Rhetoric
aside, Kerry’s expressions of goodwill simply do
not cut it.
During a
walkabout in Moscow, the US Secretary of State
chanced on a little Christmas shopping, with
Kerry buying a Babushka stacking doll among
other souvenirs. The iconic Russian doll
containing six shelled figurines could serve as
a metaphor for Washington’s elusive rhetoric.
Following his three-hour discussion with Putin,
Kerry said: “While we
don’t see eye to eye on every aspect of Syria,
we see Syria fundamentally similarly.”
US government-owned media outlet Voice of
America added: “He
[Kerry] said the US and Russia identify the same
challenges and dangers, and want the same
outcomes [in Syria].”
That, to put it bluntly, is simply not true.
Washington and Moscow do not see Syria
fundamentally similarly nor want the same
outcomes.
Washington wants regime change, no matter what
Kerry may declare. From the outset of the
conflict in Syria in March 2011, the Obama
administration has been demanding that Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad
“must go”.
Indeed,
it is well documented that Washington and its
NATO partners have been seeking regime change
against Russia’s long-time Syria ally going back
to 2007 during the George W Bush presidency. The
whole foreign-backed war in the Arab country –
resulting in 250,000 deaths and millions of
refugees over the past five years – has been
orchestrated for the precise purpose of
destabilizing Syria.
Certainly, Kerry’s latest visit to Moscow marked
a softening of the “Assad must go”
line. Washington is now saying that the Syrian
president may remain in office until a political
transition is negotiated. But at the end of the
so-called transition, the US still wants Assad
gone, as Kerry again noted. That is regime
change no matter how you slice it.
Like
Kerry’s coy claim that the US is not trying
“to isolate Russia as a matter of policy,”
the bottom line is that Washington has imposed
unilateral economic sanctions on Russia as a
result of provable US regime change in Ukraine
in February 2014, and cajoled its European
allies to follow suit. Withdrawing unilaterally
from arms control treaties and expanding NATO
forces on Russian territory are hardly the
actions of a party “not seeking isolation”
of Moscow.
Washington sure wants regime change in Syria,
just as former US General Wesley Clark disclosed
back in 2007 – a policy that the American
military-industrial complex formulated in 2001
following the 9/11 terror events. There is no
reason whatsoever to believe that the same US
hegemonic ambitions for the Middle East and
beyond have changed under Obama.
What
has changed is that Russia’s dramatic military
intervention in Syria two months ago has
shredded the US-led plans.
This
week, President Obama made a speech at the
Pentagon in which he made the laughable claim
that the US was leading the global fight against
the Islamic State terror group. “We are
hitting them harder than ever,” he said.
Such
claims by the US commander-in-chief are just
downright delusional. It is the Russian aerial
bombardment in close cooperation with the Syrian
Arab Army that has completely turned the
military tables on Islamic State (IS) and other
illegally armed groups.
Moreover, it is Russian airstrikes which have
wiped out the oil smuggling and weapon supply
routes to the jihadists from Turkey.
These
jihadists – whether they go by the shell names
IS, Nusra, Army of Conquest or Free Syrian Army
– are all part of the foreign-backed mercenary
force that the US has deployed for sacking
Syria.
Washington’s losing streak in the covert
military objective has forced the US to seek a
political track to achieve the same end result
of regime change. That explains why Washington
is now softening its rhetoric in order to
inveigle Moscow into a political transition,
euphemistically called a
“peace process”.
Kerry
said that the US and Russia have reached
“common ground” on which Syrian opposition
groups would be invited to peace talks in New
York this Friday. The aim is to create a
political opposition to the Assad government
ahead of negotiations for a transition beginning
in January.
A
preview of these “opposition” groups was given
last week when Saudi Arabia invited more than
100 so-called leaders of political and militant
factions. As the New York Times reported
the formation of this front was deemed by
Washington as a “prerequisite” for the
future talks. John Kerry welcomed the summit in
Saudi capital Riyadh as “an important step
forward”.
Although Al Qaeda-linked groups, IS and Al Nusra,
did not attend the Saudi-sponsored and
US-countenanced gathering, the NY Times admitted
that delegates included “hardline
Islamists”. Those in attendance included
Ahrar al Shams and Jaish al Islam. The latter
gained notoriety for holding civilian human
shields in cages, as well as being linked to the
chemical gas atrocity near Damascus in August
2013.
The
Saudi-sponsored opposition that Washington is
trying to line up against the Syrian government
are braying for Assad’s immediate departure.
John Kerry may say belatedly that US policy has
shifted to permit Assad to remain in power for
the duration of a transition, but it should be
obvious that Washington is setting up a
framework under the guise of a peace process in
which Assad’s departure is put on the agenda.
But
what gives the US and its NATO and Arab cronies
any right to make such demands on Syria’s
political future?
Washington does not seem to get it that its
arrogant assertions about political change in
Syria are null and void. Russia has time and
again rightly pointed out that Syria’s political
future is for the Syrian people to decide as a
matter of sovereignty. Russia’s position is
fully supported by Iran.
As for
Syria’s President Assad he has said that there
will be no negotiations with the Saudi-sponsored
political opposition, labeling them with
reasonable justification as “terrorists”.
In a
parallel development, Saudi Arabia also
announced the formation of a 34-nation alliance
of Muslim countries supposedly dedicated to
fighting the “disease of Islamic terrorism”.
The newly formed bloc comprises in addition to
Saudi Arabia: Qatar, United Arab Emirates,
Kuwait and Turkey – all countries associated
with the funding and arming of extremist groups
in Syria and elsewhere. Strangely, or perhaps
not, Iran, Iraq and Syria were not invited to
join the bloc.
US
Defense Secretary Ashton Carter welcomed
the new alliance. And the Saudis said that
troops from the 34-nation coalition could be
sent into Syria and Iraq to “combat”
the IS network. Washington also endorsed that,
saying that it wanted more regional “boots
on the ground” to help fight terrorism.
What
that suggests is that if the political track
does not go well for ousting Assad, then the US
and its allies are giving themselves the license
to openly intervene in Syria – ostensibly to
fight terror groups, which they have covertly
fomented. Such a renewed military intervention
can be seen as Plan B, where Plan A – the covert
use of terror groups – has failed.