Despite all evidence to the contrary, the Syrian
Democratic Forces kept their title unquestioned
until the Turks invaded Syria, when they were
suddenly transformed into ‘Kurdish forces’ who had
been betrayed by the Americans. Which, of course,
they always were
By Robert FiskNovember 09, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - That wars end very
differently to our own expectations – or our plans –
was established long ago. That “we” won the Second
World War did not mean the Americans would win the
Vietnam war, or that France would vanquish its
enemies in Algeria. Yet the moment we decide who the
good guys are, and who the evil monsters whom we
must destroy, we relapse again into our old
mistakes.
Because we hate, loathe and demonise
Saddam or
Gaddafi or
Assad, we are sure – we are absolutely
convinced – that they will be dethroned and
that the blue skies of freedom will shine down upon
their broken lands. This is childish, immature,
infantile (although, given the trash we are prepared
to consume over Brexit, it’s not, I suppose, very
surprising).
Well, Saddam’s demise brought upon Iraq the most
unimaginable suffering. So too Gaddafi’s
assassination beside the most famous sewer in Libya.
As for
Bashar al-Assad, far from being overthrown, he
has emerged as the biggest winner of the
Syrian war. Still we insist that he must go.
Still we intend to try Syrian war criminals – and
rightly so – but the Syrian regime has emerged above
the blood-tide of war intact, alive, and with the
most reliable superpower ally any
Middle East state could have: the
Kremlin.
I despise the word “curate”. Everyone seems to be
curating scenarios, curating political
conversations or curating business portfolios. We
seem to be addicted to these awful curio words. But
for once I’m going to use it in real form: those who
curated the story – the narrative – of the Syrian
war, got it all wrong from the start.
Bashar would go. The
Free Syrian Army, supposedly made up of tens of
thousands of Syrian army deserters and the unarmed
demonstrators of Darayya,
Damascus and
Homs, would force the Assad family from power.
And, of course, western-style democracy would break
out, and secularism – which was in fact supposed to
be the foundation of the Baath party – would become
the basis of a new and liberal Arab state. We shall
leave aside for now one of the real reasons for the
west’s support of the rebellion: to destroy
Iran’s only Arab ally.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
We didn’t predict the arrival of
al-Qaeda, now purified with the name of
Nusrah. We did not imagine that the
Isis nightmare would emerge like a
genie from the eastern deserts. Nor did
we understand – nor were we told – how
these Islamist cults could consume the
people’s revolution in which we
believed.
Still today, I am only beginning to learn how
Syria’s “moderate” rebellion turned into the
apocalyptic killing machine of the Islamic State.
Some Islamist groups (not all, by any means, and it
was not a simple transition) were there from the
start. They were in Homs as early as 2012.
This does not mean that Syrian rebels were not
brave, democratically minded figures. But they were
mightily exaggerated in the west. While
David Cameron was fantasising about the 70,000
Free Syrian Army (FSA) “moderates” fighting the
Assad regime – there were never more than perhaps
7,000, at the most – the Syrian army was already
talking to them, sometimes directly by mobile phone,
to persuade them to return to their original
government army units or to abandon a town without
fighting or to swap the bodies of government
soldiers for food. Syrian officers would say that
they always preferred to fight the FSA because they
ran away; Nusrah and Isis did not.
Yet now, today, as we report the results of the
Turkish invasion of northern Syria, we are using a
weird expression for Turkey’s Arab militia allies.
They are called the “Syrian National Army” – as
opposed to the Assad government’s original and still
very extant Syrian Arab Army. Vincent Durac, a
professor in Middle East politics in Dublin, even
wrote last week that these Arab militia allies were
“a creation of Turkey”.
This is nonsense. They are the wreckage of the
original and now utterly discredited Free Syrian
Army – David Cameron’s mythical legions whose
mysterious composition, I recall, was once explained
to British MPs by the gloriously named General
Messenger. Very few reporters (with the honourable
exception of those reporting for Channel 4 News)
have explained this all-important fact of the war,
even though some footage clearly showed the
Turkish-paid militiamen brandishing the old Free
Syrian Army green, white and black flag.
It was this same ex-FSA rabble who entered the
Kurdish enclave of Afrin last year and helped their
Nusrah colleagues loot Kurdish homes and businesses.
The Turks called this violent act of occupation
“Operation Olive Branch”. Even more preposterous,
its latest invasion is named “Operation Peace
Spring”.
There was a time when this would have provoked
ribaldry and contempt. No longer. Today, the media
have largely treated this ridiculous nomenclature
with something approaching respect.
We have been playing the same tricks with the
so-called “American-backed” Syrian Democratic Forces
(SDF). As I’ve said before, almost all the SDF are
Kurds, and they have never been elected, chosen, or
joined the SDF democratically. Indeed there was
nothing at all democratic about the militia, and
its “force” existed only so long as it was supported
by US air power. Yet the Syrian Democratic
Forces kept their title unscathed and largely
unquestioned by the media.
But when the Turks invaded Syria, to drive them
from the Syrian-Turkish border, they were suddenly
transformed by us into “Kurdish forces” – which they
largely were – who had been betrayed by the
Americans – which they very definitely were.
An irony, which is either forgotten or simply
unknown, is that when fighting began in Aleppo in
2012, the Kurds helped the FSA grab several areas of
the city. The two were fighting each other seven
years later when the Turks invaded the
“free” Kurdish borderland of Rojava. Even less
advertised was the fact that the Turkish-FSA advance
into Syria allowed thousands of Arab Syrian
villagers to return to homes taken over by the Kurds
when they set up their doomed statelet after the war
began.
But the narrative of this war is now being
further skewed by our suspension of any critical
understanding of Saudi Arabia’s new role in the
Syrian debacle.
Deny and deny and deny is the Saudi policy, when
asked what assistance it gave to the anti-Assad
Islamist rebels in Syria. Even when I found Bosnian
weapons documents in a Nusrah base in Aleppo, signed
off by an arms manufacturer near Sarajevo called
Ifet Krnjic – and even when I tracked down Krnjic
himself, who explained how the weapons had been sent
to Saudi Arabia (he even described the Saudi
officials whom he spoke to in his factory) – the
Saudis denied the facts.
Yet today, almost incredibly, it seems the Saudis
themselves are now contemplating an entirely new
approach to Syria. Already their United Arab
Emirates allies in the Yemeni war (another Saudi
catastrophe) have reopened their embassy in
Damascus: a highly significant decision by the Gulf
state, although largely ignored in the west. Now, it
seems, the Saudis are thinking of strengthening
their cooperation with
Russia by financing, along with the Emiratis and
perhaps also Kuwait, the reconstruction of Syria.
Thus the Saudis would become more important to
the Syrian regime than sanctions-cracked Iran, and
would perhaps forestall Qatar’s own increasingly
warm – if very discreet – relations with Bashar
al-Assad. The Qataris, despite their Al-Jazeera
worldwide empire, want to expand their power over
real, physical land; and Syria is an obvious target
for their generosity and wealth. But if the Saudis
decided to take on this onerous role, the kingdom
would at one and the same time muscle both Iran and
Qatar aside. Or so it believes. The Syrians – whose
principle policy in such times is to wait, and wait,
and wait – will, of course, decide how to play with
their neighbours’ ambitions.
But Saudi interest in Syria is not merely
conjecture.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman remarked to
Time magazine in August last year that “Bashar
is going to stay. But I believe that Bashar’s
interest is not to let the Iranians do whatever they
want to do.” The Syrians and the Bahrainis are
talking regularly about the post-war Levant. The
Emirates might even negotiate between the Saudis and
the Syrians. The Gulf states are now saying that it
was a mistake to suspend Syria’s membership of the
Arab League.
In other words, Syria – with Russian
encouragement – is steadily resuming the role it
maintained before the 2011 revolt.
This wasn’t what we in the west imagined then,
when our ambassadors in Damascus were encouraging
the Syrian street demonstrators to keep up their
struggle against the regime; indeed, when they
specifically told the protestors not even to talk or
negotiate with the Assad government.
But those were in the days before two crazed
elements emerged to smash all our assumptions,
sowing fear and distrust across the Middle East:
Donald Trump and Isis.
This article was originally published by "The
Independent" - -
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