Who’s to Blame for Syria Mess? Putin!
Official Washington’s new “group think” is to blame Russia’s
President Putin for the Syrian crisis, although it was the neocons
and President George W. Bush who started the current Mideast mess by
invading Iraq, the Saudis who funded Al Qaeda, and the Israelis who
plotted “regime change.”
By Robert Parry
September 15, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortiumnews"
- Sen. Lindsey Graham may have been wrong
about pretty much everything related to the Middle East, but at
least he has the honesty to tell Americans that the current
trajectory of the wars in Syria and Iraq will require a U.S.
re-invasion of the region and an open-ended military occupation of
Syria, draining American wealth, killing countless Syrians and
Iraqis, and dooming thousands, if not tens of thousands, of U.S.
troops.
Graham’s grim prognostication of endless war may
be a factor in his poll numbers below one percent, a sign that even
tough-talking Republicans aren’t eager to relive the disastrous Iraq
War. Regarding the mess in Syria, there are, of course, other
options, such as cooperation with Russia and Iran to resist the
gains of the Islamic State and Al Qaeda and a negotiated
power-sharing arrangement in Damascus. But those practical ideas are
still being ruled out.
Official Washington’s “group think” still holds
that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad “must go,” that U.S. diplomats
should simply deliver a “regime change” ultimatum not engage in
serious compromise, and that the U.S. government must obstruct
assistance from Russia and Iran even if doing so risks collapsing
Assad’s secular regime and opening the door to an Al Qaeda/Islamic
State victory.
Of course, if that victory happens, there will be
lots of finger-pointing splitting the blame between President Barack
Obama for not being “tough” enough and Russia’s President Vladimir
Putin who has become something of a blame-magnet for every
geopolitical problem. On Friday, during
a talk at Fort Meade in Maryland, Obama got out front on
assigning fault to Putin.
Obama blamed Putin for not joining in imposing the
U.S.-desired “regime change” on Syria. But Obama’s “Assad must go!”
prescription carries its own risks as should be obvious from the
U.S. experiences in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and Ukraine. Ousting
some designated “bad guy” doesn’t necessarily lead to some “good
guy” taking over.
More often, “regime change” produces bloody chaos
in the target country with extremists filling the vacuum. The idea
that these transitions can be handled with precision is an arrogant
fiction that may be popular during conferences at Washington’s think
tanks, but the scheming doesn’t work out so well on the ground.
And, in building the case against Assad, there’s
been an element of “strategic
communications” – the new catch phrase for the U.S.
government’s mix of psychological operations, propaganda and P.R.
The point is to use and misuse information to manage the perceptions
of the American people and the world’s public to advance
Washington’s strategic goals.
So, although it’s surely true that Syrian security
forces struck back fiercely at times in the brutal civil war, some
of that reporting has been exaggerated, such as the now-discredited
claims that Assad’s forces launched a sarin gas attack against
Damascus suburbs on Aug. 21, 2013. The evidence now suggests that
Islamic extremists carried out a “false flag” operation with the
goal of tricking Obama into bombing the Syrian military, a deception
that almost worked. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “The
Collapsing Syria-Sarin Case.”]
Even earlier, independent examinations of how the
Syrian crisis developed in 2011 reveal that Sunni extremists were
part of the opposition mix from the start, killing Syrian police and
soldiers. That violence, in turn, provoked government retaliation
that further divided Syria and exploited resentments of the Sunni
majority, which has long felt marginalized in a country where
Alawites, Shiites, Christians and secularists are better represented
in the Assad regime. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Hidden
Origins of Syria’s Civil War.”]
An Obvious Solution
The obvious solution would be a power-sharing
arrangement that gives Sunnis more of a say but doesn’t immediately
require Assad, who is viewed as the protector of the minorities, to
step down as a precondition. If Obama opted for that approach, many
of Assad’s Sunni political opponents on the U.S. payroll could be
told to accept such an arrangement or lose their funding. Many if
not all would fall in line. But that requires Obama abandoning his
“Assad must go!” mantra.
So, while Official Washington continues to talk
tough against Assad and Putin, the military situation in Syria
continues to deteriorate with the Islamic State and Al Qaeda’s
affiliate, the Nusra Front, gaining ground, aided by financial and
military support from U.S. regional “allies,” including Turkey,
Saudi Arabia, Qatar and other Sunni-led Persian Gulf states. Israel
also has provided help to the Nusra Front, caring for its wounded
troops along the Golan Heights and bombing pro-government forces
inside Syria.
President Obama may feel that his negotiations
with Iran to constrain its nuclear program – when Israeli leaders
and American neocons favored a bomb-bomb-bombing campaign – have put
him in a political bind where he must placate Israel and Saudi
Arabia, including support for Israeli-Saudi desired “regime change”
in Syria and tolerance of the Saudi-led invasion of Yemen. [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “On
Syria, Incoherence Squared.”]
Privately, I’m told, Obama agreed to — and may
have even encouraged — Putin’s increased support for the Assad
regime, realizing it’s the only real hope of averting a
Sunni-extremist victory. But publicly Obama senses that he can’t
endorse this rational move. Thus, Obama, who has become practiced at
speaking out of multiple sides of his mouth, joined in bashing
Russia – sharing that stage with the usual suspects, including The
New York Times’ editorial page.
In
a lead editorial on Saturday, entitled “Russia’s Risky
Military Moves in Syria,” the Times excoriated Russia and Putin for
trying to save Assad’s government. Though Assad won a multi-party
election in the portions of Syria where balloting was possible in
2014, the Times deems him a “ruthless dictator” and seems to relish
the fact that his “hold on his country is weakening.”
The Times then reprises the “group think” blaming
the Syrian crisis on Putin. “Russia has long been a major enabler of
Mr. Assad, protecting him from criticism and sanctions at the United
Nations Security Council and providing weapons for his army,” the
Times asserts. “But the latest assistance may be expanding Russian
involvement in the conflict to a new and more dangerous level.”
Citing the reported arrival of a Russian military advance team, the
Times wrote: “The Americans say Russia’s intentions are unclear. But
they are so concerned that Secretary of State John Kerry called the
foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, twice this month and warned of a
possible ‘confrontation’ with the United States, if the buildup led
to Russian offensive operations in support of Mr. Assad’s forces
that might hit American trainers or allies.
“The
United States is carrying out airstrikes in Syria against the
Islamic State, which is trying to establish a caliphate in Syria and
Iraq, as well as struggling to train and arm moderate opposition
groups that could secure territory taken from the extremists.”
Double Standards, Squared
In other words, in the bizarre world of elite
American opinion, Russia is engaging in “dangerous” acts when it
assists an internationally recognized government fighting a
terrorist menace, but it is entirely okay for the United States to
engage in unilateral military actions inside Syrian territory
without the government’s approval.
Amid this umbrage over Russia helping the Syrian
government, it also might be noted that the U.S. government
routinely provides military assistance to regimes all over the
world, including military advisers to the embattled U.S.-created
regime in Iraq and sophisticated weapons to nations that carry out
attacks beyond their own borders, such as Israel and Saudi Arabia.
Clearly, the Times believes that what is good for
the U.S. goose is not tolerable for the Russian gander. Indeed, if
Russia’s assistance to the Syrian government leads to a
“confrontation” with U.S. forces or allies, it is Russia that is
held to blame though its forces are there with the Syrian
government’s permission while the U.S. forces and allies aren’t.
The Times also defends the bizarre effort by the
U.S. State Department last week to organize an aerial blockade to
prevent Russia from resupplying the Syrian army. The Times states:
“The United States has asked countries on the
flight path between Russia and Syria to close their airspace to
Russian flights, unless Moscow can prove they aren’t being used to
militarily resupply the Assad regime. Bulgaria has done so, but
Greece, another NATO ally, and Iraq, which is depending on America
to save it from the Islamic State, so far have not. World leaders
should use the United Nations General Assembly meeting this month to
make clear the dangers a Russian buildup would pose for efforts to
end the fighting.”
Given the tragic record of The New York Times and
other mainstream U.S. media outlets promoting disastrous “regime
change” schemes, including President George W. Bush’s invasion of
Iraq in 2003 and President Obama’s bombing campaign in Libya in
2011, you might think the editors would realize that the best-laid
plans of America’s armchair warriors quite often go awry.
And, in this case, the calculation that removing
Assad and installing some Washington-think-tank-approved political
operative will somehow solve Syria’s problems might very well end up
in the collapse of the largely secular government in Damascus and
the bloody arrival of the Islamic State head-choppers and/or Al
Qaeda’s band of terrorism plotters.
With the black flag of Islamic terrorism flying
over the ancient city of Damascus, Sen. Graham’s grim
prognostication of a U.S. military invasion of Syria followed by an
open-ended U.S. occupation may prove prophetic, as the United States
enters its final transformation from a citizens’ republic into an
authoritarian imperial state.
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
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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
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click here.