By Finian Cunningham
October 25, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
From extraordinary
candid admissions made separately by US
President Donald Trump and the New York Times,
there can be no illusion about what American
forces are really deployed in Syria for. It’s an
illegal occupation against the Syrian government
and in particular to deprive the Arab country of
its oil resources.
Subsequently this week it is being
reported that the Pentagon is to deploy
Abrams tanks and other heavy equipment to the
oil fields near Deir Ez-Zor. The troops involved
for such a new deployment would far outnumber
the 1,000 or so soldiers that President Trump
had said were “coming home”.
The oil fields of Syria are located mainly in
the eastern provinces bordering with Iraq. Those
areas (about a third of the country) are the
last-remaining territory still outside of the
control of the government in Damascus. The
Syrian state will need to recover its oil fields
in order to fund the reconstruction of the
nation after nearly eight years of war.
In a tweet last weekend, Trump
stated: “USA soldiers are not in combat or
ceasefire zones. We have secured the Oil [sic].
Bringing soldiers home!”
The president was referring to the dubious
deal he hatched with Turkey last week which
resulted in the US abandoning its Kurdish allies
and unleashing a deadly offensive by Turk forces
against northeast Syria. After incurring much
criticism from both Republicans and Democrats,
as well as military experts and media pundits
for his withdrawal of US troops, Trump is
understandably trying to put a positive spin on
his move.
Hence he is bragging about having defeated
the Islamic State (IS or ISIS) jihadi terror
network “100 per cent” and “bringing soldiers
home”. The latter is an apparent fulfillment of
Trump’s 2016 election promise to “end endless
wars” and return American troops home from
foreign interventions.
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So, what’s that cryptic reference by
Trump about “securing the Oil about?”
Notice too how he used capital O when
writing “Oil”, indicating something
strategic about his reference to Syria’s
resource. Evidently, the purported
defeat of terrorism and bringing troops
home is not the full story. The oil
oozes out between the lines.
A NY Times’
report on Monday sheds more light on that
aspect. Admittedly, the Times is hardly a
reliable source, given its embedded links to US
intelligence agencies and its trenchant
anti-Trump agenda warping almost everything it
publishes. Nevertheless, given that Trump and
the NY Times appear to be consistent here on the
issue suggests that there is indeed substance to
the admission.
The Times quotes an anonymous senior Trump
administration official and Pentagon sources who
say that the president is giving the go-ahead
for a small contingency of American special
forces, perhaps numbering 200, which are to
remain in eastern Syria. That nails the lie that
Trump is pulling all US troops out of Syria. He
is not “bringing soldiers home”, as he keeps
whooping about.
Mark Esper, the US Defense Secretary, also
confirmed to reporters on route to
Afghanistan last weekend that American forces
will transfer to Iraq from Syria and remain near
the Syrian border. Esper said the US military
would be “defending Iraq” and deployed to
prevent a potential resurgence of ISIS. At any
rate, that’s the hackneyed official rationale.
However, on the matter of US special forces
remaining in Syria, the NY Times reports:
“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 senior administration official said on
Sunday.”
That is an astounding admission. Forget about
“fighting terrorists”, the real objective of US
military deployment in Syria is to control the
country’s oil resources which are predominantly
located in the eastern provinces, where the US
had been working in partnership with Syrian
Kurdish militia for the past five years. That
partnership was supposedly in the name of
“defeating ISIS”.
Trump’s cavalier jettisoning of the Kurds in
acquiescence to Turkey’s demand for a military
attack on the Syrian Kurds, which Ankara regards
as terrorists, is a clear demonstration that
Washington’s agenda with the Kurds was never
really about fighting ISIS, but rather it was
about using them as proxies to balkanize Syria’s
territory, in particular the oil-rich eastern
region.
Trump’s self-congratulations about “ending
endless wars” is all disingenuous platitude to
drum up his re-election chances in 2020.
This president has been talking about
withdrawing US troops from Syria for the past
year, yet there are an estimated 1,000 still
remaining there, as well as warplanes. The
Pentagon has built bases and air fields in
eastern and southern Syria near the border with
Iraq. The troops moving out of Syria are taking
up positions in neighboring Iraq from where they
will conduct counterinsurgency operations, no
doubt intended to maraud into Syria when
desired.
Trump has agreed to keep 150 troops at the US
base at Al Tanf in southern Syria, where the
camp is a
training ground for thousands of jihadist
militants known as Maghawir al-Thawra. The
Maghawir al-Thawra are not fighting ISIS, as the
Pentagon claims. They are more accurately just
another proxy for US interests, involved in a
nefarious division of labor along with ISIS and
the Kurds.
The militants out of Al Tanf can be expected
to link up with the 200 US special forces and
perhaps some remnant Kurdish mercenaries
assigned to “block the advance of Syrian
government and Russian forces into the region’s
coveted oil fields,” as the NT Times reports.
This is no doubt what Trump meant when he
alluded to “securing the Oil” in Syria. In that
way, President Trump and the NY Times are
admitting that the real purpose of American
military being in Syria is for imperial
conquest.
A cruel twist is that Syria needs to harness
its oil in order to reconstruct from a war
launched covertly on that nation by the US and
its NATO partners back in 2011. Now, with
sickening vindictiveness, the US seems intent on
preventing Syria utilizing its own vital oil
resources for recovery, by planning an illegal
American military occupation of eastern Syria
indefinitely.
Many astute observers of the eight-year in
Syria always knew that Washington’s agenda was
regime change and that its anti-terror claims
were a fraudulent pretext. Now we have the US
president and America’s leading newspaper owning
up to the criminal occupation of Syrian
territory and a land grab for oil.
Finian Cunningham
has written extensively on international
affairs, with articles published in several
languages. He is a Master’s graduate in
Agricultural Chemistry and worked as a
scientific editor for the Royal Society of
Chemistry, Cambridge, England, before pursuing a
career in newspaper journalism. He is also a
musician and songwriter. For nearly 20 years, he
worked as an editor and writer in major news
media organisations, including The Mirror, Irish
Times and Independent.
This article was originally published by
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