How the West's Folly Brought Humiliation in Syria
The West's obsession with regime change triggered a civil war and the rise of the Islamic State, provoking a Russian reaction which threatens to leave the West sidelined and humiliatedBy Alexander Mercouris October 05, 2015 "Information Clearing House" - "RI" - The West’s fury at the Russian air campaign in Syria is like the tantrum of a spoilt child denied its sweet. The sweet is the head of President Assad. US President Obama gave the game away in his first public comments following the Russian air strikes. Amidst many bitter words, he let the truth slip out: “The moderate opposition in Syria is one that, if we ever going to have a political transition, we need. And the Russian policy is driving those folks underground or creating a situation in which they are decapacitated and it is only strengthening ISIL.”Translated into plain English, Obama is complaining the Russian air campaign is destroying the people the US wants to take over Syria. This comment tells us something else. This is that the US expects the Russian air campaign to succeed, and the opposition to Assad to be defeated. This very revealing article in the Daily Beast describes the hand-wringing in Washington as its bluff in Syria is being called. Behind the bluster, there is no intention to interfere in the Russian air campaign, and rather than face off against the Russian air force, plans for US bombing raids on Syria and for no-fly zones have been called off. Moreover there is a bipartisan support for this, with war hawks like Hillary Clinton and Senator McCain isolated. This is consistent with scattered reports that despite its public show of defiance the US has actually heeded the Russian warning to stay out of Syrian air space whilst the Russian air campaign is underway. That warning was made in an intentionally humiliating way, giving the US just an hour to comply, to rub in the point that the days when the US and its allies could roam freely in the skies of Syria are well and truly over. Future overflights and bombing raids will henceforth have to be coordinated with the Russians, at least whilst the Russian air campaign is underway. Obama of course also complains in his comments that the Russian air campaign, by defeating the so-called “moderate” opposition to President Assad, is helping the Islamic State. This has become the main theme of Western media commentary over the last few days. The argument is - to quote Obama again - that “Russian policy is driving those folks underground or creating a situation in which they are decapacitated and it is only strengthening ISIL”.The people Obama is referring to - the “folks” who may be “driven underground” or “decapacitated” - are the people the US is supporting in the fight against President Assad. It is now universally admitted these people are overwhelmingly Sunni militants - in other words armed jihadis - violently opposed to what they see as an apostate secular Alawite led government in Syria. The idea that there can be a “moderate jihadi” opposition to President Assad - any more than there was a “moderate jihadi” opposition in Libya to Muammar Gaddafi - is one that would strike most people as bizarre. It is in fact an acknowledged fact that many of the “moderate jihadis” fighting President Assad - who the US is supporting - are affiliated to Al-Qaeda. To say this however is to underestimate the obsessive character of the US's Syrian policy. US policy is to overthrow President Assad. The fact most of those fighing President Assad are militant jihadis is neither here nor there. If “moderate” “liberal” “secular” Syrians cannot overthrow President Assad - and the lesson of the last four years is they cannot - then militant jihadis will have to do. The result is the absurd situation where the US is now running two covert programmes in Syria at the same time - one to create a jihadi army to fight President Assad; the other to create an army to fight the Islamic State, which also opposes President Assad, but which the US also says it opposes. The first programme - run by the CIA - has been a relative success. The second programme - run by the Pentagon - has despite the commitment of $500 million been a total failure. The reason the US has to have two programmes to create two different armies is because its first army - the jihadi army set up by the CIA to fight President Assad - won't fight the Islamic State. As militant jihadis they have far too much in common with the Islamic State to be prepared to fight it. This is why the Islamic State has managed to win so much territory at their expense in so short a time. Since the US backed jihadis are only motivated to fight President Assad, and will not fight the Islamic State in any meaningful way, when the two come into conflict the US backed jihadis tend to defect to the Islamic State . The distinction the US therefore makes between a “moderate” armed opposition to President Assad and the Islamic State, has no meaningful ideological - and therefore political - reality. The only difference between the two groups is that the first - a militant jihadi group supported by the US - is focused on overthrowing President Assad, whilst the second - a militant jihadi group opposed by the US - is focused on expanding its territory. The victory of either group following the defeat of the Syrian government would however have the same result: the establishment of a violent sectarian jihadi state in Syria. In practice, since the Islamic State is by far the better organised of the two groups attracting regular defections from the other group, its eventual victory would be all but certain. The key point - as Putin said in his UN speech - is that the only force in Syria that can be reliably trusted to fight the Islamic State is the Syrian army, together with its allies the Kurds and Hezbollah. To pretend otherwise is fantasy, denying the reality of the situation. What of repeated Western claims that the Syrian government is in some sort of implicit alliance with the Islamic State to weaken the anti-Assad opposition, and is not really fighting it? Putin has called this anti-Syrian propaganda and he is right. The problem is not that the Syrian army does not want to fight the Islamic State. The problem is that the jihadi army the US has created insists on fighting the Syrian army rather than the Islamic State. Since the Syrian army has its hands full fighting the jihadi army the US has created, it cannot fight the Islamic State, especially since the Islamic State, taking advantage of the situation, has - quite deliberately - focused on expanding its territory at the expense of other jihadi groups, instead of fighting the Syrian army. If the objective is to defeat the Islamic State, then the Russian policy is the only one that makes sense. This is to help the Syrian army fight and defeat the Islamic State. If that means destroying the US backed jihadis who are fighting the Syrian army, preventing the Syrian army from fighting the Islamic State, then the Russians have shown they will not balk from doing it. They are right. In the situation that exists in Syria now any other approach is not serious, and will end in failure. The only alternative is to do what the Russians have been calling for since the first protests in Syria began in 2011: arrange negotiations without preconditions between President Assad and his opponents. President Assad agreed to this in 2011, and a road map for such negotiations was agreed at a conference in Geneva in 2012. The negotiations never got underway because the Syrian opposition backed by the US refused to negotiate with President Assad, demanding he resign instead. This is a demand that the Syrian government concede to the Syrian opposition the victory the Syrian opposition has failed to win on the battlefield, whilst making a precondition for the negotiations a possible outcome of the negotiations. That is ridiculous, and both the Russians and the Syrian government have repeatedly made clear they will never agree to it. Whenever the Russians and the Syrian government say no to this demand, which they always do, the Syrian opposition and the US invariably escalate, with a disastrous decision taken in the autumn of 2011 to go to war. It was that decision to go to war that set the scene for the present disaster. That a decision to go to war was made at that time was clear to anyone who was following the situation closely. Here is whatI wrote in October 2011: “Notwithstanding the defeat the western powers on this occasion (have) suffered on the Security Council it would be naive to think that they have abandoned their plans.The logic of war is that the most violent and ruthless people generally come out on top, and that is what has happened in Syria with the rise of the Islamic State. That in turn has provoked the Russians to act by starting their air campaign. In doing so the Russians have the support of China, the Eurasian states, and the key regional powers, Iran and Iraq. By contrast, as Obama’s plaintive comments and the article in the Daily Beast show, the US has been sidelined. If the US and West want to save some tatters of credibility out of this debacle, then now is probably their last chance to do what they should have done in 2011, which is get their Syrian proteges to sit down and talk with the Syrian government without preconditions. If they do that, then there is still a chance a settlement of the Syrian conflict can be agreed, allowing the focus to shift to where it should be, which is fighting the Islamic State. It has to be said however that with the US backed opposition now dominated by violent jihadists, the chances of successfully doing that now look remote. Certainly they are far worse than they were back in 2011 or 2012. If the diplomatic route is to be followed - even at this very late stage - then the US and its allies will have to abandon their insane demand that President Assad go as a precondition for negotiations, and their equally insane demand that the Russians force him to go . There are some people in the West, like the writer of the article in the Daily Telegraph I attach below (since it is behind a paywall) who appear to understand this. It is far from clear however that US and Western leaders do. Despite some optimistic claims to the contrary, the most Western leaders for the moment seem prepared to concede is that President Assad might remain in power for a few months until power is handed over to those the US has groomed to take over. This is something to which the Russians will never agree, as Putin made clear in his recent interview with Charlie Rose, when he said “At no time in the past, now or in the future has or will Russia take any part in actions aimed at overthrowing (a) legitimate government.”The idea the Russians will shift from this position - or can be bullied or bribed with threats or offers of Syrian bases to do so - is fantastic. It is an idea that has been repeatedly tested over the last four years, and which has repeatedly been proved to be wrong. It is incredible that - judging from the ceaseless Western media refrain that Russia “push” Assad into “negotiations” (ie. force him to go) - so many people in the West still don't grasp this. What the events of the last few weeks show is that the West now has a choice. Either it revises its strategy, and engages meaningfully with the Russians - and President Assad - to find a way out of the Syrian crisis and to defeat the Islamic State, or the Russians will simply follow through the logic of their position and of their recent actions, and press on with their campaign together with their allies until the the Islamic State has been destroyed. That is the objective Putin has declared, and there is no reason to think the Russians will not pursue it until it has been achieved. The forces that are gathering, not just from Russia but also from Iran, Iraq and Lebanon, from within Syria itself, and possibly even from China, are almost certainly enough to achieve it. The US and the West will in that case find themselves sidelined, becoming bystanders with none of their objectives in Syria achieved. If that is the result, then the blame for the humiliation they will suffer will lie in their own intransigence and folly. The “exceptional country”, it will turn out, is not so exceptional after all.
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The following article was first published in the Daily TelegraphFear of the peace: Why Assad is not the main obstacle to a deal on SyriaAlexander Mercouris is a writer on international affairs with a special interest in Russia and law. He has written extensively on the legal aspects of NSA spying and events in Ukraine in terms of human rights, constitutionality and international law. He worked for 12 years in the Royal Courts of Justice in London as a lawyer, specializing in human rights and constitutional law. His family has been prominent in Greek politics for several generations. He is a frequent commentator on television and speaker at conferences. He resides in London. http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article43047.htm |
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