The Day After Damascus Falls
The Saudi-Israeli alliance has gone on the offensive, ramping up a “regime
change” war in Syria and, in effect, promoting a military victory for Al-Qaeda
or its spinoff, the Islamic State. But the consequences of that victory could
toll the final bell for the American Republic, writes Robert Parry.
By Robert ParryApril 29, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortium
News" - If Syrian President Bashar al-Assad meets the
same fate as Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi or Iraq’s Saddam Hussein, much of Official
Washington would rush out to some chic watering hole to celebrate – one more
“bad guy” down, one more “regime change” notch on the belt. But the day after
Damascus falls could mark the beginning of the end for the American Republic.
As Syria would descend into even bloodier chaos – with an
Al-Qaeda affiliate or its more violent spin-off, the Islamic State, the only
real powers left – the first instinct of American politicians and pundits would
be to cast blame, most likely at President Barack Obama for not having
intervened more aggressively earlier.
A favorite myth of Official Washington is that Syrian
“moderates” would have prevailed if only Obama had bombed the Syrian military
and provided sophisticated weapons to the rebels.
Though no such “moderate” rebel movement ever existed – at
least not in any significant numbers – that reality is ignored by all the “smart
people” of Washington. It is simply too good a talking point to surrender. The
truth is that Obama was right when he
told New York Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman in August 2014 that
the notion of a “moderate” rebel force that could achieve much was “always … a
fantasy.”
As much fun as the “who lost Syria” finger-pointing would be,
it would soon give way to the horror of what would likely unfold in Syria with
either Al-Qaeda’s Nusra Front or the spin-off Islamic State in charge – or
possibly a coalition of the two with Al-Qaeda using its new base to plot terror
attacks on the West while the Islamic State engaged in its favorite pastime,
those YouTube decapitations of infidels – Alawites, Shiites, Christians, even
some descendants of the survivors from Turkey’s Armenian genocide a century ago
who fled to Syria for safety.
Such a spectacle would be hard for the world to watch and
there would be demands on President Obama or his successor to “do something.”
But realistic options would be few, with a shattered and scattered Syrian army
no longer a viable force capable of driving the terrorists from power.
The remaining option would be to send in the American
military, perhaps with some European allies, to try to dislodge Al-Qaeda and/or
the Islamic State. But the prospects for success would be slim. The goal of
conquering Syria – and possibly re-conquering much of Iraq as well – would be
costly, bloody and almost certainly futile.
The further diversion of resources and manpower from America’s
domestic needs also would fuel the growing social discontent in major U.S.
cities, like what is now playing out in Baltimore where disaffected
African-American communities are rising up in anger against poverty and the
police brutality that goes with it. A new war in the Middle East would
accelerate America’s descent into bankruptcy and a dystopian police state.
The last embers of the American Republic would fade. In its
place would be endless war and a single-minded devotion to security. The
National Security Agency already has in place the surveillance capabilities to
ensure that any civil resistance could be thwarted.
Can This Fate Be Avoided?
But is there a way to avoid this grim fate? Is there a way to
wind this scenario back to some point before this outcome becomes inevitable?
Can the U.S. political/media system – as corrupt and cavalier as it is – find a
way to avert such a devastating foreign policy disaster?
To do so would require Official Washington to throw off old
dependencies, such as its obeisance to the Israel Lobby, and old habits, such as
its reliance on manipulative PR to control the American people, patterns deeply
engrained in the political process.
At least since the Reagan administration – with its “kick the
Vietnam Syndrome” fascination via “public diplomacy” and “perception management”
– the tendency has been to designate some foreign leader as the latest new
villain and then whip up public hysteria in support of a “regime change.” [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “The
Victory of Perception Management.”]
In the 1980s, we saw the use of these “black hat/white hat”
exaggerations in Nicaragua, where President Ronald Reagan deemed President
Daniel Ortega “the dictator in designer glasses” as Reagan’s propagandists
depicted Sandinista-ruled Nicaragua as a “totalitarian dungeon” and the
CIA-trained Contra “freedom fighters” the “moral equal of the Founding Fathers.”
And, since Ortega and the Sandinistas were surely not the
embodiment of all virtue, it was hard to put Reagan’s black-and-white depiction
into the proper shades of gray. To make the effort opened you to charges of
being a “Sandinista apologist.” Similarly, any negative news about the Contras –
such as their tendencies to rape, murder, torture and smuggle drugs – was
sternly suppressed with offending U.S. journalists targeted for career
retaliation.
The pattern set by Reagan around Nicaragua and other Central
American conflicts became the blueprint for how to carry out these post-Vietnam
War propaganda operations. Afterwards came Panama’s “madman” Manuel Noriega in
1989 and Iraq’s “worse than Hitler” Saddam Hussein in 1990-91. Each American war
was given its own villainous lead actor.
In 2002-03, Hussein was brought back to reprise his
“worse-than-Hitler” role in a post-9/11 sequel. His new evil-doing involved
sharing nuclear weapons and other WMD with Al-Qaeda so the terror group could
inflict even worse havoc on the innocent United States. Anyone who questioned
Official Washington’s WMD “group think” was dismissed as a “Saddam apologist.”
Amid this enforced consensus, there was great joy when the
U.S.-led invasion overthrew Hussein’s government and captured him. “We got him,”
U.S. proconsul Paul Bremer exulted when Hussein was pulled from a “spider hole”
and was soon heading to the gallows.
However, some of the triumphal excitement wore off when the
U.S. occupation forces failed to discover the promised caches of WMD. Hussein’s
ouster also didn’t produce the sunny new day that America’s neocons had promised
for Iraq and the Middle East. Instead, Al-Qaeda, which had not existed under
Hussein’s secular regime, found fertile soil to plant its “Al-Qaeda in Iraq,” a
radical Sunni movement which pioneered a particularly graphic form of terrorist
violence.
That brutality, often directed at Shiites, was met with
brutality in kind from Iraq’s new Shiite leadership, touching off a sectarian
civil war. Meanwhile, the war against the U.S. occupation turned into a messy
struggle between America’s high-tech military and Iraq’s low-tech resistance.
Lessons Unlearned
What Americans should have learned from Iraq was that just
because the neocons and their liberal-interventionist friends identify a foreign
“bad guy” – and then exaggerate his faults – doesn’t mean that his violent
removal is the best idea. It might actually lead to something worse. There is
wisdom in the doctor’s oath, “first, do no harm,” and there’s truth in the old
warning that before you tear down a wall, you should ask why someone built it in
the first place.
However, in the propaganda world of Official Washington, a
different lesson was learned: that it is easy to create designated villains and
no one of importance will dare challenge the wisdom of removing that villain
through another “regime change.”
Instead of the neocons and their liberal helpers being held
accountable and removed from the corridors of power, they entrenched themselves
more deeply inside the U.S. government, mainstream media and big-name think
tanks. They also found new allies among the self-righteous “human rights”
community espousing the theory of “responsibility to protect” or “R2P.”
Despite President Obama’s election – partly driven by the
American people’s revulsion over the neocon excesses during President George W.
Bush’s administration – there was no real purge of the neocons and their
accomplices. Indeed, Obama kept in place Bush’s Defense Secretary Robert Gates
and the neocons’ beloved Gen. David Petraeus while installing neocon-lite
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Around Obama at the White House were
prominent R2Pers such as Samantha Power.
So, although Obama may have personally favored a more
realist-driven foreign policy that would deal with the world as it is, not as
one might dream it to be, he never took control of his own administration,
passively accepting the rise of a new generation of interventionists who
continued depicting designated foreign villains as evil and rejecting any
discouraging word that “regime change” might actually unleash even worse evil.
In 2011, the R2Pers, as the neocons’ junior partners, largely
initiated the U.S.-orchestrated “regime change” in Libya, which starred Muammar
Gaddafi in a returning role as “the world’s most dangerous man.” All the old
terror charges against him were resurrected, including some like the Pam Am 103
bombing over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988 that he very likely didn’t do. But,
again, no one wanted to quibble because that would make you a “Gaddafi
apologist.”
So, to the gleeful delight of Secretary of State Clinton,
Gaddafi was overthrown, captured, beaten, sodomized with a knife, and then
murdered. Clinton made no effort to conceal her glee. “We came, we saw, he
died,” she joked
at the news of his murder (although it was not clear that she knew all the
grisly details at the time).
But Gaddafi’s demise did not bring Nirvana to Libya. Indeed,
Gaddafi’s warning about the need to attack Islamic terrorists operating in
eastern Libya – his military offensive that led to the R2P demand that Obama
intervene militarily to stop Gaddafi – proved to be prophetic.
Extremists grabbed control of much of Libya. They overran the
U.S. consulate in Benghazi, killing the U.S. ambassador and three other U.S.
diplomatic personnel. A civil war has now spread anarchy and mayhem across Libya
and nearby countries.
Libya also now has its own branch of the Islamic State, which
videotaped its beheadings of Coptic Christians along a beach on the
Mediterranean Sea, a sickening sign of what could be expected after a possible
Syrian “regime change” next. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “The
US Hand in Libya’s Tragedy.”]
On to Ukraine
While U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power and
other R2Pers took the lead in provoking the Libyan fiasco, neocon holdovers
demonstrated their own “regime change” skills by turning a pedestrian political
dispute in Ukraine – about how fast to build new economic ties to Europe while
maintaining old ones with Russia – into not only a civil war in Ukraine but a
revival of the Cold War between the United States and Russia.
In the Ukraine case, the neocons made elected President Viktor
Yanukovych wear the black hat with Russian President Vladimir Putin fitted for
even a bigger black hat. So, as Yanukovych and Putin were scripted as the new
“bad guys,” the anti-Yanukovych protesters and rioters at the Maidan square were
made into the white-hatted “good guys.”
Much as with the Sandinistas and the Contras in the 1980s,
this dichotomy required assigning all evil to Yanukovych and Putin while
absolving the Maidan crowd of all sins, including the key role played by
neo-Nazi militias in both the Feb. 22, 2014 coup and the subsequent civil war.
[See Consortiumnews.com’s “Seeing
No Neo-Nazi Militias in Ukraine.”]
As the Ukraine crisis has played out, Official Washington and
the mainstream U.S. news media have consistently placed all blame for the
violence on Yanukovych – lodging the dubious charge that he had snipers kill
both police and protesters on Feb. 20, 2014 – or on Putin – fingering him for
the still-unsolved case of the Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 shoot-down on July
17, 2014.
Evidence that suggests that right-wing Ukrainian elements were
responsible for those pivotal events is sloughed off with anyone daring to
dispute the conventional wisdom deemed a “Putin apologist.” [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “How
Ukraine Commemorates the Holocaust.”]
Meanwhile, starting in 2011, the neocons and the R2Pers were
both active in pushing for the overthrow of Syria’s President Assad, who – like
all the other “bad guys” – has been made into a one-dimensional villain
brutalizing innocent “moderates” who stand for all that is good and right in the
world.
The fact that the anti-Assad opposition has always included
Sunni extremists and terrorists drawing support from Saudi Arabia and other
authoritarian Sunni Persian Gulf states is another inconvenient truth that
usually gets kept out of the mainstream narrative.
Though it’s surely true that both sides in the Syrian civil
war have engaged in atrocities, the neocon-R2P storyline – for much of the civil
war – was to consistently blame Assad and to conveniently absolve the rebels.
Thus, on Aug. 21, 2013, when a mysterious sarin gas attack killed several
hundred people in a Damascus suburb, the rush to judgment blamed Assad’s forces,
despite logic and evidence that it was more likely a provocation by rebel
extremists. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “A
Fact-Resistant ‘Group Think’ on Syria.”]
Though it was less clear in August 2013, it soon became
obvious that the most effective rebel fighters were Al-Qaeda’s Nusra Front and
the Islamic State, which had evolved from the hyper-violent “Al-Qaeda in Iraq”
into the “Islamic State of Iraq and Syria” before adopting the name, “Islamic
State.” By September 2013, many of the U.S.-armed and CIA-trained fighters of
the Free Syrian Army had thrown in their lot with either Nusra Front or Islamic
State. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Syrian
Rebels Embrace Al-Qaeda.”]
No Self-Criticism
But the opinion leaders of Official Washington are not exactly
self-critical when they misread a foreign crisis. To explain why the beloved
Syrian “moderates” joined forces with Al-Qaeda or the Islamic State, the neocons
and the R2Pers blamed Obama for not intervening militarily earlier to achieve
“regime change” against Assad.
In other words, no lessons were learned from the experiences
in Iraq and Libya – that “regime change” is a dangerous strategy that fails to
take into account the complexities of the countries where the United States
decides to overthrow governments.
The same unlearned lesson should have applied to Ukraine, a
strategically important nation to Russia and one in which much of the population
is ethnic Russian. But there neocon Assistant Secretary of State for European
Affairs Victoria Nuland brushed aside the possibility of a costly showdown with
Russia – a conflict that could potentially evolve into a nuclear conflagration –
in order to pursue the “regime change” model.
While Ukraine today remains engulfed in chaos – the same as
“regime change” experiments Iraq and Libya – the most potentially catastrophic
“regime change” could come in Syria. The neocons and the R2Pers – as well as the
mainstream U.S. media – remain set on ousting Assad, a goal also shared by
Israel, Saudi Arabia and other hard-line Sunni states.
For his part, President Obama seems incapable of making the
tough decisions that would avert a Syrian victory by Al-Qaeda and the Islamic
State. That’s because to help salvage the Assad regime – as the preferable
alternative to transforming Syria into the bedlam of “terror central” – would
require cooperating with Iran and Russia, Assad’s two most important backers.
That, in turn, would infuriate the neocons, the R2Pers and the
mainstream media. Obama would face a rebellion across Official Washington, where
the debating points regarding “who lost Syria” are more valuable than taking
realistic actions to protect vital American interests.
Obama would also have to face down both Saudi Arabia and
Israel, something he does not seem capable of doing, especially as he tries to
salvage an international agreement to restrict Iran’s nuclear program to
peaceful purposes only – when Saudi Arabia and Israel want to enlist the U.S.
military in another “regime change” war in Iran.
Indeed, the recent decision by the Saudi-Israeli alliance to
go on the offensive against what it deems Iranian “proxies” is possibly the
major reason why the United States is incapable of taking action to avert what
may be an impending Al-Qaeda/Islamic State victory in Syria. Between Saudi
Arabia’s power over finance and energy and Israel’s political and media clout,
these “strange-bedfellow” allies wield enormous influence over Official
Washington. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Did
Money Seal Israeli-Saudi Alliance?”]
This alliance is now entangling the United States in ancient
Sunni-Shiite rivalries dating back to the Seventh Century. Saudi Arabia, Israel
and their many U.S. backers are gluing black hats on Shiite-ruled Iran and its
allies while adjusting white hats on the Saudi royals and Israel’s Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has unleashed the potent Israel Lobby to get
Official Washington in line.
Israel also has intensified its airstrikes inside Syria,
bombing targets associated with Lebanon’s Hezbollah militia which is supporting
the Assad regime. Israel rationalizes these attacks as designed to prevent
Hezbollah from obtaining sophisticated weaponry but the practical effect is to
weaken the forces battling Al-Qaeda’s Nusra Front and the Islamic State.
Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia, along with Turkey and some Persian
Gulf states, has stepped up support for the Sunni Islamists battling Assad’s
army, thus explaining the recent surge of new recruits and improved fighting
capabilities of the rebels.
Yemen’s Suffering
In another front in this Sunni-Shiite regional war, Saudi
Arabia – deploying sophisticated American warplanes – continues to pummel
neighboring Yemen where Houthi rebels, belonging to a Shiite offshoot, have
gained control of the capital Sanaa and other major cities.
On Tuesday, Saudi jets
bombed Sanaa’s airport to prevent an Iranian humanitarian aid flight
from landing, but the destruction also made the runway unusable for other
supplies desperately needed by the Yemeni people. While the Saudis prevented
this aid from the air, the U.S. Navy has mounted what amounts to a blockade at
sea, turning back nine Iranian ships last weekend because of unconfirmed
suspicions that weapons might be hidden in the food and medicine.
The combination of these interdictions is creating a
humanitarian crisis in Yemen, the poorest nation in the Middle East. The U.S.
Navy, which likes to call itself “a global force for good,” has, in effect, been
drawn into a strategy of starving the Yemeni people into submission as just more
collateral damage in the Saudi war against Iranian influence.
Another consequence of the Saudi air campaign has been to
boost “Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula” which has exploited the Saudi
targeting of Houthi forces to seize more territory in Yemen’s east.
Yet, as tragic as the Yemeni situation is becoming, the more
consequential crisis is emerging in Syria, where some analysts are
seeing signs of a possible collapse of the Assad regime, a chief goal
of the Saudi-Israeli alliance. Senior Israelis have been saying since 2013 that
they would prefer a victory by Al-Qaeda over a victory by Assad.
For instance, in September 2013, Israeli Ambassador to the
United States Michael Oren, then a close adviser to Prime Minister Netanyahu,
told the Jerusalem Post in
an interview: “The greatest danger to Israel is by the strategic arc
that extends from Tehran, to Damascus to Beirut. And we saw the Assad regime as
the keystone in that arc. … We always wanted Bashar Assad to go, we always
preferred the bad guys who weren’t backed by Iran to the bad guys who were
backed by Iran.” He said this was the case even if the “bad guys” were
affiliated with Al-Qaeda.
In June 2014, Oren expanded on this thinking at an Aspen
Institute conference, extending Israel’s preference to include even the
hyper-brutal Islamic State. “From Israel’s perspective, if there’s got to be an
evil that’s got to prevail, let the Sunni evil prevail,” Oren
said.
During Netanyahu’s March 3, 2015 speech to a joint session of
the U.S. Congress, he also downplayed the danger from the Islamic State – with
its “butcher knives, captured weapons and YouTube” – compared to Iran, which he
accused of “gobbling up the nations” of the Middle East. However, Iran has not
gobbled up any nations in the Middle East. It has not invaded any country for
centuries. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Inventing
a Record of Iranian Aggression.”]
Yet, while the Saudi-Israeli alarums about Iran may border on
the hysterical, the alliance’s combined influence over Official Washington
cannot be overstated. Thus, as absurd and outrageous as many of the claims are,
they are not only taken seriously, they are treated as gospel. Anyone who points
to the reality immediately becomes an “Iranian apologist.”
But the power of the Saudi-Israeli alliance is not simply a
political curiosity or an obstacle to sensible policies. As it creates the
conditions for an Al-Qaeda/Islamic State victory in Syria – and the possible
reintroduction of the U.S. military into the middle of the Middle East – the
Saudi-Israeli alliance has become an existential threat to the survival of the
American Republic.
As the nation’s first presidents wisely recognized, there are
grave dangers to a republic when it entangles itself in foreign conflicts. It’s
almost always wiser to seek out realistic albeit imperfect political solutions
or at least to evaluate what the negative ramifications of the military option
might be before undertaking it. Otherwise, as the early presidents realized, if
the country plunges into one costly conflict after another, it becomes a martial
state, not a democratic republic.
Investigative reporter
Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and
Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest book, America’s Stolen
Narrative, either in print
here or as an e-book (from
Amazon
and
barnesandnoble.com).
You also can order Robert Parry’s trilogy on the Bush Family and its connections
to various right-wing operatives for only $34. The trilogy includes
America’s Stolen Narrative. For details on this offer,
click here.