(New York Post) Too Little, Too Late.
Late Friday afternoon the US military began strikes in response to the attack that killed three US soldiers the weekend before, but so far it looks like President Biden opted for the least he could do.
Again.
We’ll keep up some hope: The Pentagon and National Security Council said Thursday it will be a multifaceted campaign, and NSC spokesman John Kirby announced, “The first thing you see won’t be the last.”
But it looks like the targets will be exclusively in Syria and Iraq, and mainly Iran’s proxy forces there, though some Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps units might get hit.
IRGC forces inside Iran will be perfectly safe, even though the White House fully admits Tehran is behind it all.
Huh?
The Iranians direct 160-plus attacks on us, but we respect their border?
As important, Washington’s been talking about this all week, with much noise about Biden weighing his options.
Which means Iran and its pawns had plenty of time to move everything vital away, evacuate higher-ups (at least) into hiding and so on.
How many empty buildings and tents will our multimillion-dollar weapons “annihilate”?
In what we expect the White House will sell as meaningful symbolism, the strikes began an hour or so after the solemn Dover Air Force Base ceremony marking the return home of the remains of Sgt. William Jerome Rivers, Spc. Kennedy Ladon Sanders and Spc. Breonna Alexsondria Moffett.
(The president, incidentally, attended the ceremony — then jetted off to California for a fundraiser where he’ll no doubt brag about his resolve and decisiveness.)
Yet a far more fitting honor would have been to start the strikes as soon as the Iranian “axis of resistance” killed those three soldiers.
Indeed, the strikes should’ve begun the instant Iran’s allies started shooting at us.
Every one of those attacks intended to kill Americans, yet Biden only OK’d pinprick responses lobbing missiles at an unoccupied terrorist warehouses and so on.
Sorry: No president should give the enemy a single free slap at the US Army, Navy, Air Force or Marines, let alone 160.