As expected, Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo are leading a U.S. delegation to Turkey, where American officials hope to persuade Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to implement a cease-fire in Syria. It is, by any fair measure, a White House attempt to clean up Donald Trump’s mess: the Republican’s decision to remove troops from northern Syria unleashed no small amount of hell in the region.
Whether the American president appreciates this or not, the administration isn’t speaking with one voice. NBC News’ report on the talks touched on an underappreciated point.
…Pence’s meeting with Erdogan comes hours after Trump dismissed Turkey’s invasion and said the fight was over land that “has nothing to do with us.”
“If Turkey goes into Syria, that’s between Turkey and Syria,” he said to reporters in the Oval Office. “It’s not between Turkey and the United States.”
The point Trump went to great lengths to drive home yesterday was that he does not care about the violence or its effects. Talking to reporters in the Oval Office, the American president dismissed our Kurdish allies, insisting they’re “no angels,” and suggesting at least some Kurds are dangerous terrorists. Trump added, in apparent reference to Turkish and Kurdish forces, “There’s a lot of sand that they can play with.”
The Republican added on Twitter this week, “The Kurds and Turkey have been fighting for many years…. Others may want to come in and fight for one side or the other. Let them!”
So much for the White House’s commitment to a cease-fire.
The result is a contradiction for which there is no obvious resolution: the American vice president is in Ankara, eager to make clear that the United States cares, but his message is at odds with the American president’s explicit indifference.
Slate‘s Joshua Keating had a good piece on the latest developments yesterday:









