European allies France, UK gamble, join Trump against Syria
PARIS — Europe’s two biggest military powers took a gamble in lining up behind U.S. President Donald Trump to bombard Syria. Now they need to make sure it doesn’t backfire.
Critics swiftly accused Britain and France of playing loyal deputies to an unpredictable American leader, viewed by many in Europe with suspicion or outright scorn. Some worried it could further antagonize Europe’s hulking neighbour Russia at an already tense time.
British Prime Minister Theresa May was decried for not seeking parliamentary approval for Saturday’s co-ordinated airstrikes. French President Emmanuel Macron was accused of compromising the independence of a country that famously stayed out of former U.S. President George W. Bush’s 2003 invasion of Iraq.
And worst of all, Saturday’s “one-shot” military operation may not substantially change the course of the war in Syria.


