. But every day there are more rocket attacks on our forces, who have been forgotten about and taken for granted for too long. We appear to have been playing down their injuries, just as Trump played down the injuries suffered in Iran's retaliation for the assassination of Iranian Maj. Gen. Qassem Soleimani. Thank God the only death so far has been from a contractor's heart attack during a false alarm.
The militias firing at our forces in Iraq and Syria haven't been the A-Team, and no U.S. troops have died yet. But this Veterans' Day, President Biden ought to take a moment and ask himself whether the mission he has given them is worthy of the risks they are being asked to run—and the risks of escalation that mission poses to so many more servicemembers. The greatest duty a commander in chief has is to give his troops a lawful mission, clearly defined, with the escalatory potential clearly bounded. Biden has failed these troops miserably in that regard. He should bring them home.
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Oooh! Is it because the MIC are a bunch of cunts and Biden is their puppet?
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That Syria Study Group is a perfect example of the newer parts of MIC. Careerists who wander from think tanks to universities to "Biden's Middle East team—the authors of the Syria report who now run Middle East policy for him".
The article is a little two dimensional, no? Is it because policy makers are oh-so-stupid to have American troops in Iraq who are nothing but targets? Boy, are they dumb?
During the Cold War, West Germany was America's giant garage where equipment for mechanized, armored divisions waited for their troops to turn the ignitions if the balloon ever went up -- it's a lot easier to move men across the Atlantic than it is tanks, trucks, and howitzers.
The lesson of Desert Shield at the outset of the 1990s was just how long it takes to get heavy equipment in theater. Look at Iraq on google maps. Location, location, location, as a realtor would say. Our skeleton base there is about 8 hours drive from Damascus, and a day's drive from Tehran.
I don't know what's in the "garage" there, but even if the great unwashed masses in those respective countries have no concept of the import of what a Western mechanized division can do, you can bet the leadership in Syria and Iran comprehend it.
Because the deep state lied to the last president about troop levels.
Trump somehow settled on the idea that "We're out of Syria,
Somehow he was maybe lied to?
Left media bragged about it.
https://www.defenseone.com/threats/2020/11/outgoing-syria-envoy-admits-hiding-us-troop-numbers-praises-trumps-mideast-record/170012/
Not sure how his author is not aware of that.
Remember when Trump tried to withdraw the troops from Syria and the “top libertarian” publication in the country cheered his attempt? Yeah me neither.
Reason’s position on war only became prominent when the guy they supported got in office and a bunch of wars coincidentally broke out.
Abortion, open borders and sexually mutilating little kids who are confused about their biological gender..these are more important issues to Nick and Matt and the gang at Reason.
Why are there American troops in any nation not named the United States?
Lots of reasons, some good, some ... less so.
Among the good reasons, any competent strategist will tell you that if war is inevitable, it's far better that it be fought on someone else's farms and cities than on your own. A good strategist will also tell you to fight as far forward as practicable to blunt the enemy's ability to gain momentum and access to resources. A disturbingly honest strategist (including most deployed soldiers) will admit that they are bait, intentionally drawing the enemy's ire onto themselves in order to protect their families at home.
There are also very good reasons why you might not want to deploy troops overseas but I assume from your question that you can already sketch out that side of the equation.
No nation state army is going to invade the US. Waves of people looking for free stuff? That is a different matter. Which interestingly, the many hundreds of oversees military bases are not protecting against.
There are also the issues of expense and blowback.
If we fight 'em over here we won't have to fight 'em over there.
So, we probably won't fight 'em over here, because if we did it would be really cheap and we'd win decisively and no one else would dare come over here to fight and lots of people would lose their jobs, especially the poor glaziers who were counting on replacing those broken windows, so why do you hate glaziers and national security think-tankers and state and defense department bureaucrats and war profiteers?
Because naval strategy requires that we have command of the sea and that requires that we have bases around the world's coasts.
The problem is that we don't restrain ourselves to that limited purpose. Our careerists want to use our military for empire-building.
Neutral ports can accept warships from other neutral nations. Bases is an excuse for warbonering and the MIC graft. As for command of the seas in regard to near peer nations, hypersonic anti-ship missiles and ostensibly the new nuclear torpedo may be sunsetting that narrative.
Command of the seas will always matter if the goal is to keep the seas open for trade. We tend to take that for granted because our transition from the last country to enforce that (Britain) to us enforcing it was so easy and they had the same goal. But that goal is not at all universal - and it is why the US dollar is the reserve currency with the advantages that provides to us.
That empire fell apart. Maybe they just needed to spend more money on military bases. Shipping lanes can be protected without needing to procure new sails or coal from expensive imperial outposts.
Why are American troops still in Iraq and Syria?
Because Israel said so!
Because as long as American troops remain there, the MIC will continue to suck the blood from taxpayers to so they can buy high priced hookers and blow.
The real question should be why do we still maintain more than 800 foreign bases? Why are the taxpayers being forced at gunpoint to do so?
The main question is why does congress continue to vote for and support this scam?
The answer of course is all about money. And great big middle finger to the American people who object.
Besides, senile ole Joe has no idea what's going down anyway.
hit it out
Escalation is the fucking goal.
Because Biden is a tool and a simp for the Deep State. The Deep State has never cared about the lives of our Troops or American Tax Dollars being wasted.
"Our troops are just sitting there with targets on their backs. Why?"
Because droolin' Joe, that's why.
Too bad the Syrians never crossed Obama's "red line". Of course, it did keep moving.
There obviously are no troops in Iraq because Obama ended the war in Iraq. He did that single-handedly, the Prince of Peace, and we left no soldiers there because why would we have soldiers there after the war is over?
These vicious lies about the idea that Obama didn't end the war in Iraq and didn't bring the truth home are a seditious conspiracy. You will be censored for such gross libel of our Dear Leader, may His name forever be etched in our hearts.
Because being over there means there will be no terrorism over here.
*cough*
My Dad recalled being in Vietnam and hearing old General Westmorland say if we didn't beat the communists there we would be fighting them here. Even as a 19 year old kid he knew that was bs.
Been to a college campus lately?
Shit, I can’t even get away from it on my workplace website.
My uncle volunteered. He was a devout, social program loving FDR style democrat. I guess to him fighting communism was just another big social program.
It was always so strange to me because (I loved the guy, but) his politics were half communist already and barreling down the road towards full on every day, I never understood it.
I have been led to believe it has something to do with Dick Cheney's footwear?
Is Dick Cheney short enough to need high heels?
never stood next to him. was Hoover?
Dude Israel and the Trotskyites who run US foreign policy call all the shots. What do you think you have George Keenan or Ike's advisors running the US policy these days?
Get with the program..Irving Kristol's boys call the shots. If you don't have Russian ancestry and old world greviences you are not qualified to run foreign policy.
Who do you think you are...American rural boys stay where the Israel and Nuland and Kaganovich want them..
Nothing sacred about Ike's advisors, though. They gave us a lot of our issues in the region when Ike and his administration greenlighted Mossadegh's assassination.
Remember the Maine!
Maybe the troops' presence is protection for the Kurds. The Kurds helped drive ISIS out, town by town, city by city. Trump let Turkey take control of the Kurds. The Kurds have been fighting Turkey for an independent Kurdistan.
It's all about maintaining US dollar supremacy. The entire Bush II neo-con agenda, which Obama actually pretty much carried on with, was destabilizing a series of countries who, along with Russia and Iran, wanted to create a competing currency to our own. We have troops there to pin down our economic rivals, advance an agenda of keeping the nation region aligned with our geopolitical agenda, and maintain a loose sort of global hegemony. I know libertarians hate neocons, but the reasoning is plain to the meanest of understandings, and it's not a great mystery that needs much pondering. What does need pondering is why, if Biden is continuing on in that path, he's being so damned tepid about it.