The Hope Behind Putin’s Syria Help
By Ray McGovernOctober 04, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortiumnews"
- Russia’s airstrikes on rebel strongholds in Syria, now in their
fifth day, are a game-changer. To borrow an aphorism from
philosopher Yogi Berra, “The future ain’t what it used to be.” Yogi
also warned, “It’s tough to make predictions, especially about the
future.”
What follows, then, will focus primarily on how
and why the violence in Syria has reached this week’s crescendo, the
magnitude of the tipping point reached with direct Russian military
intervention in support of Syria’s government, and the
self-inflicted dilemma confronting President Barack Obama and his
hapless advisers who have been demanding “regime change” in Syria as
the panacea to the bloody conflict.
Think of this piece as an attempted antidote to
the adolescent
analysis by Steven Lee Myers front-paged in Sunday’s New
York Times, and, for that matter, much else that’s been written
about Syria in the Times and other mainstream U.S. news outlets.
Many articles, in accusing Russian President Vladimir Putin of bad
faith, have willfully misrepresented his vow to strike at all
“terrorist groups” as meaning only the Islamic State as if Al
Qaeda’s Nusra Front and other violent extremists don’t qualify as
“terrorists.”
However, if Washington finally decides to face the
real world – not remain in the land of make-believe that stretches
from the White House and State Department through the neocon-dominated
think tanks to the editorial pages of the mainstream media – it will
confront a classic “devil-you-know” dilemma.
Does Washington really think that Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad, as demonized as he has been as a key player in a
conflict blamed for killing more than 250,000, is worse than the
beheaders of the Islamic State or the global-terrorism plotters of
Al Qaeda? Does President Obama really think that some surgical
“regime change” in Damascus can be executed without collapsing the
Syrian government and clearing the way for an Islamic State/Al Qaeda
victory? Is that a gamble worth taking?
President Obama needs to ask those questions to
the State Department’s neocons and liberal interventionists emplaced
by former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who – like Israel’s
leaders – positively lust for Assad’s demise. “Regime change” in
Syria has been on the Israeli/neocon to-do list since at least the
mid-1990s and the neocon idea last decade was that Assad’s overthrow
would immediately follow the Iraq “regime change” in 2003, except
the Iraq scheme didn’t work out exactly as planned.
But there may be some reason to hope. After all,
Obama showed courage in overcoming the strong resistance of the
neocons to the recent nuclear deal with Iran. So, he may have the
intelligence and stamina to face them down again, although you
wouldn’t know it from his recent rhetoric, which panders to the war
hawks’ arguments even as he resists their most dangerous action
plans.
At his
news conference on Friday, Obama said, “in my discussions
with President Putin, I was very clear that the only way to solve
the problem in Syria is to have a political transition that is
inclusive — that keeps the state intact, that keeps the military
intact, that maintains cohesion, but that is inclusive — and the
only way to accomplish that is for Mr. Assad to transition [out],
because you cannot rehabilitate him in the eyes of Syrians. This is
not a judgment I’m making; it is a judgment that the overwhelming
majority of Syrians make.”
But Obama did not explain how he knew what “the
overwhelming majority of Syrians” want. Many Syrians – especially
the Christians, Alawites, Shiites and secular Sunnis – appear to see
Assad and his military as their protectors, the last bulwark against
the horror of a victory by the Islamic State or Al Qaeda’s Nusra
Front, which is a major player in the so-called “Army of Conquest,”
as both groups make major gains across Syria.
Obama’s cavalier notion, as expressed at the news
conference, that “regime changes” are neat and tidy, easily
performed without unintended consequences, suggests a sophomoric
understanding of the world that is stunning for a U.S. president in
office for more than 6 ½ years, especially since he adopted a
similar approach toward Libya, which now has descended into violent
anarchy.
Obama must realize that the alternative to Assad
is both risky and grim – and some of the suggestions coming from
presidential candidate Clinton and other hawks for a U.S. imposition
of a “no-fly zone” over parts of Syria would not only be a clear
violation of international law but could create a direct military
clash with nuclear-armed Russia. This time, the President may have
to get down off his high horse and substitute a reality-based
foreign policy for his rhetorical flourishes.
Yet, it is an open question whether Obama has
become captive to his own propaganda, such as his obsession with
Syria’s use of “barrel bombs” in attacking rebel strongholds, as if
this crude home-made weapon were some uniquely cruel device unlike
the hundreds of thousands of tons of high explosives that the United
States has dropped on Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan and other countries
in the last dozen years.
Does Obama really think that his “humanitarian”
bombs – and those given to U.S. “allies” such as Saudi Arabia and
Israel – don’t kill innocents? In just the past week, a Saudi
airstrike inside Yemen reportedly killed some 131 people at a
wedding and an apparent U.S. attack in Kunduz, Afghanistan, blasted
a hospital run by Doctors Without Borders, killing at least 19
people.
(By contrast, too, The New York Times treated the
Kunduz atrocity gingerly, with the cautious headline, “US Is Blamed
After Bombs Hit Afghan Hospital,” noting that Defense Secretary
Ashton Carter extended his “thoughts and prayers to everyone
afflicted” and added that a full investigation is under way in
coordination with Afghanistan’s government to “determine exactly
what happened.” Surely, we can expect the slaughter to be dismissed
as some unavoidable “accident” or a justifiable case of “collateral
damage.”)
With Obama, one cannot exclude the possibility
that he has become so infatuated with his soaring words that he
actually believes what he told the West Point graduating class on
May 28, 2014; but if he does, someone needs to give him a quick
reality check. He told the graduates:
“In fact, by most measures, America has rarely
been stronger relative to the rest of the world. Those who argue
otherwise … are either misreading history or engaged in partisan
politics. … So the United States is and remains the one
indispensable nation. That has been true for the century passed and
it will be true for the century to come.”
How We Got Here
The world could have taken a very different
direction after the fall of the Berlin Wall in November 1989, the
evaporation of the Warsaw Pact in February 1991, and the breakup of
the Soviet Union in December 1991. Those developments left the
United States in a virtually unchallenged position of power — and
wise leaders might have seized the opportunity to wind down the
world’s excessive investment in military hardware and war-like
solutions.
But the U.S. government chose a different course,
one of “permanent” global hegemony with American troops as the
world’s “armed-up” policemen. Gulf War I, led by the United States
in January-February 1991 to punish Iraq for invading Kuwait the
previous summer, injected steroids into leading arrogant neocons
like Paul Wolfowitz – already awash in hubris.
Shortly after that war, Gen. Wesley Clark recalled
Wolfowitz (then Undersecretary of Defense for Policy) explaining the
thinking: “We learned [from Gulf War I] that we can use our military
in the region, in the Middle East, and the Soviets won’t stop us.
And we’ve got about five or ten years to clean up those old Soviet
client regimes – Syria, Iran, Iraq before the next great superpower
comes on to challenge us.”
Clark highlighted this comment in an Oct. 3, 2007
speech, apparently thinking this might somehow enhance his
credentials as a contender for the Democratic presidential
nomination (see this highly instructive
eight-minute excerpt).
Clark added that neocons like Bill Kristol and
Richard Perle “could hardly wait to finish Iraq so they could move
into Syria. … It was a policy coup. … Wolfowitz, [Vice President
Dick] Cheney, [Defense Secretary Donald] Rumsfeld, and you could
name a half-dozen other collaborators from the
Project for a New American Century. They wanted us to
destabilize the Middle East, turn it upside down, make it under our
control.” [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Neocon
‘Chaos Promotion’ in the Mideast.”]
The ideology of the Project for the New American
Century (PNAC) was summarized in a 90-page report published in 2000
and titled, Rebuilding America’s Defenses: Strategies, Forces,
and Resources For a New Century, which advocated a Pax
Americana enforced by the “preeminence of U.S. military forces.”
The report emphasized that the fall of the Soviet
Union left the U.S. the world’s preeminent superpower, adding that
the U.S. must work hard, not only to maintain that position, but to
spread its military might into geographic areas that are
ideologically opposed to its influence, subduing countries that may
stand in the way of U.S. global preeminence.
PNAC’s dogma, in turn, had antecedents in “A
Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the Realm,” a study
written in 1996 for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as he
was running for the election of his first government. That study was
chaired by arch-neocon Richard Perle, who later served as Chair of
Defense Secretary Rumsfeld’s Defense Policy Board (2001-2003); the
majority of the study contributors were also prominent American
neocons.
Here’s what Perle and associates, many of whom
later found influential posts in the Bush/Cheney administration, had
to say on Syria: “Given the nature of the regime in Damascus, it is
both natural and moral that Israel abandon the slogan ‘comprehensive
peace’ and move to contain Syria, drawing attention to its weapons
of mass destruction program [sic], and rejecting ‘land for peace’
deals on the Golan Heights. …
“Israel can shape its strategic environment, in
cooperation with Turkey and Jordan, by weakening, containing, and
even rolling back Syria. This effort can focus on removing Saddam
Hussein from power in Iraq – an important Israeli strategic
objective in its own right – as a means of foiling Syria’s regional
ambitions.”
Why Won’t Assad Do What He’s Told?
Given the hangover from the neocon binge during
the Bush/Cheney years, one might say that President Obama was “under
the influence” when he began calling for Assad to “step aside” in
August 2011. Then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton chimed in, too,
telling ABC, “Assad must go – the sooner the better for
everyone concerned.”
The violence in 2011 was the catalyst for the
civil war – as Assad’s forces cracked down on an “Arab Spring”
uprising that while largely peaceful included extremist
elements who killed police and ambushed troops. But the repeated
unconditional-surrender demands from Secretary Clinton and other
U.S. leaders that “Assad must go,” plus “covert” U.S. support for
rebels fighting against Syrian government forces, surely raised
expectations that Assad would bow out, making the capture of
Damascus a promising prize for a variety of Sunni militants.
Particularly pathetic has been Washington’s
benighted, keystone-cops support for so-called “moderate” rebels –
an embarrassing fiasco if there ever was one. For a while, the
“mainstream media” actually was taking note of this disaster within
a disaster, after the Pentagon recently acknowledged that its $500
million project had produced only four or five fighters still in the
field.
Even earlier, President Obama recognized the
fallacy in this approach. In August 2014, he
told New York Times’ columnist Thomas Friedman that trust
in rebel “moderates” was a “fantasy” that was “never in the cards”
as a workable strategy. But Obama bent to political and media
pressure to “do something.”
As journalist Robert Parry
pointed out, “Official Washington’s most treasured
‘fantasy’ … is the notion that a viable ‘moderate opposition’ exists
in Syria or could somehow be created. That wish-upon-a-star belief
was the centerpiece of congressional [approval in September 2014 of]
a $500 million plan by President Barack Obama to train and arm these
‘moderate’ rebels.”
Even Pentagon-friend Anthony Cordesman of the
Center for Strategic and International Studies recently
conceded that “what is very clearly not happening is
there has not been any meaningful military action or success on the
part of any of the rebels that we have trained.”
Cordesman described the state of play in Syria as
“convoluted,” noting that “In addition to Iran’s involvement in the
conflict, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Turkey have all sponsored armed
groups in Syria, making it a surreal proxy playground, even by
Middle East standards.”
Yet, this past week, the “moderate” Syrian rebels
sprang back to prominence, at least in the mainstream U.S. media,
when Russian planes began bombing targets associated with the Army
of Conquest, a coalition which is dominated by Al Qaeda’s Nusra
Front. This militant coalition suddenly was redefined as “moderate,”
as part of the argument that Russia should only be attacking Islamic
State targets.
The U.S. media also has downplayed where the
Islamic State (also known as ISIS, ISIL or Daesh) came from. It was
an outgrowth of the Sunni resistance to the U.S. invasion of Iraq in
2003 when the group was known as “Al Qaeda in Iraq.” It later
splintered off from Al Qaeda over a tactical dispute, whether a
fundamentalist Sunni caliphate should be started now (the ISIS view)
or whether the focus should be on mounting terror attacks against
the West (Al Qaeda’s view.)
Putin Chides US Failures
Putin reminded the world of this embarrassing
history – and other damaging consequences of U.S. interventionism –
during his Sept. 28 speech to the UN General Assembly when he noted:
“The so-called Islamic State has tens of thousands of militants
fighting for it, including former Iraqi soldiers who were left on
the street after the 2003 invasion.
“Many recruits come from Libya whose statehood was
destroyed as a result of a gross violation of UN Security Council
Resolution 1973. And now radical groups are joined by members of the
so-called ‘moderate’ Syrian opposition backed by the West. They get
weapons and training, and then they defect and join the so-called
Islamic State. …
“I’d like to tell those who engage in this:
Gentlemen, the people you are dealing with are cruel but they are
not dumb. They are as smart as you are. So, it’s a big question:
who’s playing whom here? The recent incident where the most
‘moderate’ opposition group handed over their weapons to terrorists
is a vivid example of that.”
The UN speech was not the first time Putin
complained about the way U.S. officials have presented the factual
circumstances of the Syrian conflict. On Sept. 5, 2013, he publicly
accused Secretary of State John Kerry of lying to Congress in
exaggerating the strength of “moderate” rebels in Syria.
Alluding to Kerry’s congressional testimony, Putin
said: “This was very unpleasant and surprising for me. We talk to
them [the Americans], and we assume they are decent people, but he
is lying and he knows that he is lying. This is sad.” [See
Consortiumnews.com’s “Rebuilding
the Obama-Putin Trust.”]
But the pretense continues. Obama knows only too
well the sorry state of the handful of intrepid “moderates” that may
still be operating within Syria. By the same token, he does not need
Putin to tell him of the danger from ISIS or Al Qaeda if these Sunni
extremists (either separately or together) march into Damascus.
So the question becomes: Will Obama bring himself
to see Soviet military intervention as a positive step toward
stabilizing Syria and creating the chance for a political settlement
or will he cling to the “Assad must go” precondition, rejecting
Russia’s help and risking an ISIS/Al Qaeda victory?
This Time the Russians Can Stop Us
There is another element here, creating an even
graver risk. It is no longer 1991 when the triumphant neocons
brushed aside hopes for global military de-escalation and instead
pressed for worldwide U.S. military dominance. Under Putin, Russia
has made clear that it will no longer sit back and let U.S. and NATO
tighten a vise around Russia’s borders.
Regarding its “front yard” in Ukraine, Putin
has sharply admonished those in the West who “want the
Ukrainian government to destroy … all political opponents and
adversaries [in eastern Ukraine]. Is that what you want? That’s not
what we want and we won’t allow that to happen.”
Putin’s deployment of aircraft and other arms to
Assad reflects a similar attitude toward events in Syria, which
Russia considers part of its backyard. The message is clear:
“Overthrow Assad with the prospect of a terrorist victory? We won’t
allow that to happen.”
The risk here, however, is that the American
neocons and liberal interventionists remain drunk on their dreams of
a permanent U.S. global hegemony that doesn’t broach any rivalry
from Russia, China or any other potential challenger to America’s
“full-spectrum dominance.” If these war hawks don’t sober up – and
if Obama remains their reluctant enabler – the chances that the
crises in Ukraine or Syria could escalate into a nuclear showdown
cannot be ignored.
Thus, Russia’s move last week was truly a
game-changer; and Putin is no longer playing games. One can only
hope Obama can break free from the belligerent neocons and liberal
war hawks. [For more on this topic, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Obama
Tolerates the Warmongers.”]
Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, a
publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city
Washington. He is a 30-year veteran of the CIA and Army intelligence
and co-founder of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
(VIPS). McGovern served for considerable periods in all four of
CIA’s main directorates.