By
Philip Giraldi
Joe Biden is
continuing down the path that be gan
with George W. Bush, with military
action used as a substitute for any
real foreign policy.
July I5, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" -
- "SCF"
-In less than six months in office
President Joe Biden has already developed a
national security policy that appears to
lean strongly towards proactive use of
military force in questionable
circumstances, as if war is the answer to
every problem. Biden should nevertheless be
applauded for his persistence in withdrawing
from Afghanistan after twenty years of
ill-considered nation building, but even the
departure from that country appears to be
characterized by a lack of coordination,
rather reminiscent of helicopters taking off
from the embassy roof in Saigon in 1975.
For the second time the president has
ordered a US bombing raid on two targets
in Syria, and for the first time, he also
attacked a site inside Iraq. According to
one report possibly as many as seven
Iraqis died in the attacks which targeted
alleged weapons storage facilities along the
Syria-Iraq border belonging to Kata’ib
Hezbollah and Kata’ib Sayyid al-Shuhada
militias. The US claims that the two Iraqi
militias have ties to Iran, which may be
more than usually true because the Iraqis
and Iranians have cooperated regularly in
the fight against the Islamic State in Syria
(ISIS). The Pentagon also claims that the
militias were behind recent attacks on
American targets, see more below.
After the attacks carried out by US
fighter-bombers, the
excuse provided was the same one
employed after Biden’s first
air attack in February, namely that the
US, as described by
Pentagon spokesman John Kirby,
“conducted defensive precision airstrikes
against facilities used by Iran-backed
militia groups in the Iraq-Syria border
region.” He added verbiage what has now
become a regular feature of all US military
actions, that “the United States acted
pursuant to its right of self-defense.” For
those who are intrigued by Pentagon newspeak
the expression “defensive precision
airstrikes” must be considered as a new
entry in the crowded field of phrases that
largely have no meaning.
No Advertising - No Government Grants - This Is
Independent Media
The strikes were framed as being
retaliatory, but the most interesting aspect
of this latest bombing is that the initial
US government justifications for the action
were on somewhat tentative. Reportedly,
someone had used drones with explosives
attached for mostly night-time attacks
directed “against places where Americans
were located in Iraq,” which were further
described as including diplomatic,
intelligence and military facilities. The
Pentagon refers to the drones as “unmanned
aerial vehicles” or UAVs. No Americans were
killed in the alleged attacks and there were
no reports of any substantial damage, though
the Pentagon is apparently collecting
information and preparing a comprehensive
report which the public undoubtedly will not
be allowed to see.
Oddly, the initial media reporting on
what had occurred and who had been blamed
for it included a weasel word, “suspected.”
In government-speak that frequently means
there was little or no evidence that the
militias that had been targeted were
actually the perpetrators, but it is
convenient to assume that they are
responsible, making them “suspects.” After
all, it is relatively easy to transport a
number of drones on the bed of a pickup
truck, drive with it to a location where one
is unlikely to be observed and then release
them at a fixed target. Even if you don’t
hit anything, you will spread fear and
trigger a response that might well be
exploited to vilify the occupying forces.
You will also provide justification for your
own retaliation.
The Iraqi government, which was not
informed in advance of the US bombings, not
surprisingly reacted strongly, registering
its opposition to such activity on the part
of its so-called ally, though occupier has
been suggested as a more appropriate
description. Prime Minister Mustafa
al-Kadhimi’s office
called the airstrikes a “blatant and
unacceptable violation of Iraqi sovereignty
and Iraqi national security.” After the
assassination of General Qasem Soleimani at
Baghdad Airport in January 2020, the Iraqi
Parliament had called for the departure of
all US forces, but the Trump Administration
ignored the demand, claiming that it was in
Iraq to help the Iraqis in their fight
against ISIS and other terrorist groups.
The US currently has a claimed 2,500
soldiers in Iraq who, it asserts, are in
country advising and training their local
counterparts. Meanwhile, “Fighting
terrorists and training friendly forces” is
roughly the same excuse that has been used
to justify remaining in neighboring Syria,
where the US has deployed
roughly 500 soldiers who have been
taking possession of the production of the
country’s oil fields, which it then provides
to Israel. The US is also, by the way,
trying to overthrow the legitimate Syrian
government in Damascus, using some of the
very terrorists it claims to be fighting to
do the job, but that is of course another
story.
If the United States government is
beginning to sound a bit like the Israeli
government that should surprise no one, as
Israel is clearly heavily involved in
whatever on goes vis-à-vis Syria and Iran
directly and in Iraq by proxy. One almost
expects new Israeli Prime Minister Naftali
Bennett to provide an endorsement, parroting
the Pentagon line as well as his own
country’s rhetoric, saying “the US has a
right to defend itself.” Of course, the
unasked question then becomes “to defend
itself against what?” Israel was at least
able to pretend that there was some kind of
threat coming from Gaza since the two share
a border, but the United States would be
hard pressed to explain why it has soldiers
in Syria and Iraq at all, particularly since
the Iraqi government has called upon them to
depart.
A neocon journalist supportive of a
global crusade to spread “democracy” once
quipped that the nice thing about having an
empire is never having to say you are sorry,
but that has not meant that mindless acts of
violence inflicted throughout the Middle
East are have been consequence free. One has
to suspect in this case that the use of
force to include a target within the borders
of a nominal ally was also mostly intended
to send a signal to Iran. A Pentagon
spokesman ironically boasted afterwards that
“This action should send a message to Iran
that it cannot hide behind its proxy forces
to attack the United States and our Iraqi
partners.” The spokesman appears to be
oblivious to the fact that it was Iraqi
militiamen tied to the government that had
been killed, not Iranians. And his
assumption that it would reduce the level of
violence also proved wrong as there
have been a number of new drone, rocket
and mortar attacks against American targets
in Iraq since Biden’s “defensive precision
airstrikes” were launched. One of the
militias that lost fighters to the US
airstrikes,
said it would “avenge the blood of our
righteous martyrs.” Another Iranian
supported group, the Popular Mobilization
Forces went further,
threatening to “enter an open war with
the American occupation.” In short, all the
attacks really accomplished was to anger the
Iraqi people over the continued US presence
and to guarantee more incidents.
Biden’s “sending a message to Iran” would
undoubtedly be intended to do the same to
the Iraqi government, telling them that
drawing any closer to the Iranians is too
close as far as the Pentagon and White House
are concerned. In terms of the timing of the
airstrikes, it is also important to note
that the US has been working closely with
the new Israeli government to establish a
unified policy on Iranian “regional
aggression” and its nuclear program. Biden
met recently with retiring Israeli President
Reuven Rivlin at the White House and
Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken has
been having discussions with Israel’s
foreign minister, Yair Lapid. Iran was the
focus of both meetings.
So, Joe Biden and whoever is advising him
are continuing down the path that began with
George W. Bush, with military action used as
a substitute for any real foreign policy.
The problem with the meddling in the Middle
East is primarily that it permits no exit
strategy. It will end ignominiously when it
ends as is happening in Afghanistan, without
any remorse and little to show for all the
expense and the deaths. Given that reality,
rather than concoct largely fabricated
reasons to keep US troops in Iraq and Syria
the Administration should be looking for
ways to end the torment for everyone
involved.