Why Assad Isn't "Our Son of a Bitch"
By Sheldon Richman
December 02, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - While Franklin Roosevelt
may not have said that Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza
"may be a son of a bitch, but he's our son of a bitch," he
probably thought it -- just as other presidents have had similar
thoughts about
myriad brutal rulers.
So if the U.S. government has forced the American people to support
useful dictators, why is it trying to overthrow Syria's brutal
president, Bashar al-Assad, whose enemies -- Jabhat al-Nusra
(al-Qaeda in Syria) and the Islamic State (the ambitious al-Qaeda
offshoot) -- are also self-proclaimed enemies of America?
This question merits discussion in the establishment media, yet
instead of discussion we get a parade of retired generals and CIA
analysts, along with terrorism "experts," who insist that to defeat
the Islamic State the U.S. government must end the Syrian civil war
by ousting Assad. (That's a responsibility for the U.S.
government?) In light of the catastrophic U.S. intervention in Iraq
and Libya, isn't Assad's overthrow more likely to help the violent
jihadist groups, principally the Islamic State? After all, in 2012
the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency
acknowledged that American, Turkish, and Gulf state attempts to
isolate Assad were leading to a radical caliphate.
To put this into a larger context, it's worth noting that the U.S
government worked with Assad in the past. Syria was one of many
countries to which the George W. Bush administration outsourced
torture services in its "war on terror." Outsourcing torture
has negative ring to it, so the administration called it
extraordinary rendition (just as torture became
enhanced interrogation). In a sense, then, Assad was our
son of a bitch when the U.S. government needed him. Then he outlived
his usefulness.
Why? The short answer is
Iran.
The longer answer is that the U.S. government has been willing to
play footsie with violent anti-Western jihadist organizations in
order to undermine regimes it does not like. It used jihadists
against secular pan-Arab regimes, such as Nasser's in Egypt, and it
did the same against the Soviet-backed regime in Afghanistan --
attracting Osama bin-Laden. (Jimmy Carter's national-security
adviser Zbigniew
Brzezinski bragged about it.)
Post-9/11, the U.S. government has tilted toward violent jihadist
organizations in order to harm Iran and its friends. But
overthrowing Iraq's Saddam Hussein, who had suppressed the Shia
Muslim majority, predictably brought an Iran-friendly regime to
power in Iraq, and the American military enabled Shia militias to
rid Baghdad of Sunnis. Thus Bush's neoconservative brain trust had
no reason to support regime change in Iraq unless Iran and its
friends Assad and Hezbollah in Lebanon were next on the hit list.
And they were.
With Saddam out of the picture, the U.S. government, Saudi Arabia,
Turkey, and Israel could warn of the menacing "Shia Crescent" from
Tehran to southern Lebanon (plus Yemen). Saudi Arabia, home of Sunni
Wahhabism (the ideology of bin Ladenites), hates the reemergence of
Shia rival Iran as a major regional power, and Israel wants, among
other things, to undermine Hezbollah, which protects southern
Lebanon from invasion and ate Israel's lunch in 2006. So Saudi
Arabia, its Gulf partners, and Turkey (which wants to defeat the
U.S.-backed Kurds) help violent jihadists against Assad (the
moderate opposition was known to be a "fantasy"; the
Assad opposition was
violent from the start), while Israel and the U.S. government
also weaken Assad while conducting covert war and facilitating
terrorism against Iran. (The Iranian nuclear program is a
bogus part of this campaign. Israel is the nuclear monopolist in
the region.)
Iran is portrayed as on the march to regional conquest (or beyond),
but that's ridiculous. It, like Russia (another neocon bogeyman),
has long been Assad's Shia ally, the Houthi movement in Yemen has
little to do with Iran, and Hezbollah arose against Israeli
brutality in Lebanon. Assad's secular regime (like his father's) has
not bothered Israel even though the self-identified Jewish state
annexed Syria's Golan Heights, seized in the 1967 war. But being an
ally of Iran and Hezbollah is enough for Israel to want to
destabilize Syria.
All this adds up to an American, Saudi, Turkish, and
Israeli preference
for violent Sunni jihadists, the sort of people who attacked the
Twin Towers and Paris, as the lesser evil -- regardless of what
Obama, John Kerry, and Hillary Clinton say about the Islamic State.
Sheldon Richman keeps the blog Free
Association and is a senior fellow and chair of the trustees
of the Center
for a Stateless Society. Become a patron today!
Cross-posted at the Center for a
Stateless Society.