November 10, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "RT"
- In the aftermath of the Russian airplane crash in Egypt last
week, Britain in particular has been quick to claim that the
crash was the result of a “terrorist bomb,” presumably planted
by Islamic State (previously ISIS/ISIL). So what is it that
makes Cameron so sure that the terrorist group created by his
Syria policy has the necessary training, equipment and
wherewithal to carry out that attack? Did he look at the
receipt?What is clear is that if the
plane was brought down by a bomb, and that bomb was planted by
ISIS, it marks a major development for the group.
According to Raffaello Pantucci, of the Royal
United Services Institute, an attack of this kind by ISIS would
“herald an unseen level of sophistication in their
bomb-making, as well as the ability to smuggle a device on board.”
But as well as a new technical feat, such an
attack would represent an alarming change in tactics. The Times
argued: “If the plane crash did turn out to be the work of
an Islamic State affiliate in Sinai, it would mark a significant
departure for the jihadist group, which had yet to launch a
large-scale attack against civilians.”
So, if the plane was indeed brought down by an
ISIS-in-Sinai bomb, either the group have suddenly been blessed
with some amazing new technology, or they have suddenly decided
to change tactics to mass killings of civilians. If the latter,
isn’t it a little odd that, after more than a year of Western
airstrikes apparently targeting them, ISIS have failed to launch
such an attack against Western civilians – yet are able to
respond within weeks to a campaign of Russian airstrikes which,
according to the West, are not even aimed at them?
Either way, the crash couldn’t have been timed
more perfectly from the point of view of Western geopolitics.
After four years of setbacks, the West’s Syrian “regime change”
(that euphemism for wholesale state destruction) operation now
faces the prospect of imminent total defeat courtesy of Russia’s
intervention. And options for how to salvage that operation are
very limited indeed.
Full scale occupation is a non-starter;
following Iraq and Afghanistan, both the US and British armies
are now officially incapable of mounting such ventures. The
Libya option – supporting death squads on the ground with NATO
air cover – has always come up against Russian opposition, but
has now been effectively rendered impossible. And relying on
anti-government death squads alone is simply very unlikely to
succeed, however many TOWs
and manpads
are feverishly thrown into the fire; after all, there are only
so many terrorists and mercenaries who can be shipped in, and,
as Mike Whitney put
it, the world may have already reached “peak terrorist.”
Forcing Russia out – and turning US and
British airpower openly and decisively against the Syrian state
– has thus become a key objective for Western planners. But how
to do it? What would turn Russians against the intervention? The
Times wrote: “So far the war in Syria has been quite
popular….[but] if it turns out that the war prompts terrorists
to wreak vengeance on ordinary Russians by secreting explosives
on planes, that gung-ho attitude could change.” Or at
least, that is presumably what the Times hopes.
And downing the plane on Egyptian soil just
before Sisi’s first state visit to Britain?
Egypt is at a historical crossroads. Having
moved from the socialist camp into the West’s “orbit” during the
Sadat era in the 1970s, Egypt’s leadership has become ever less
willing to be dictated to by Washington and London: a process
that began in the latter part of Mubarak’s rule, and has
continued under Sisi. Along with Russia, Egypt has played a
leading “spoiler role,” as Sukant Chandan puts it, in the West’s
regime change operation in Syria – and has not been forgiven for
it.
In addition, Mubarak’s government had been
dragging its feet on the privatization and “structural
adjustment” demanded by the IMF: and tourism was and is a
major source of income helping to reduce the country’s
dependence on the international banksters. But since last
Saturday, all that is now in the balance; as the Financial Times
commented, suspicions that the crash was caused by a bomb “are
likely to prove disastrous to the country’s struggling tourism
industry.”
Britain’s foreign secretary, Philip Hammond
agreed. “Of course, this will have a huge negative impact on
Egypt,” he announced matter-of-factly, following Britain’s
decision to stop British flights to Egypt - seemingly without an
ounce of regret. The likely massive loss of tourist income will
force the Egyptians to go back to the IMF, who will, of course,
demand their pound of flesh in the form of mass privatizations
and “austerity.”
But it is not only Egypt’s economic dependency
on the West that will be deepened by the crash – Britain, in
particular, appears to be using the crash as leverage to
re-insinuate itself into Egypt’s military and security
apparatus. Firstly, British officials have been taking every
opportunity to humiliate Egypt, trying to convince the world
that Egypt is perilously unstable, and that only by outsourcing
security to the West can it be safe again. When Sisi arrived in
the country this week, noted the Times, “Britain openly
contradicted the Egyptian leader and suggested that he was not
in full control of the Sinai peninsula,” whilst an Egyptian
official “commented that the dispatch of six officials to
check the security arrangements at Sharm el-Sheikh airport was
‘like treating us as children.’”
Finally, of course, the British government has
not missed the opportunity to use the tragedy to push for deeper
British involvement in Syria. Michael Fallon, Britain’s Defence
Secretary, has been spending the last two days explaining how
the case for bombing Syria would be strengthened if it were
proven the plane was brought down by ISIS. Quite how more deeply
insinuating one of the death squads’ leading state backers into
Syria would somehow reduce the power of the death squads is, of
course, not explained; such is the nature of imperialism.
In a world, then, where Western power is in
steep decline, terrorism is fast becoming one of the last few
viable options for extending its hegemony and undermining the
rising power of the global South. If this attack does turn out
to have been conducted by ISIS, how kind it will have been of
them to take it upon themselves to act as the vanguard of
Western imperial interests. And how obliging of the hundreds of Western
agents in the organization not to do anything to stop them.
Dan Glazebrook is a freelance political
writer. His first book “Divide and Ruin: The West’s Imperial
Strategy in an Age of Crisis” was published by Liberation Media
in October 2013. It featured a collection of articles written
from 2009 onwards examining the links between economic collapse,
the rise of the BRICS, war on Libya and Syria and 'austerity'.