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Charles Krauthammer: Assad, allies fighting to win

On Wednesday, Qusair fell to the Bashar al-Assad regime in Syria. Qusair is a strategic town that connects Damascus with Assad's Alawite heartland on the Mediterranean, with its ports and Russian naval base. It's a major strategic shift. Assad's forces can now advance on rebel-dominated areas in central and northern Syria.

On Wednesday, Qusair fell to the Bashar al-Assad regime in Syria. Qusair is a strategic town that connects Damascus with Assad's Alawite heartland on the Mediterranean, with its ports and Russian naval base. It's a major strategic shift. Assad's forces can now advance on rebel-dominated areas in central and northern Syria.

For the rebels, it's a devastating loss of territory, morale, and their supply corridor to Lebanon. No one knows if this reversal of fortune will be the last, but everyone knows that Assad now has the upper hand.

What altered the tide of battle was brazen outside intervention. A hardened, well-trained, well-armed Hezbollah force - from the terrorist Shiite group that dominates Lebanon and answers to Iran - crossed into Syria and drove the rebels out of Qusair, which Syrian artillery has left a smoking ruin.

This is a huge victory not just for Tehran but also for Moscow, which sustains Assad in power and prizes its warm-water port at Tartus, Russia's only military base outside of the former Soviet Union. Vladimir Putin has stationed a dozen or more Russian warships offshore, further protecting his strategic outpost and his Syrian client.

The losers? NATO member Turkey, the major supporter of the rebels; Jordan, America's closest Arab ally, now drowning in half a million Syrian refugees; and America's Gulf allies, principal weapons suppliers to the rebels. And the United States, whose bystander president, having declared that Assad must go, that he has lost all legitimacy, and that his fall is just a matter of time, is looking not just feckless but clueless.

President Obama doesn't want U.S. boots on the ground. Fine. No one does. But between nothing and invasion lie intermediate measures: arming rebels, helping Turkey maintain a safe zone in northern Syria, grounding Assad's murderous air force by attacking airfields - all the way up to enforcing a no-fly zone by destroying the regime's air-defense system.

Obama could have chosen any rung on the ladder. He chose none. Weeks ago, as fortunes began changing, the administration leaked that it was contemplating possibly, maybe, arming the rebels. Then nothing. Obama does not understand that if America is hands-off, it invites hostile outside intervention. A superpower's role in a regional conflict is deterrence.

In 1958, President Dwight Eisenhower - venerated by today's "realists" for his restraint - landed Marines in Lebanon to protect the pro-American government from threats from Syria and Egypt.

In the 1973 Yom Kippur War, Russia threatened to send troops on behalf of the Egyptian army. President Richard Nixon threatened a U.S. counteraction, reinforced the Sixth Fleet, and raised the U.S. worldwide military alert level. Russia stood down.

That's how the region works. Power deterring power. Obama deals instead in empty abstractions - such as "international legitimacy" - and useless conclaves, such as "Friends of Syria" conferences.

Assad, in contrast, has a real friend. Putin knows Obama. Having watched Obama's retreat in Eastern Europe, his passivity at Russian obstructionism on Iran, his bended-knee "reset" policy, Putin knows he has nothing to fear from the American president.

Result? The contemptuous Putin floods Syria with weapons. Iran, equally disdainful, sends Revolutionary Guards to advise and shore up Assad's forces. Hezbollah invades Syria and seizes Qusair.

Obama's response? No warning that such balance-altering provocations would trigger even the most minimal American response.

Even Obama's chemical-weapons red line is a farce. Its very pronouncement advertised passivity, signaling that anything short of weapons of mass destruction - say, massacring 80,000 innocents using conventional weapons - would draw no U.S. response.

And when that WMD red line was finally crossed, Obama went into lawyerly overdrive to erase it. Is it any wonder that Assad's allies are on full offensive - Hezbollah brazenly joining the ground war, Russia sending a small armada and mountains of military matériel, Iran warning everyone to stay out?

Obama's response is to send the secretary of state, hat in hand, to Moscow. And John Kerry returns thinking he's achieved some great diplomatic breakthrough - a "peace" conference that Russia will dominate and use to relegitimize Assad and marginalize the rebels.

Just to make sure Kerry understood his place, Putin kept him waiting for three hours. The Russians know how to send messages. And the one from Qusair is this: If you're fighting for your life and have your choice of allies - Obama bearing "international legitimacy" or Putin bearing Russian naval protection, Iranian arms shipments, and thousands of Hezbollah fighters - which would you choose?