How US Allies Aid Al Qaeda in Syria
The dirty secret about the Obama administration’s
“regime change” strategy in Syria is that it amounts to a de facto
alliance with Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front which is driving toward a
possible victory with direct and indirect aid from Saudi Arabia,
Turkey and Israel, as Daniel Lazare explains.
By Daniel Lazare
When the U.S. and Turkey announced on July 23 that
they were joining forces to establish a “safe zone” in northern
Syria, no one could quite figure out what they meant. With the White
House denying that the deal required it to send in troops to seal
the zone off or warplanes to patrol the skies, Bloomberg’s Josh
Rogin
wrote that the whole thing was misnomer: “In fact, there
is really no ‘zone,’ and there is no plan to keep the area ‘safe.’”
Indeed, Rogin said, three “senior administration
officials” had put together a conference call in order to assure
reporters that there were no plans “for a safe zone, a no-fly zone,
an air-exclusionary zone, a humanitarian buffer zone, or any other
protected zone of any kind.” So if that wasn’t the plan, what on
earth was it?
Now we know. The purpose of the non-zone zone that
Turkey and the U.S. may or may not wish to establish is to give the
former a free hand to bomb the Kurds and the latter an opportunity
to engage in joint operations with Al Qaeda.
The proof? A
front-page article in the Aug. 1 New York Times
reporting that a U.S.-trained rebel unit, known as Division 30,
which had been sent into Syria to combat ISIS, had come “under
intense attack on Friday from a different hardline Islamist faction
… the Nusra Front, which is affiliated with Al Qaeda.”
This is no big news in itself since the Syrian
opposition’s myriad rebel factions, one more hardline than the next,
are constantly battling one another for control of arms, territory,
resources and personnel. But what was new was the fact that the
trainees had been caught off guard.
As The Times’s Anne Bernard and Eric
Schmitt reported: “American military trainers … did not anticipate
an assault from the Nusra Front. In fact, officials said on Friday,
they expected the Nusra Front to welcome Division 30 as an ally in
its fight against the Islamic State. ‘This wasn’t supposed to happen
like this,’ said one former senior American official.”
In other words, Defense Department officials
expected Al Nusra to see Division 30 as friends and were perplexed
when it didn’t. The Americans “had no known plans to fight the Nusra
Front,” the Times went on, adding that, while “allied with
Al Qaeda,” Nusra “is seen by many insurgents in Syria as preferable
to the Islamic State, and it sometimes cooperates with other less
radical groups against both the Islamic State and Syrian government
forces.”
According to the London Independent, a
“distraught” Division 30 commander whom it managed to catch up with
in Turkey said
that he and one of the captured trainees had actually met with an Al
Nusra leader ten days earlier to work out a truce. “They said that
if even one bullet reached them, they would attack us, but we
assured them we were there only to fight Daesh [i.e. ISIS],” he
said.
But even though Division 30 had kept its part of
the bargain, Al Nusra was now beating the captured trainees and
parading them in the hot afternoon sun with their shirts pulled over
their heads while Al Nusra fighters accused them of “collaborat[ing]
with the crusader coalition.”
So when the New York Times
announced that the U.S.-Turkish plan “would create what
officials from both countries are calling an Islamic State-free zone
controlled by relatively moderate Syrian insurgents,” it’s now clear
who those “moderates” are: Al Nusra. The zone would be safe for
U.S.-trained forces, which
numbered only around 60 fighters prior to last week’s attack,
but it would be mainly safe for the much larger and more powerful
Syrian branch of Al Qaeda.
Teaming Up with Al Qaeda?
The U.S. teaming up with Al Qaeda – how can this
be? Although the press doesn’t like to talk about it, there in fact
has hardly been a moment in recent history when the U.S. has not
worked hand in glove with the most dangerous fundamentalist forces.
It goes all the way back to President Dwight
Eisenhower who, as Ian Johnson noted in his excellent book, A
Mosque in Munich (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010), was always
eager “to stress the ‘holy war’ aspect” in his talks with Muslims
leaders according to an internal White House memo and, when informed
that jihad might be directed against Israel, replied that the Saudis
had assured him that it would only be used against the Soviets.
More recently, President Jimmy Carter and National
Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski opted to put the Eisenhower
Doctrine to the test by channeling money and arms to Afghan
mujahedeen battling a Soviet-backed government in Kabul. The effort,
which eventually – under President Ronald Reagan – morphed into a
$20-billion-plus joint operation by the Saudis and CIA, no doubt
contributed to the collapse of the U.S.S.R., Brzezinski’s top
priority.
But it also destroyed Afghan society, paved the
way for the Taliban takeover in 1996, gave rise to Al Qaeda, and, of
course, led directly to the destruction of the World Trade Center in
Lower Manhattan.
The U.S. may have backed off thereafter, although
it continued to maintain close relations with Saudi Arabia, which,
according to Zacarias Moussaoui, the so-called “twentieth hijacker,”
maintained close ties with Osama bin Laden right up to the eve of
9/11. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “The
Secret Saudi Ties to Terrorism.”]
But by 2007, as Seymour Hersh argued not at all
implausibly in
The New Yorker, the Saudis had succeeded in
convincing the Bush administration to concentrate on battling
Shi‘ite forces instead. This meant not only lightening up on Al
Qaeda, but cooperating with increasing militant Sunni groups in
order to pursue the fight against Hezbollah and other such Shi’te
forces.
The consequences have grown more and more evident
ever since the Arab Spring caught up with the Assad family
dictatorship in February 2011. Washington’s pro-Sunni orientation
required that it ignore reports that the radical-Sunni Muslim
Brotherhood was dominating the protests, which were
taking on an ugly and bigoted anti-Shi‘ite and anti-Christian
coloration as the Assads – who are of Shi‘ite origin but
otherwise non-sectarian – struggled to maintain control.
When fighting broke out, the “re-direction,” as
Hersh called it, also required that the U.S. steer money and aid to
Sunni rebels and even that it rely on the Muslim Brotherhood,
according to the Times,
to determine which groups were deserving and which were not.
In order to rein in the Shi‘ites, the U.S. thus
threw its weight behind ultra-Sunni Saudi Arabia and its program of
bloody sectarian warfare. As
Vice President Joe Biden put it at Harvard’s Kennedy School last
October, Saudi Arabia and the gulf states “were so
determined to take down Assad and essentially have a proxy
Sunni-Shia war, what did they do? They poured hundreds of millions
of dollars and tens of thousands of tons of military weapons into
anyone who would fight against Assad except the people who were
being supplied were Al Nusra and Al Qaeda and the extremist elements
of jihadis coming from other parts of the world.”
In August 2012, a Defense Intelligence Agency
noted that Al Qaeda, the Muslim Brotherhood, and assorted
Salafists were “the major forces driving the insurgency in Syria”;
that the Western powers, the gulf states, and the Turks were solidly
behind the uprising; that Al Qaeda was seeking to use the revolt to
unite all Sunnis in a general anti-Shi‘ite jihad; that the holy
warriors were likely to establish “a declared or undeclared Salafist
principality in eastern Syria,” and that “this is exactly what the
supporting powers want, in order to isolate the Syrian regime, which
is considered the strategic depth of the Shia expansion (Iraq and
Iran).”
Although the consequences would be disastrous for
Syria’s Christian, Druze and Alawite-Shi‘ite minorities, the U.S.
went along and the mainstream press supplied the all-important
cover-up.
A Non-Aggression Pact
The non-aggression pact that Defense Department
thought it had hammered out with Al Nusra is the latest step in this
strategy. While the Obama administration claims to be battling ISIS,
its attitude toward the hyper-brutal group is more ambiguous than it
lets on. The U.S. only raised the alarm when ISIS invaded Iraq in
June 2014 and began threatening the American-backed government in
Baghdad.
Before then, the U.S. was content to sit back and
watch while ISIS made life miserable for Assad and the Baathists in
Damascus. Turkey claims to oppose ISIS as well even though it has
allowed Daesh to turn its 550-mile border with Syria into “an
open highway for jihadists from around the world.”
After ISIS bombed a left-wing, pro-Kurdish rally
in the border town of Suruç, killing 32 people and injuring more
than a hundred, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan vowed to get
tough. But instead of ISIS, he got tough with the Kurds,
bombing targets in northern Iraq and southeastern Turkey
associated with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) even
though the PKK, along with its Syrian branch, the Democratic Union
Party (PYD) is one of the few effective anti-ISIS forces in the
field.
As Reuters
observed, “Turkey’s assaults on the PKK have so far been
much heavier than its strikes against Islamic State, fueling
suspicions that its real agenda is keeping Kurdish political and
territorial ambitions in check.”
Indeed, Erdogan’s agenda may be
even more convoluted than that since striking out at the
PKK may serve to undermine the pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party
(HDP), which, after an impressive 13-percent showing in June’s
elections, poses a growing danger to his rule.
Further, Turkey and other U.S. allies in the
region have packaged their attacks on the most effective anti-ISIS
forces as indirect ways to undermine ISIS. Turkey offers the curious
belief that the best way to defeat ISIS is by defeating the Kurds.
Similarly, Saudi Arabia claims the best way to
defeat ISIS is by toppling Assad since his determination to remain
in power is supposedly what fuels Sunni anger, which in turn fuels
the growth of ISIS. This rationale holds that even though Assad’s
Syrian Arab Army is one of the few bulwarks against an ISIS victory,
defeating Assad is suppose to somehow spell doom for ISIS.
Another country that claims to want to see ISIS go
down in flames is Israel, except that whenever it intervenes in the
Syrian civil war, it ends up bombing Assad’s forces and their
Shi’ite allies, including Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Iranian military
advisers.
So, everyone claims to want to defeat ISIS, yet
everyone bombs precisely those forces that are working to stop ISIS.
Of course, the most convoluted agenda of all is that of the U.S. The
Obama administration seems to believe that defeating ISIS is the top
goal, except when it says that priority number one is overthrowing
Assad.
As the Times blandly
puts it with regard to units like Division 30: “The
training [of Division 30 to combat ISIS] is often at cross-purposes
with a covert C.I.A. training program for fighters battling Syrian
security forces. Toppling Mr. Assad was the original goal of the
Syrian revolt, before the Islamic State sprang from its most extreme
Islamist wing.” (However, the actual history of ISIS is that it
emerged from the Sunni resistance to the U.S. invasion and
occupation of Iraq, originally calling itself “Al Qaeda in Iraq”
before joining the war against Assad and taking the name “Islamic
State of Iraq and Syria” or simply the “Islamic State.”)
What’s the Priority?
Based on recent developments, one might ask: is
toppling Assad yesterday’s top goal superseded by today’s top goal
of defeating ISIS – or is it the other way around? Meanwhile, the
U.S. policy is to bomb ISIS whenever possible except when it is
engaged in battle with Syrian government forces, at which point the
U.S. policy is to hold off.
Explained the
Times’s Anne Bernard: “In Syria, a new awkwardness arises. Any
airstrikes against Islamic State militants in and around Palmyra
would probably benefit the forces of President Bashar al-Assad. So
far, United States-led airstrikes in Syria have largely focused on
areas far outside government control, to avoid the perception of
aiding a leader whose ouster President Obama has called for.”
In other words, the U.S. bombs ISIS except when it
might help the most potent force fighting ISIS. Washington is also
at war with Al Nusra – sometimes. In early July, for instance, a
U.S. air strike
killed seven Al Nusra members in Idlib Province in
northern Syria. But America’s neocons disapprove of such strikes
because they may indirectly benefit Assad’s forces.
Neocons were gleeful when a Nusra-led coalition
swept through Idlib in April with support from the U.S.-backed Free
Syrian Army, while the administration remained conspicuously silent
about the large numbers of U.S.-made TOW missiles – almost certainly
supplied by the Saudis – that provided Al Nusra with a critical
edge. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Climbing
into Bed with Al-Qaeda.”]
So the U.S. opposes Al Nusra except when it
supports it. Indeed, just about every player in the Middle East is
busy playing both sides of the fence, which is why ISIS and Al Qaeda
are doing so well.
As Karl Sharro, a Lebanese architect turned
political satirist,
noted: “Obama is an astute strategist. His plan centers
on supporting Kurdish factions as he also supports Turkey which is
now attacking the Kurds while also supporting Saudi Arabia in its
war in Yemen which upsets Iran whom U.S. forces are collaborating
with in fighting ISIS in Iraq as he simultaneously yields to
pressure from allies to weaken Assad in Syria which complicates
things further with Iran which he pacifies by signing the nuclear
deal upsetting America’s traditional friend Israel whose anger is
absorbed with shipments of advanced weapons escalating the arms race
in the region.”
Exactly. It would all be quite funny if the
consequences – 220,000 deaths in Syria, millions more displaced,
plus widespread destruction in Yemen where nightly Saudi air raids
are now in their sixth month – weren’t so tragic.
Daniel Lazare is
the author of several books including The
Frozen Republic: How the Constitution Is Paralyzing Democracy (Harcourt
Brace).