Oil is becomming a superfluous reason with all the new discoveries in the GOM and the new shale plays around the US. If the greenie hippie liberals would just STFU, we could tell OPEC to take a flying fuck at a rolling doughnut.
I'd say part of it is our agreement to protect Israel.
I'd also say that another part is the unwillingness to just totally surrender a huge portion of the world to psychotic religious zealots who espouse death to anyone not a Muslim man, especially when these zealots have WMD, including but not limited to nukes, and the US is Public Jhihadi Enemy #1.
As horrific as the chemical attack is, they are doing it within their own borders, to their own people. If they took that shit to another country (Israel) in an attack, then hell yeah, let's go fuck some people up. But it's up to the people of Syria now to get that psychopath out of office. He needs to be Khadafied ASAP. Give them aid and support in accomplishing that goal, but it's not for us to do. We drive him out and we become liable for collateral damage, and that shit gets used against us as fodder for every suicide bomber wanna be that comes along.
I still don't get Putin's role in all of this. Why in the hell is he backing Assad? Is it because of the trading relationship or is it just to fuck with the US? What's so sad is that Assad was Western educated - he's an opthomologist, fer pete's sake - and I really had high hopes that he may be less of an asshole than his father before him. Wrong.
Al-Assad graduated from the medical school of the University of Damascus in 1988, and started to work as a physician in the army. Four years later, he attended postgraduate studies at the Western Eye Hospital, in London, specializing in ophthalmology. In 1994, after his elder brother Bassel, the heir apparent to their father, was killed in a car crash, Bashar was promptly recalled to Syria to take over Bassel's role. He entered the military academy, and took charge of the Syrian occupation of Lebanon in 1998. In December 2000, Assad married Asma Assad, née Akhras. Al-Assad was reconfirmed by the national electorate as President of Syria in 2000 and 2007, after the People's Council of Syria had voted to propose the incumbent each time.
Initially seen by the domestic and international community as a potential reformer, this expectation ceased when he ordered a mass crackdown and military sieges on pro-rebel protesters amid recent civil war, described by some commentators as related to the wider "Arab Spring" movement. The domestic Syrian opposition and much of the Western world, along with a number of pro-Western Arab states, have subsequently called for al-Assad's resignation from the presidency.