With Aleppo Encircled,
West Seeks Wildcard to Save its Terror
Hordes
By Tony Cartalucci
January 25, 2015 "ICH"
- "NEO"
- The Syrian Arab Army is reportedly close
to completely encircling militants that have
occupied the northern city of Aleppo since
they invaded
it from NATO territory in 2012. Once the
encirclement is complete, analysts believe
the the city will be finally liberated, in a
process similar to the
retaking of Homs further south.
The desperation of militants
facing this final phase in the Battle for
Aleppo is indicated by their Western
sponsors’ attempts to broker a ceasefire and
arrange “aid” to reach them. Similar
attempts were made in vain during the
closing phases in the Battle for Homs in
mid-2014 – with the city of Homs having been
an epicenter of terrorist activity beginning
in 2011, and now under the control of the
Syrian government. Small pockets of
militants have been isolated within Homs,
allowing order to be restored across the
majority of the city and the surrounding
region.
As the Syrian government
systematically regains control of a nation
up-ended by Western-backed terrorists
flooding the country accompanied by a
seemingly inexhaustible torrent of cash,
weapons, and equipment, the desperation of
these Western interests has visibly
increased.
The Guardian, chief among the
many propagandists distorting the conflict
since it began in 2011, is now attempting to
form a narrative extorting global security
by claiming only by NATO establishing a
no-fly-zone over Aleppo and repelling Syrian
government forces, can “moderate rebels”
hold on to the city and repel lingering
“Islamic State” (ISIS) forces.
In a report titled, “Syrian
rebels prepare to defend ruined Aleppo as
troops and militias close in,” the
Guardian claims:
Since then the regime’s
incremental gains have been hard fought,
with most inroads being pushed back by
rebel fighters and locals, both still
reeling from their losses of manpower in
the war with Isis. Meanwhile Isis has
lurked 20 miles away, taunting the
Islamic Front with a radio station it
has set up that regularly plays Islamic
chants insulting the group’s members.
“They were strategic
[losses] for us,” said the Aleppo
commander of the gains by Isis. “And
[yet] the Americans doubt our commitment
to fighting them? When [the US] came
back to Syria, we thought the least they
could do is to stop Assad’s air force
from flying. But they have bombed the
city more than at any time before the
Americans arrived. Of course we believe
they have a deal with the regime. It is
obvious.”
Of course the reality is that
the US has merely used ISIS as a pretext to
violate Syrian airspace, with the next step
being to establish long-planned
no-fly-zones, if possible, to thwart the
Syrian Arab Army. Just as in Libya, the
no-fly-zone would simply hand the rest of
Syria over to ISIS and other Al Qaeda
affiliates – clearly the most dominate
militant force engaged in fighting the
Syrian government, and clearly the
recipients of the vast majority of material
support supplied by NATO and their regional
partners, most notably Saudi Arabia, Qatar,
and Israel.
It should be noted, that
while the Guardian claims the remaining
encircled militants in Aleppo are at odds
with ISIS, the same report admits these same
militants coordinate with US State
Department listed foreign terrorist
organization, Al Nusra. The Guardian would
admit:
The fight for Zahraa, one
of the few Shia enclaves in northern
Syria, is being led by the
al-Qaida-aligned Jabhat al-Nusra, with
whom the Islamic Front have an
understanding but no formal alliance.
After barely holding ground for much of
the past year, al-Nusra recently seized
large chunks of territory near the
Turkish border, reasserting itself as a
power player at the expense of
non-jihadist groups. The fast-changing
dynamic is forcing a new reckoning with
the Islamic Front, which says it has
waited fruitlessly for help from Arab
states that was promised but never
delivered.
These same ISIS forces that
are allegedly at odds with “moderate rebels”
have seen thousands
of so-called “moderates” defecting into
their ranks recently bringing with them
large sums of Western cash and weapons. That
Al Qaeda – both Al Nusra and ISIS – seems to
thrive along the Turkish border indicates
that NATO support is not at all going to
“moderate rebels,” but instead,
intentionally to Al Qaeda, or to moderate
groups NATO knows is working with, or soon
to join Al Qaeda.
With a menace of the its own
creation – perpetuated to this day and
thriving along the borders of NATO, seeking
safe-haven in NATO territory and
receiving an uninterrupted line of supplies
from NATO territory with absolute
impunity – the West seeks to extort from the
world through fear of ISIS’ spread, greater
direct military intervention, up to and
including no-fly-zones, and perhaps more
muscular policies including the carving out
of “safe havens” within which ISIS can stage
larger and more effective military
operations deeper into Syria.
As exposed in 2007 by
two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and veteran
journalist Seymour Hersh in his New Yorker
report titled, “The
Redirection,” the West conspired to
intentionally build up and unleash terrorist
mercenaries affiliated with Al Qaeda across
the Arab World to fight a proxy war against
Iran and its growing arc of influence. US
support was to be laundered through Saudi
Arabia as to maintain a veneer of plausible
deniability and operational
compartmentalization. Clearly, what is
unfolding in Syria today, is the verbatim
manifestation of Hersh’s meticulous, 9-page
report.
To confound this criminal
conspiracy, Syria and its allies must ensure
that the ongoing conflict is exposed as a
terrorist invasion, not a “civil war,” and
that any strategy formulated to combat this
terrorist scourge must include the Syrian
government – demonstrably the most capable
force confronting Al Qaeda in the Levant
since 2011. Thus, the more aid the West and
its regional allies supply this terrorist
front with, the greater support Syria has
upon the global stage to fight it – painting
Western foreign policy into a corner, and
allowing Syrians to finally restore order to
their besieged nation.
Tony Cartalucci,
Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher and
writer, especially for the online magazine“New
Eastern Outlook”.