Attack
Against Syria and the Region Speaking Up
By Andre Vltchek
April
18, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Beirut — As the US Tomahawk missiles
were raining on Syria, the entire Middle East
was shaken to its core. Here, even the name
itself – Syria – triggers extremely complex and
often contradictory sets of emotions. To some,
Syria is synonymous
with pride and a determined struggle against
Western imperialism, while others see it as an
uncomfortable reminder of how low their own
rulers and societies have managed to sink,
serving foreign interests and various
neo-colonialist designs.
Many
people are hiding their heads in the sand,
obediently repeating the official Western
narrative, while others are gradually resorting
to the alternative sources of information that
are coming from outlets such as RT Arabic,
Al-Mayadeen and Press TV.
Here in
the Middle East and, in fact, all over the
entire Arab world, feelings towards the Syrian
President Bashar Al-Assad are always ‘strong’;
no one appears to be ‘neutral’. But even the
divisions are often ‘pre-defined’, carved along
pan-Arab versus pro-Western, or Sunni versus
Shi’a lines. It is rarely being mentioned that
the Syrian state is constructed mainly on
secular and socialist principles.
The
recent opportunistic statements by certain badly
informed and biased Western ‘progressive’
intellectuals, calling the Syrian system
“disgraceful” has confused things even further.
*****
Overall, in the countries encircling Syria,
there is very little support among the general
population as well as among the intellectuals,
for the Western assaults on the country,
conducted directly, and indirectly by proxies.
Pro-Western regimes and governments are
currently governing Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey,
and all of them are officially supporting the
Western military actions. So is, naturally,
Israel. The leaders of both Turkey and Israel
would actually like to see more military
actions, and more attacks against one of the
last Arab countries, which is still upholds its
independence.
But ask
the thinkers from all over the region, and the
reaction is near unanimously against the
assaults that are being conducted by the West.
Ms Zeinab
Al-Saffar (Photo: Andre Vltchek)
An
Iraqi educationalist, prominent journalist and
researcher, Ms Zeinab Al-Saffar explained:
I
believe that the attacks against Syria that
we are now witnessing, are a
pre-orchestrated flagrant imperialist
violation of a sovereign state, a flexing of
muscles which is supposed to prove that the
US is still the global power. Why on earth
would the Syrian government perform a
chemical attack knowing that the fingers
would be immediately pointed at it,
consequently thwarting an ongoing political
process? Only fools could buy such
narratives that are reminiscent of the 2003
US-led aggression to destroy the WMDs in
Iraq, which only resulted in the devastation
of Iraq, in the ruining of its people, and
wiping out of its culture.
After
the US missile assault on Syria, the Bolivian
Ambassador to the United Nations, Sacha Llorenti,
lashed out at Trump’s decision, which he defined
as, “an extremely serious violation of
international law.”
Llorenti reminded the Council of February 5th,
2003, when the then US secretary of State Colin
Powell, “came to this room to present to us,
according to his own words, convincing proof
that there were weapons of mass destruction in
Iraq.”
Incirlik
NATO air base in Turkey near Syria (Photo: Andre
Vltchek)
Such
views are not held in Iraq only; I encountered
fairly similar logic and recollection of the
events even in Turkey, from where a well-known
columnist Feryal Çeviköz wrote to me:
The
real question is: “who orchestrated that
chemical attack?” It seems that only the US
could benefit from this chemical assault.
The US had finally found the ‘reason’, the
pretext for its direct attack against Syria.
There were already many similar incidents in
the region and in other parts of the world,
and the screenplay is always the same. It
seems that only the players, the actors keep
changing.
In
Latin America, Russia, China, much of Africa
and, of course, in the neighboring Iran, people
are beginning to see clearly both the pattern
and predictability of the Western foreign
policy.
A young
prominent Iranian researcher, columnist and
filmmaker, Hamed Ghashghavi, gave me his opinion
on the recent developments:
It
seems to me that the US behaves like an
injured wolf that is close to its death, but
before vanishing is trying to hurt others.
The more aggressively the US behaves, the
closer, it appears to be at its end. The
recent attack against Syria, whatever the
reasons and consequences, has symbolically
proven how and why the so-called US Empire
is declining. What the US did is also
sending a strong signal to Iran and its
project of the military base near the Syrian
town of Khmeimim, but it is also a message
to an anti-Trump wing of neocons who have
been accusing him of being too much
‘pro-Putin’ and ‘pro-Assad’.
What is
now clearly detectable in the region is not just
a condemnation of the US and Western actions, it
is also a deep fatigue of having to endure the
same type aggression which brings absolutely
nothing except misery to the people of the
Middle East and the world.
In
Syria, the sentiments are clear. My friend, a
Syrian educator Ms. Fida Bashour summarized it
all, I believe:
I
feel sad and worried. I want this war to
finally stop, no blood any more, I want
peace and to have my safe existence. I don’t
want others to interfere in our life. Why
doesn’t Trump let us live as we want to; why
is he doing this to us?
Andre Vltchek is a philosopher, novelist,
filmmaker and investigative journalist. He has
covered wars and conflicts in dozens of
countries. Three of his latest books are
revolutionary novel
“Aurora”
and two bestselling works of political
non-fiction: “Exposing
Lies Of The Empire”
and “Fighting
Against Western Imperialism”.
View his other books
here.
Andre is making films for teleSUR and Al-Mayadeen.
Watch
Rwanda
Gambit,
his groundbreaking documentary about Rwanda and
DRCongo. After having lived in Latin America,
Africa and Oceania, Vltchek presently resides in
East Asia and the Middle East, and continues to
work around the world. He can be reached through
his website
and his
Twitter.
First published by
NEO
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.