US troops are staying in Syria to ‘keep the oil’
– and have already killed hundreds over it
Hundreds of American soldiers are remaining in Syria
to occupy its oil reserves and block the Syrian
government from revenue needed for reconstruction.
Trump said openly, “We want to keep the oil.”
By Ben Norton
October 25, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
US President Donald Trump has reassured supporters
that he is “bringing soldiers home” from the
“endless” war in Syria. But that is simply not the
case.
While Trump has ordered a partial withdrawal
of the approximately 1,000 American troops on Syrian
territory — who have been enforcing an illegal
military occupation under international law — US
officials and the president himself have admitted
that some will be staying. And they will remain on
Syrian soil not to ensure to safety of any group of
people, but rather to maintain control over oil and
gas fields.
The US military has already killed hundreds of
Syrians, and possibly even some Russians, precisely
in order to hold on to these Syrian fossil fuel
reserves.
Washington’s obsession with toppling the Syrian
government refuses to die. The United States remains
committed to preventing Damascus from retaking its
own oil, as well as its wheat-producing breadbasket
region, in order to starve the government of revenue
and prevent it from funding reconstruction efforts.
The Washington Post noted in 2018 that the US and
its Kurdish allies were militarily occupying a
massive “30 percent slice of Syria, which is
probably where 90 percent of the pre-war
oil production took place.”
Now, for the first time, Trump has openly
confirmed the imperialist ulterior motives behind
maintaining a US military presence in Syria.
“We
want to keep the oil,” Trump confessed in a
cabinet meeting on October 21. “Maybe we’ll have one
of our big oil companies to go in and do it
properly.”
Three days earlier, the president tweeted, “The
U.S. has secured the Oil.”
Just spoke to President @RTErdogan of Turkey. He told me there was minor sniper and mortar fire that was quickly eliminated. He very much wants the ceasefire, or pause, to work. Likewise, the Kurds want it, and the ultimate solution, to happen. Too bad there wasn’t.....
The
New York Times confirmed the strategy on October
20. Citing a “senior administration official,” the
newspaper reported:
“President Trump
is leaning in favor of a new Pentagon plan to keep a
small contingent of American troops in eastern
Syria, perhaps numbering about 200, to combat the
Islamic State and block the advance of
Syrian government and Russian forces into the
region’s coveted oil fields.
… A side benefit
would be helping the Kurds keep control of
oil fields in the east, the official said.”
Trump then explicitly reiterated this policy in a
White House press briefing on the Syria
withdrawal on October 23.
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“We’ve secured the oil (in Syria), and therefore
a small number of US troops will remain in the area
where they have the oil,” Trump said. “And we’re
going to be protecting it. And we’ll be deciding
what we’re going to do with it in the future.”
Using ISIS as an excuse to occupy Syria’s oil
fields
US Secretary of Defense Mark Esper – the former
vice president of government relations at top
weapons manufacturer Raytheon, before being promoted
by Trump to the head of the Pentagon – revealed the
actual US policy on Syria in a
press conference on the 21st:
“We have troops in
towns in northeast Syria that are located next to
the oil fields. The troops in those towns are not in
the present phase of withdrawal.
… Our
forces will remain in the towns that are located
near the oil fields.”
Esper added that the US military is “maintaining
a combat air patrol above all of our forces on the
ground in Syria.”
Unlike Trump, Esper offered an excuse to justify
the continued US military occupation of Syria’s oil
fields. He insisted that American soldiers remain to
help the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF)
hold on to the resources and prevent ISIS jihadists
from taking them over.
This led mainstream corporate media outlets like
CNN to report, “Defense secretary says some US
troops will temporarily stay in Syria to protect oil
fields from ISIS.”
But any observer who carefully parsed
Esper’s comments during his press conference
would have been able to detect the real goal behind
the prolonged US presence in northeastern Syria. As
Esper said, “A
purpose of those [US] forces, working with the SDF,
is to deny access to those oil fields by ISIS
and others who may benefit from revenues that
could be earned.”
An excerpt from the Pentagon’s
official transcript of the Mark Esper press
conference
“And others who may benefit from their revenues
earned” is a crucial qualifier. In fact, Esper used
this language – “ISIS and others” – two more times
in his presser.
Who exactly Esper meant by “others” is clear: The
US strategy is to prevent Syria’s UN-recognized
government and the Syrian majority that lives under
its control from retaking their own oil fields and
reaping the benefits of their revenue.
US military massacred hundreds to keep control
of Syrian oil fields
This is not just speculation. CNN made it plain
when it
reported the following in an undeniably blunt
passage, citing anonymous US senior military
officials:
“The US military
has long had military advisers embedded with the
Syrian Democratic Forces near the Syrian oil fields
at Deir Ezzoir ever since the area was captured from
ISIS. The loss of those oil fields denied ISIS a
major source of revenue, a one-time source of funds
that has differentiated the organization from other
terror groups.
The oil
fields are assets that have also been long sought
after by Russia and the Assad regime, which is
strapped for cash after years of civil war. Both
Moscow and Damascus hope to use oil revenues to help
rebuild western Syria and solidify the regime’s
hold.
In a bid
to seize the oil fields, Russian mercenaries
attacked the areas, leading to a clash that saw
dozens if not hundreds of Russian mercenaries killed
in US airstrikes, an episode that Trump has
touted as proof he is tough on Russia. That action
helped deter Russian or regime forces from making
similar bids for the oil fields.
The US forces near
the oil fields remain in place and senior military
officials had previously told CNN that they would
likely be among the last to leave Syria.”
CNN thus acknowledged that the US military had
killed up to “hundreds” of Syrian and Russia-backed
fighters seeking to gain access to Syria’s oil
fields. It massacred these fighters not for
humanitarian reasons, but to prevent the Syrian
government from using “oil revenues to help rebuild
western Syria.”
This shockingly direct admission flew in the face
of the popular myth that the US was keeping troops
in Syria to protect Kurds from an assault by NATO
member Turkey.
The CNN report was an apparent reference to the
Battle of Khasham, a little known but important
episode in the eight-year international proxy war on
Syria.
The battle unfolded on February 7, 2018, when the
Syrian military and its allies launched an attack to
try to retake major oil and gas reserves in Syria’s
Deir ez-Zour governorate, which were being occupied
by American troops and their Kurdish proxies.
The Times repeatedly stressed that Deir ez-Zour
is “oil-rich.” And it cited anonymous US officials
who claimed that many of the slaughtered fighters
were Russian nationals from the private military
company the Wagner Group. These unnamed “American
intelligence officials” told the Times that the
alleged Russian fighters were “in Syria to seize oil
and gas fields and protect them on behalf of the
Assad government.”
The Times noted that US special operations forces
from JSOC were working with Kurdish forces at an
outpost next to Syria’s important Conoco gas plant.
The Kurdish-led SDF had seized this facility from
ISIS in 2017 with the help of the US military. The
Wall Street Journal noted at the time that the
“plant is capable of producing nearly
450 tons of gas a day,” and was one of ISIS’
most important sources of funding.
The newspaper added, “The Kurdish-led Syrian
Democratic Forces, backed by U.S.-led coalition
airstrikes, are racing against the regime of
President Bashar al-Assad for territorial gains in
Syria’s east.” The commodities monitoring websites
MarketWatch and
OilPrice.com were closely following the story
and analyzing which forces would take over one of
Syria’s most important gas plants.
Starving Syria of oil and wheat, the basics of
survival
For the Syrian government, regaining control over
its oil and gas reserves in the eastern part of its
territory is crucial to paying for reconstruction
efforts and social programs — especially at a time
when suffocating US and EU sanctions have crippled
the economy, caused
fuel shortages,
and severely hurt Syria’s civilian population.
The US has aimed to prevent Damascus from
retaking profitable territory, starving it of
natural resources from fossil fuels to basic
foodstuffs.
In 2015, then-President Barack Obama deployed US
troops to northeastern Syria on the grounds of
helping the Kurdish militia the People’s Protection
Units (YPG) fight ISIS. What started as several
dozen US special operations forces quickly ballooned
into some 2,000 troops, largely stationed in
northeastern Syria.
As these US soldiers enabled the YPG retake
territory from ISIS, they solidified Washington’s
control over nearly one-third of Syrian sovereign
territory — territory that just so happened to
include 90 percent of Syria’s oil, as well as 70
percent of its wheat.
The US subsequently forced the Kurdish-led YPG to
rebrand as the SDF, and then treated them as
proxies to try to weaken the Syrian government and
its allies Iran and Russia.
In June, Reuters confirmed that Kurdish-led
authorities had agreed to
stop selling wheat to Damascus, after the US
government pressured them to do so.
The Grayzone has reported how the Center for a
New American Security, a leading Democratic Party
foreign policy think tank bankrolled by the US
government and NATO, proposed using the
“wheat weapon” to starve Syria’s civilian population.
A former Pentagon researcher-turned-senior fellow
at the think tank declared openly, “Wheat is a
weapon of great power in this next phase of the
Syrian conflict.” He added, “It can be used to apply
pressure on the Assad regime, and through the regime
on Russia, to force concessions in the UN-led
diplomatic process.”
Donald Trump appeared to echo this strategy in
his October 21 cabinet meeting.
“We want to keep the oil, and we’ll work
something out with the Kurds so that they have some
money, have some cashflow,” he said. “Maybe we’ll
have one of our big oil companies to go in and do it
properly.”
While Trump has pledged to bring US soldiers home
and end their military occupation of Syrian
territory – which is illegal under international law
– it is evident that the broader regime change war
continues.
A brutal economic war on Damascus is escalating,
not only through sanctions but through the theft of
Syria’s natural treasures by foreign powers.
(Editor’s note: This article
was updated after publication, at 2:35 pm EST on
October 23, to include Trump’s White House press
briefing.)
Ben Norton is a journalist,
writer, and filmmaker. He is the assistant editor of
The Grayzone, and the producer of the
Moderate
Rebels podcast, which he co-hosts with editor
Max Blumenthal. His website is
BenNorton.com and
he tweets at @BenjaminNorton.
This article was originally
published by "Gray
Zone"--
Blowback: US-armed ‘moderate rebels’ slaughter Kurds in Syria
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