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Does Syria Matter?

Published 09/06/2013, 04:30 PM

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee gave its blessing to President Obama’s plan to take limited action against the Syrian regime for using chemical weapons against its own people. A full Senate vote is expected in the next few days and will likely pass. Barring any hiccups in the House, the bombs could start falling as soon as next week.

Messy And Complicated
Whenever the words “Middle East” and “war” get mixed in the same sentence, people get nervous. It’s a messy and complicated part of the world with ever-shifting alliances and unlikely bedfellows. Devoutly Sunni Saudi Arabia supports the secular military regime in Egypt, while constitutionally secular Turkey supports the deposed Muslim Brotherhood. In Syria, a secular nationalist regime is supported by radical Shia Iran and Orthodox Christian (and formally communist) Russia. And Lebanon? Its political arrangements resemble something from the Godfather.

Allies Of Sorts
You might think that hatred of Israel is the tie that binds, but even this is a half-truth. Though the two countries have no formal relations, Israel and Saudi Arabia have become allies of sorts and rumors have flown in recent years that the Saudis have given the nod to the Israelis that it might be ok for their jets to cross Saudi airspace en route to bombing Iran’s nuclear facilities.

This is why an airstrike on Syria gives us the jitters. The fear is that, given how complicated the relationships are, a “limited” response could escalate into something much bigger, dragging in other regional players such as Iran, or even Russia. Colin Powell warned George W. Bush that if he broke Iraq, he owned it. No one in Congress or the White House wants to “own” Syria.

Should You Worry?
So with all of this as background, should investors worry about Syria?

Not really. You should watch the headlines and be aware that events can change quickly. But consider the following:

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  1. The Western response is intended to punish the Assad regime but not remove it. Assad will not escalate and give the West an incentive to remove him…particularly since he is winning the war.
  2. Syria’s options for retaliation are few and likely ineffective. Could they attack Israel in the hopes of rallying the Arab street? Maybe. But Saddam Hussein tried that in the first Gulf War to little effect.
  3. Iran is not likely to join the fray. Think about it. If they sit tight, their ally in Syria will take some damage but will hold on to power.
  4. Vladimir Putin’s Russia likes to antagonize the West, but this isn’t the 1980s. Russia has little to gain from letting this escalate too far, particularly given that their ally is winning the war.
  5. Syria is not an oil-exporting country. Unless Iran enters the fray and closes the Straits of Hormuz—which again, is unlikely—any spike in the price of oil should be a temporary blip.

There are plenty of macro risks out there to consider. Front and center is the Fed’s tapering of its quantitative easing program and Europe’s sovereign-debt debacle is the crisis that never seems to end. But Syria is not something you spend time worrying about.

This article first appeared on InvestorPlace.

Latest comments

Many Americans believe the USA is the international leader of the world. They also believe America leads in health care and is still the leader financially of the world. To many the attack on Syria is a given..something this leading country can easily carry out. Americans need to wake up and face reality. An attack on Syria would help cover the stupid "red line" remark made by Obama. To save face in other words. The idea of killing over a thousand people is horrible but get serious people..OVER 100,000 have died in the last 2 years. I guess their deaths were not as deadly. Gas seems quicker than bleeding out from gun fire. Americans still don't really understand a war with religious overtones. Democracy will never be an aim of Islam. The most important piece of this punishment bombing is the location. In case you think you missed it..Obama has no idea of what or where a strike should go. If you think our planes will slip in..slip out..think again. I believe this attack is a sure fire way to get the debt ceiling raised. After all we GOTTA HAVE BUCKS so whos' to know if a few billion slips in to cover spending. Obama has lead the USA to the brink of economic failure( I voted for him so I'm not a crazy Republican). His back is up against a wall. A war would solve Obamas most pressing problems and be an excellent smokescreen. Should investors worry? Only if they are planning on travelling. If not then they will never learn what printing billions of dollars really means when trying to buy something anywhere except in the USA. An attack on Syria is a last ditch effort for the Obama administration to get some cash..ponzie style.
Why there is no comment on China where the crude oil plays major role in their economy. China will never agree for any hiccup in crude price. As Russia and China are against the strike I don't think america would think of going ahead and to self-damage
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