US War on ISIS a Trojan
Horse
By Ulson Gunnar
March 07, 2015 "ICH"
- "NEO"
- In August of 2013, even as the words came
out of US President Barack Obama’s mouth
regarding an “impending” US military strike
against the Syrian state, the impotence of
American foreign policy loomed over him and
those who wrote his speech for him like an
insurmountable wall. So absurd was
America’s attempt to once again use the
canard of “weapons of mass destruction” to
justify yet another military intervention,
that many believed America’s proxy war in
Syria had finally reached its end.
The counterstroke by Russia
included Syria’s immediate and unconditional
surrendering of its chemical weapons
arsenal, and with that, so evaporated
America’s casus belli.
Few would believe if one told
them then, that in 2015, that same
discredited US would be routinely bombing
Syrian territory and poised to justify the
raising of an entire army of terrorists to
wage war within Syria’s borders, yet that is
precisely what is happening. President Obama
has announced plans to formally increase
military force in Iraq and Syria “against
ISIS,” but of course includes building up
huge armies of “rebels” who by all other
accounts are as bad as ISIS itself (not to
mention prone to joining ISIS’ ranks by the
thousands).
All it took for this
miraculous turn in fortune was the creation
of “ISIS,” and serial provocations committed
by these Hollywood-style villains seemingly
engineered to reinvigorate America’s
justification to militarily intervene more
directly in a war it itself started in Syria
beginning in 2011.
ISIS could not be a more
effective part of America’s plans to
overthrow the Syrian government and destroy
the Syrian state if it had an office at the
Pentagon.
Having failed to achieve any
of its objectives in Syria, it inexplicably
“invaded” Iraq, affording the US military a
means of “easing into” the conflict by first
confronting ISIS in Iraq, then following
them back across the border into Syria. When
this scheme began to lose its impact on
public perception, ISIS first started
executing Western hostages including several
Americans. When the US needed the French on
board, ISIS executed a Frenchman. When the
US needed greater support in Asia, two
Japanese were beheaded. And just ahead of
President Obama’s recent attempt to formally
authorize the use of military force against
“ISIS,” a Jordanian pilot was apparently
burned to death in a cage in an
unprecedented act of barbarity that shocked
even the most apathetic.
The theatrics of ISIS
parallel those seen in a Hollywood
production. This doesn’t mean ISIS didn’t
really burn to death a Jordanian pilot or
behead scores of hostages. But it does mean
that a tremendous amount of resources and
planning were put into each murder, except
apparently, the effect it would have of
rallying the world behind the US and its
otherwise hopelessly stalled efforts to
overturn the government of Syria.
Could ISIS have built a set
specifically to capture dramatic shots like
a flame trail passing the camera on its way
to the doomed Jordanian pilot, planned crane
shots, provided matching uniforms for all
the extras on their diabolical movie set,
but failed to consider the target audience
and how they would react to their
production? Could they have, just by
coincidence, given exactly what the United
States needed to continue its war on Syria
in 2015 when it otherwise had effectively
failed in 2013?
The answer is obviously no.
ISIS’s theatrics were designed specifically
to accomplish this. ISIS itself is a
fictional creation. In reality the legions
of terrorists fighting across the Arab World
under the flag of “ISIS” are the same Al
Qaeda militants the US, Saudi Arabia and
others in an utterly unholy axis have been
backing, arming and exploiting in a variety
of ways for decades.
Just as the “Islamic State”
in Iraq was exposed as a fictional cover for
what was also essentially Al Qaeda (as
reported by the NYT in their article, “Leader
of Al Qaeda group in Iraq was fictional,
U.S. military says“), ISIS too is just
the latest and greatest re-visioning yet.
The fighters are real. Their
atrocities are real. The notion that they’ve
sprung out of the dunes of Syria and Iraq,
picked their weapons from local date trees
and have managed to wage war regionally
against several collective armies is
entirely fantasy. Required to maintain ISIS’
ranks would be billions in constant support.
These are billions ISIS simply cannot
account for from hostage ransoms and black
market oil alone. The only source that could
prop ISIS up for as long as it has allegedly
existed and to the extent it allegedly
exists, is a state or collection of states
intentionally sponsoring the terrorist
enterprise.
Those states are of course
the chief benefactors of ISIS’ atrocities,
and we can clearly see those benefactors are
the US and its partners both in Europe and
in the Middle East. The US would claim that
the threat of ISIS necessitates them to
intervene militarily in Syria (when lies
about WMDs were flatly rejected by the
American and international public). Of
course, before the serial headline
atrocities ISIS committed, the US attempted
to sell this same lie but without affect.
Now that sufficient blood has been split and
the public sufficiently riled, the US is
once again trying to move forward its
agenda.
Don’t be surprised, if the US
manages to succeed, that everything in Syria
is left destroyed except for ISIS. A
Hollywood villain this popular and effective
is surely destined for a sequel in
neighboring Iran or southern Russia,
coincidentally where the US would like to
create strife and carnage the most.
Ulson Gunnar, a New
York-based geopolitical analyst and writer
especially for the online magazine “New
Eastern Outlook”