Obama’s Former Syria Ambassador Slams U.S. Policy
Obama’s Former Syria Ambassador Slams U.S. Policy · The Fiscal Times

President Obama’s former ambassador to Syria on Tuesday said that he resigned his position earlier this year because he could not defend the U.S. policy toward the country, where the army backing President Bashar al-Assad – re-elected yesterday in a contested vote – has killed untold numbers of civilians in its effort to put down a rebellion.

Former Ambassador Robert Ford told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour, “I was no longer in a position where I felt I could defend the American policy. We have been unable to address either the root causes of the conflict in terms of the fighting on the ground and the balance on the ground, and we have a growing extremism threat.”

Related: Missing in Action – A Strong U.S. Cyber Offense

The conflict in Syria was part of the “Arab Spring” of 2011, when protesters in multiple countries tried to overthrow autocratic governments across the Middle East. The conflict in Syria has proved to be the most intractable. Rebels hold huge regions of the country, but have been unable to break the government’s hold on the capital, Damascus, and the region surrounding it.

The Syrian regime, for its part, has responded to the rebellion with indiscriminate attacks – including the use of chemical weapons –not just on combatants, but on civilians as well. President Obama called for the ouster of Assad in 2011 and said a year later that the use of chemical weapons was a “red line” that the Syrian government could not cross without suffering dire consequences.

However, Assad remains in power, and even held an election Tuesday – almost uniformly regarded as a sham by the international community.

“There really is nothing we can point to that’s been very successful in our policy except the removal of about ninety-three percent of some of Assad’s chemical materials,” Ford said. “But now he’s using chlorine gas against his opponents in contravention of the Syrian governments agreement in 2013 to abide by the chemical weapons convention. The regime simply has no credibility and our policy is not addressing the Syrian crisis as it needs to, frankly.”

Related: Obama Fights Foreign Policy Critics, Pledges Aid to Syria Groups

Ford contrasted the situation of the Syrian government, which not only has control of the military, but which has benefited from “great intervention…coming from Iran, from Hezbollah, and also coming from Russia” with the moderate elements of the popular opposition, which has received encouragement, but little tangible aid, from Western governments.

He argued that a strong, Western-looking opposition movement is gradually being undercut by Islamic extremists, whose efforts to recruit members are strengthened by the appearance of Western indifference toward the fate of the Syrian people.