At 9:30am, a Russian SU-24 jet was shot down by a
Turkish fighter plane. The pilots were then allegedly killed by
Syrian Turkmen anti-government militias, with the body of one
being paraded on camera in a video that was immediately posted
to YouTube. Turkey claimed the jet had encroached on Turkish
airspace, but Russia maintains the plane was shot down inside
Syrian territory, 4km from the Turkish border. Rather than
calling Russia to defuse any tension arising from the attack,
Turkey then immediately called an emergency NATO meeting to ramp
it up – “as if we shot down their plane,” Putin
commented, “and not they ours”.
To make sense of this apparently senseless
provocation, it is necessary to cut through the multiple layers
of obfuscation which surround Western narratives around Syria
and Islamic State militants.
The reality is that the forces essentially
line up today just as they did at the outbreak of this crisis in
2011: The West, Turkey and the gulf monarchies sponsor an array
of death squads bent on bringing down the Syrian government,
while Russia, Iran, Iraq, Syria (obviously) and Hezbollah resist
this project. The rise of ISIS has not fundamentally changed
this underlying dynamic. Indeed, the next-to-useless impact of
the West’s year-long phony war against ISIS – alongside its
relentless funneling of weaponry to militias with an, at best,
ambiguous relationship with Al-Qaeda and ISIS – has demonstrated
that the Syrian state (or “Assad” to use the West’s puerile
personalization) remains the ultimate target of the West’s Syria
policy. As Obama himself put it, the goal is not to eliminate
ISIS, but rather to “contain” them – that is, keep them
focused on weakening Syria and Iraq, and not US allies like
Jordan, Turkey or the US’s favored Kurdish factions. In civil
wars, there are only ever really two sides. And in the Syrian
civil war, NATO remains on the same side as ISIS. In this sense,
Putin was entirely correct when he commented on the Turkish
attack that it had been a “stab in the back, carried out by the
accomplices of terrorists” and asked:“do they want to make
NATO serve ISIS?” Or, we could expand, is it that ISIS was
created to serve NATO?
Russia’s direct entry into the Syrian conflict
two months ago, however, has stirred the ‘regime change’ camp.
Belying all their ‘anti-ISIS’ rhetoric, the US and Britain were
openly worried that Russia might actually be putting up an
effective fight against the group and restoring governmental
authority to the ungoverned spaces in which it thrives.
Immediately, the West began warning of ‘blowback’ against
Russia, and ramped up advanced arms shipments to the insurgency.
Within a month, a Russian passenger plane was blown up, with
ISIS claiming responsibility and British Foreign Minister Philip
Hammond calling the attack a “warning shot”. It was a “shot”
alright, aimed not only at Russia, but also at her allies; the
downing of the plane on Egyptian soil was a deliberate act of
economic war against the Egyptian tourism industry, a punishment
for Egypt’s support for Russia and Syria and its choking off of
fighters to Syria since Abdel Fattah Sisi came to power. Then,
two weeks later, came the attack on Paris. White supremacist
niceties prevented Hammond calling this one a “warning shot”
as well, but that is precisely what it was, this time directed
at those within the regime change/ anti-Russia camp who were
showing signs of ‘wobbling’. Francois Hollande suggested back in
January that sanctions on Russia should be lifted as soon as
possible, and more recently the nation showed a willingness to
cooperate with Russia militarily over Syria: a ‘red line’ for
France’s ‘Atlantic partners’.
Nevertheless, the net continues to close on
the West’s death squad project in Syria. From the start the key
to ISIS success has been, firstly, the porous Syria-Turkey
border, through which Turkey has allowed a free flow of fighters
and weapons back and forth for the past four years, and
secondly, the massive amounts of finance ISIS receives both from
oil sales and from donors in countries prepared to turn a blind
eye to terror financing. In recent weeks, all of this has been
threatened by the Russian-led alliance (of which France is
increasingly willing to be a part).
The past week has seen a large scale Syrian
ground offensive, supported with Russian air cover, in precisely
the Syrian-Turkish border region which is the death squads’
lifeline: a move which prompted the Turkish foreign ministry to
warn of “serious consequences” if the Russian
airstrikes continued. Simultaneously, Russia embarked on a major
campaign against ISIS’ reportedly 1,000-strong oil tanker fleet
which is so crucial to the group’s financial success.
As the Institute for the Study of War
reported, "Russian military chief of staff Col. Gen. Andrey Kartapolov announced
on November 18 that 'Russian warplanes are now flying on a free
hunt' against ISIS-operated oil tanker trucks traveling back and
forth from Syria and Iraq, claiming that Russian strikes had
destroyed over 500 ISIS-operated oil trucks in the past 'several
days.'” This massive dent in the group’s oil transporting
capacity even shamed the US into belatedly and somewhat
half-heartedly launching similar attacks of their own. The
smashing of ISIS’ oil industry will not only be a blow to the
entire death squad project, but will directly affect Turkey,
widely thought to be involved in the transportation of
ISIS-produced oil, and even Erdogan’s family itself, as it is
the company run by his son Bilal that is believed to be running
the illicit trade.
Finally, France yesterday announced a
crackdown on ISIS’ financiers, and demanded that other countries
do the same. French Finance Minister Michel Sapin implied that
the report to the G20 on the issue last month was a whitewash,
and demanded that the international Financial Action Task Force
be much more explicit in its report to the next G20 finance
meeting in February about which countries are lax in terms of
terror financing. The move is very likely to expose not only
Turkey and Saudi Arabia but also, given HSBC’s links to Al
Qaeda, the City of London. Indeed, as the Politico website
noted, Sapin specifically said "that considering the
reputation of the City of London, he would be 'vigilant' on the
UK’s implementation of EU-agreed measures to clamp down on money
laundering and exchange financial information on shady
transactions or individuals”. The reactions to his demands
that implementation of tougher EU regulations be moved forward
will also be instructive (in another move exposing the total
lack of urgency given to the West’s supposed ‘war on ISIS’, they
are currently not due to be implemented for another two years).
And on top of all this, the UN Security
Council finally passed a resolution authorizing ‘all necessary
measures’ to be used against ISIS, Al-Qaeda and other terrorist
groups in Syria, effectively granting UN approval to Russia’s
intervention. As Pepe Escobar has pointed out, French support
for the resolution rendered it politically impossible for the US
or UK to use their veto – although US ambassador Samantha Power,
an extreme Russophobe and ‘regime changer’, registered her
disapproval by failing to turn up for the vote and sending a
junior official along instead.
In other words, on all sides the net is
closing in on the West’s death squad project in Syria. Turkey’s
actions today have merely demonstrated, again, the impotent rage
of those who have thrown in their chips with a disastrous and
bloody attempt to remake the Middle East. Syria is indeed
becoming the Stalingrad of the regime changers – the rock on
which the imperial folly of the West and it’s regional imitators
may finally be broken.