Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin, meanwhile, said the U.S. airstrike has put “a very big question mark” over the future of the U.S. and Russian-brokered cease-fire agreement in Syria. Indicating the level of tensions inside the closed-door meeting, Churkin told reporters that in long career as a diplomat he had “never seen such an extraordinary display of American heavy-handedness as we are witnessing today.”

And according to the Guardian:

In an email exchange with Common Dreams, foreign policy expert Phyllis Bennis, who directs the New Internationalism Project at the Institute for Policy Studies, reacted to the latest developments in Syria by placing Saturday’s bombing in the broader context of the post-9/11 era’s so-called “Global War on Terror”—which fifteen years after the initial attacks by Al-Qaeda on U.S. soil shows no signs of waning.

“The problem with a mistake of this Himalayan proportions is that it will be extremely difficult in the aftermath to convince Syria that the US did not intentionally aid [ISIS].” —Juan Cole, Middle East historian”The latest US attack—this time on Syrian troops ostensibly surrounded by ISIS fighters—demonstrates once again why using war against terrorism fails,” Bennis argues. “The inability and/or unwillingness to distinguish troops from other troops, or more often, troops from civilians, remains a hallmark of the US wars in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and beyond.”

Bennis says that “though unlikely,” it remains “possible” that Saturday’s attack on Syrian troops exposes a U.S. strategy of direct war against the government of President Bashar al-Assad. However, she says, “Far more likely, it is one more piece of evidence of the inability of the US military or any other to use war against terrorism and think it will work. As is always the case, whether the ‘wrong’ or the ‘right’ people are killed, the ‘war on terror’ continues to fail.”

Writing for his site, Informed Comment, historian and foreign policy analyst Juan Cole said the killing of nearly 100 Syrian troops, in addition to the political implications vis-a-vis Russia, exposes the serious shortcomings of overal U.S. policy in Syria and the greater Middle East.

“Air strikes from 30,000 feet are always open to being inexact, and to producing civilian casualties and destruction of infrastructure,” Cole writes. “Moreover, the US is hostage to local informants for information on targets, and sometimes they turn out to be double agents or mentally fragile or have other reasons for delivering false intel to the US military.”

He concluded, “The problem with a mistake of this Himalayan proportions is that it will be extremely difficult in the aftermath to convince Syria that the US did not intentionally aid [ISIS].”

And so what’s the solution or pathway out of what continues to appear an intractable situation?

According to Bennis, the answer has long been the same.

“Only arms embargoes, negotiations and diplomacy have any chance to end this crisis,” she said.

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