Military to
Military
US Intelligence Sharing in the Syrian War
By Seymour M. Hersh
December
21, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "LRB"
-
Barack
Obama’s repeated
insistence that Bashar al-Assad must leave office –
and that there are ‘moderate’ rebel groups in Syria
capable of defeating him – has in recent years
provoked quiet dissent, and even overt opposition,
among some of the most senior officers on the
Pentagon’s Joint Staff. Their criticism has focused
on what they see as the administration’s fixation on
Assad’s primary ally, Vladimir Putin. In their view,
Obama is captive to Cold War thinking about Russia
and China, and hasn’t adjusted his stance on Syria
to the fact both countries share Washington’s
anxiety about the spread of terrorism in and beyond
Syria; like Washington, they believe that Islamic
State must be stopped.
The
military’s resistance dates back to the summer
of 2013, when a highly classified assessment,
put together by the Defense Intelligence Agency
(DIA) and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, then led by
General Martin Dempsey, forecast that the fall
of the Assad regime would lead to chaos and,
potentially, to Syria’s takeover by jihadi
extremists, much as was then happening in Libya.
A former senior adviser to the Joint Chiefs told
me that the document was an ‘all-source’
appraisal, drawing on information from signals,
satellite and human intelligence, and took a dim
view of the Obama administration’s insistence on
continuing to finance and arm the so-called
moderate rebel groups. By then, the CIA had been
conspiring for more than a year with allies in
the UK, Saudi Arabia and Qatar to ship guns and
goods – to be used for the overthrow of Assad –
from Libya, via Turkey, into Syria. The new
intelligence estimate singled out Turkey as a
major impediment to Obama’s Syria policy. The
document showed, the adviser said, ‘that what
was started as a covert US programme to arm and
support the moderate rebels fighting Assad had
been co-opted by Turkey, and had morphed into an
across-the-board technical, arms and logistical
programme for all of the opposition, including
Jabhat al-Nusra and Islamic State. The so-called
moderates had evaporated and the Free Syrian
Army was a rump group stationed at an airbase in
Turkey.’ The assessment was bleak: there was no
viable ‘moderate’ opposition to Assad, and the
US was arming extremists.
Lieutenant
General Michael Flynn, director of the DIA
between 2012 and 2014, confirmed that his agency
had sent a constant stream of classified
warnings to the civilian leadership about the
dire consequences of toppling Assad. The
jihadists, he said, were in control of the
opposition. Turkey wasn’t doing enough to stop
the smuggling of foreign fighters and weapons
across the border. ‘If the American public saw
the intelligence we were producing daily, at the
most sensitive level, they would go ballistic,’
Flynn told me. ‘We understood Isis’s long-term
strategy and its campaign plans, and we also
discussed the fact that Turkey was looking the
other way when it came to the growth of the
Islamic State inside Syria.’ The DIA’s
reporting, he said, ‘got enormous pushback’ from
the Obama administration. ‘I felt that they did
not want to hear the truth.’
‘Our policy
of arming the opposition to Assad was unsuccessful
and actually having a negative impact,’ the former
JCS adviser said. ‘The Joint Chiefs believed that
Assad should not be replaced by fundamentalists. The
administration’s policy was contradictory. They
wanted Assad to go but the opposition was dominated
by extremists. So who was going to replace him? To
say Assad’s got to go is fine, but if you follow
that through – therefore anyone is better. It’s the
“anybody else is better” issue that the JCS had with
Obama’s policy.’ The Joint Chiefs felt that a direct
challenge to Obama’s policy would have ‘had a zero
chance of success’. So in the autumn of 2013 they
decided to take steps against the extremists without
going through political channels, by providing US
intelligence to the militaries of other nations, on
the understanding that it would be passed on to the
Syrian army and used against the common enemy,
Jabhat al-Nusra and Islamic State.
Germany,
Israel and Russia were in contact with the Syrian
army, and able to exercise some influence over
Assad’s decisions – it was through them that US
intelligence would be shared. Each had its reasons
for co-operating with Assad: Germany feared what
might happen among its own population of six million
Muslims if Islamic State expanded; Israel was
concerned with border security; Russia had an
alliance of very long standing with Syria, and was
worried by the threat to its only naval base on the
Mediterranean, at Tartus. ‘We weren’t intent on
deviating from Obama’s stated policies,’ the adviser
said. ‘But sharing our assessments via the
military-to-military relationships with other
countries could prove productive. It was clear that
Assad needed better tactical intelligence and
operational advice. The JCS concluded that if those
needs were met, the overall fight against Islamist
terrorism would be enhanced. Obama didn’t know, but
Obama doesn’t know what the JCS does in every
circumstance and that’s true of all presidents.’
Once the
flow of US intelligence began, Germany, Israel and
Russia started passing on information about the
whereabouts and intent of radical jihadist groups to
the Syrian army; in return, Syria provided
information about its own capabilities and
intentions. There was no direct contact between the
US and the Syrian military; instead, the adviser
said, ‘we provided the information – including
long-range analyses on Syria’s future put together
by contractors or one of our war colleges – and
these countries could do with it what they chose,
including sharing it with Assad. We were saying to
the Germans and the others: “Here’s some information
that’s pretty interesting and our interest is
mutual.” End of conversation. The JCS could conclude
that something beneficial would arise from it – but
it was a military to military thing, and not some
sort of a sinister Joint Chiefs’ plot to go around
Obama and support Assad. It was a lot cleverer than
that. If Assad remains in power, it will not be
because we did it. It’s because he was smart enough
to use the intelligence and sound tactical advice we
provided to others.’
*
The
public history of
relations between the US and Syria over the past few
decades has been one of enmity. Assad condemned the
9/11 attacks, but opposed the Iraq War. George W.
Bush repeatedly linked Syria to the three members of
his ‘axis of evil’ – Iraq, Iran and North Korea –
throughout his presidency. State Department cables
made public by WikiLeaks show that the Bush
administration tried to destabilise Syria and that
these efforts continued into the Obama years. In
December 2006, William Roebuck, then in charge of
the US embassy in Damascus, filed an analysis of the
‘vulnerabilities’ of the Assad government and listed
methods ‘that will improve the likelihood’ of
opportunities for destabilisation. He recommended
that Washington work with Saudi Arabia and Egypt to
increase sectarian tension and focus on publicising
‘Syrian efforts against extremist groups’ –
dissident Kurds and radical Sunni factions – ‘in a
way that suggests weakness, signs of instability,
and uncontrolled blowback’; and that the ‘isolation
of Syria’ should be encouraged through US support of
the National Salvation Front, led by Abdul Halim
Khaddam, a former Syrian vice president whose
government-in-exile in Riyadh was sponsored by the
Saudis and the Muslim Brotherhood. Another 2006
cable showed that the embassy had spent $5 million
financing dissidents who ran as independent
candidates for the People’s Assembly; the payments
were kept up even after it became clear that Syrian
intelligence knew what was going on. A 2010 cable
warned that funding for a London-based television
network run by a Syrian opposition group would be
viewed by the Syrian government ‘as a covert and
hostile gesture toward the regime’.
But there
is also a parallel history of shadowy co-operation
between Syria and the US during the same period. The
two countries collaborated against al-Qaida, their
common enemy. A longtime consultant to America’s
intelligence community said that, after 9/11,
‘Bashar was, for years, extremely helpful to us
while, in my view, we were churlish in return, and
clumsy in our use of the gold he gave us. That quiet
co-operation continued among some elements, even
after the [Bush administration’s] decision to vilify
him.’ In 2002 Assad authorised Syrian intelligence
to turn over hundreds of internal files on the
activities of the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria and
Germany. Later that year, Syrian intelligence foiled
an attack by al-Qaida on the headquarters of the US
Navy’s Fifth Fleet in Bahrain, and Assad agreed to
provide the CIA with the name of a vital al-Qaida
informant. In violation of this agreement, the CIA
contacted the informant directly; he rejected the
approach, and broke off relations with his Syrian
handlers. Assad also secretly turned over to the US
relatives of Saddam Hussein who had sought refuge in
Syria, and – like America’s allies in Jordan, Egypt,
Thailand and elsewhere – tortured suspected
terrorists for the CIA in a Damascus prison.
It was this
history of co-operation that made it seem possible
in 2013 that Damascus would agree to the new
indirect intelligence-sharing arrangement with the
US. The Joint Chiefs let it be known that in return
the US would require four things: Assad must
restrain Hizbullah from attacking Israel; he must
renew the stalled negotiations with Israel to reach
a settlement on the Golan Heights; he must agree to
accept Russian and other outside military advisers;
and he must commit to holding open elections after
the war with a wide range of factions included. ‘We
had positive feedback from the Israelis, who were
willing to entertain the idea, but they needed to
know what the reaction would be from Iran and
Syria,’ the JCS adviser told me. ‘The Syrians told
us that Assad would not make a decision unilaterally
– he needed to have support from his military and
Alawite allies. Assad’s worry was that Israel would
say yes and then not uphold its end of the bargain.’
A senior adviser to the Kremlin on Middle East
affairs told me that in late 2012, after suffering a
series of battlefield setbacks and military
defections, Assad had approached Israel via a
contact in Moscow and offered to reopen the talks on
the Golan Heights. The Israelis had rejected the
offer. ‘They said, “Assad is finished,”’ the Russian
official told me. ‘“He’s close to the end.”’ He said
the Turks had told Moscow the same thing. By
mid-2013, however, the Syrians believed the worst
was behind them, and wanted assurances that the
Americans and others were serious about their offers
of help.
In the
early stages of the talks, the adviser said, the
Joint Chiefs tried to establish what Assad needed as
a sign of their good intentions. The answer was sent
through one of Assad’s friends: ‘Bring him the head
of Prince Bandar.’ The Joint Chiefs did not oblige.
Bandar bin Sultan had served Saudi Arabia for
decades in intelligence and national security
affairs, and spent more than twenty years as
ambassador in Washington. In recent years, he has
been known as an advocate for Assad’s removal from
office by any means. Reportedly in poor health, he
resigned last year as director of the Saudi National
Security Council, but Saudi Arabia continues to be a
major provider of funds to the Syrian opposition,
estimated by US intelligence last year at $700
million.
In July
2013, the Joint Chiefs found a more direct way of
demonstrating to Assad how serious they were about
helping him. By then the CIA-sponsored secret flow
of arms from Libya to the Syrian opposition, via
Turkey, had been underway for more than a year (it
started sometime after Gaddafi’s death on 20 October
2011).*
The operation was largely run out of a covert CIA
annex in Benghazi, with State Department
acquiescence. On 11 September 2012 the US ambassador
to Libya, Christopher Stevens, was killed during an
anti-American demonstration that led to the burning
down of the US consulate in Benghazi; reporters for
the Washington Post found copies of the
ambassador’s schedule in the building’s ruins. It
showed that on 10 September Stevens had met with the
chief of the CIA’s annex operation. The next day,
shortly before he died, he met a representative from
Al-Marfa Shipping and Maritime Services, a
Tripoli-based company which, the JCS adviser said,
was known by the Joint Staff to be handling the
weapons shipments.
By the late
summer of 2013, the DIA’s assessment had been
circulated widely, but although many in the American
intelligence community were aware that the Syrian
opposition was dominated by extremists the
CIA-sponsored weapons kept coming, presenting a
continuing problem for Assad’s army. Gaddafi’s
stockpile had created an international arms bazaar,
though prices were high. ‘There was no way to stop
the arms shipments that had been authorised by the
president,’ the JCS adviser said. ‘The solution
involved an appeal to the pocketbook. The CIA was
approached by a representative from the Joint Chiefs
with a suggestion: there were far less costly
weapons available in Turkish arsenals that could
reach the Syrian rebels within days, and without a
boat ride.’ But it wasn’t only the CIA that
benefited. ‘We worked with Turks we trusted who were
not loyal to Erdoğan,’ the adviser said, ‘and got
them to ship the jihadists in Syria all the obsolete
weapons in the arsenal, including M1 carbines that
hadn’t been seen since the Korean War and lots of
Soviet arms. It was a message Assad could
understand: “We have the power to diminish a
presidential policy in its tracks.”’
The flow of
US intelligence to the Syrian army, and the
downgrading of the quality of the arms being
supplied to the rebels, came at a critical juncture.
The Syrian army had suffered heavy losses in the
spring of 2013 in fighting against Jabhat al-Nusra
and other extremist groups as it failed to hold the
provincial capital of Raqqa. Sporadic Syrian army
and air-force raids continued in the area for
months, with little success, until it was decided to
withdraw from Raqqa and other hard to defend,
lightly populated areas in the north and west and
focus instead on consolidating the government’s hold
on Damascus and the heavily populated areas linking
the capital to Latakia in the north-east. But as the
army gained in strength with the Joint Chiefs’
support, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey escalated
their financing and arming of Jabhat al-Nusra and
Islamic State, which by the end of 2013 had made
enormous gains on both sides of the Syria/Iraq
border. The remaining non-fundamentalist rebels
found themselves fighting – and losing – pitched
battles against the extremists. In January 2014, IS
took complete control of Raqqa and the tribal areas
around it from al-Nusra and established the city as
its base. Assad still controlled 80 per cent of the
Syrian population, but he had lost a vast amount of
territory.
CIA efforts
to train the moderate rebel forces were also failing
badly. ‘The CIA’s training camp was in Jordan and
was controlled by a Syrian tribal group,’ the JCS
adviser said. There was a suspicion that some of
those who signed up for training were actually
Syrian army regulars minus their uniforms. This had
happened before, at the height of the Iraqi war,
when hundreds of Shia militia members showed up at
American training camps for new uniforms, weapons
and a few days of training, and then disappeared
into the desert. A separate training programme, set
up by the Pentagon in Turkey, fared no better. The
Pentagon acknowledged in September that only ‘four
or five’ of its recruits were still battling Islamic
State; a few days later 70 of them defected to
Jabhat al-Nusra immediately after crossing the
border into Syria.
In January
2014, despairing at the lack of progress, John
Brennan, the director of the CIA, summoned American
and Sunni Arab intelligence chiefs from throughout
the Middle East to a secret meeting in Washington,
with the aim of persuading Saudi Arabia to stop
supporting extremist fighters in Syria. ‘The Saudis
told us they were happy to listen,’ the JCS adviser
said, ‘so everyone sat around in Washington to hear
Brennan tell them that they had to get on board with
the so-called moderates. His message was that if
everyone in the region stopped supporting al-Nusra
and Isis their ammunition and weapons would dry up,
and the moderates would win out.’ Brennan’s message
was ignored by the Saudis, the adviser said, who
‘went back home and increased their efforts with the
extremists and asked us for more technical support.
And we say OK, and so it turns out that we end up
reinforcing the extremists.’
But the
Saudis were far from the only problem: American
intelligence had accumulated intercept and human
intelligence demonstrating that the Erdoğan
government had been supporting Jabhat al-Nusra for
years, and was now doing the same for Islamic State.
‘We can handle the Saudis,’ the adviser said. ‘We
can handle the Muslim Brotherhood. You can argue
that the whole balance in the Middle East is based
on a form of mutually assured destruction between
Israel and the rest of the Middle East, and Turkey
can disrupt the balance – which is Erdoğan’s dream.
We told him we wanted him to shut down the pipeline
of foreign jihadists flowing into Turkey. But he is
dreaming big – of restoring the Ottoman Empire – and
he did not realise the extent to which he could be
successful in this.’
*
One
of the constants in US affairs since the fall of the
Soviet Union has been a military-to-military
relationship with Russia. After 1991 the US spent
billions of dollars to help Russia secure its
nuclear weapons complex, including a highly secret
joint operation to remove weapons-grade uranium from
unsecured storage depots in Kazakhstan. Joint
programmes to monitor the security of weapons-grade
materials continued for the next two decades. During
the American war on Afghanistan, Russia provided
overflight rights for US cargo carriers and tankers,
as well as access for the flow of weapons,
ammunition, food and water the US war machine needed
daily. Russia’s military provided intelligence on
Osama bin Laden’s whereabouts and helped the US
negotiate rights to use an airbase in Kyrgyzstan.
The Joint Chiefs have been in communication with
their Russian counterparts throughout the Syrian
war, and the ties between the two militaries start
at the top. In August, a few weeks before his
retirement as chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Dempsey
made a farewell visit to the headquarters of the
Irish Defence Forces in Dublin and told his audience
there that he had made a point while in office to
keep in touch with the chief of the Russian General
Staff, General Valery Gerasimov. ‘I’ve actually
suggested to him that we not end our careers as we
began them,’ Dempsey said – one a tank commander in
West Germany, the other in the east.
When it
comes to tackling Islamic State, Russia and the US
have much to offer each other. Many in the IS
leadership and rank and file fought for more than a
decade against Russia in the two Chechen wars that
began in 1994, and the Putin government is heavily
invested in combating Islamist terrorism. ‘Russia
knows the Isis leadership,’ the JCS adviser said,
‘and has insights into its operational techniques,
and has much intelligence to share.’ In return, he
said, ‘we’ve got excellent trainers with years of
experience in training foreign fighters – experience
that Russia does not have.’ The adviser would not
discuss what American intelligence is also believed
to have: an ability to obtain targeting data, often
by paying huge sums of cash, from sources within
rebel militias.
A former
White House adviser on Russian affairs told me that
before 9/11 Putin ‘used to say to us: “We have the
same nightmares about different places.” He was
referring to his problems with the caliphate in
Chechnya and our early issues with al-Qaida. These
days, after the Metrojet bombing over Sinai and the
massacres in Paris and elsewhere, it’s hard to avoid
the conclusion that we actually have the same
nightmares about the same places.’
Yet the
Obama administration continues to condemn Russia for
its support of Assad. A retired senior diplomat who
served at the US embassy in Moscow expressed
sympathy for Obama’s dilemma as the leader of the
Western coalition opposed to Russia’s aggression
against Ukraine: ‘Ukraine is a serious issue and
Obama has been handling it firmly with sanctions.
But our policy vis-à-vis Russia is too often
unfocused. But it’s not about us in Syria. It’s
about making sure Bashar does not lose. The reality
is that Putin does not want to see the chaos in
Syria spread to Jordan or Lebanon, as it has to
Iraq, and he does not want to see Syria end up in
the hands of Isis. The most counterproductive thing
Obama has done, and it has hurt our efforts to end
the fighting a lot, was to say: “Assad must go as a
premise for negotiation.”’ He also echoed a view
held by some in the Pentagon when he alluded to a
collateral factor behind Russia’s decision to launch
airstrikes in support of the Syrian army on 30
September: Putin’s desire to prevent Assad from
suffering the same fate as Gaddafi. He had been told
that Putin had watched a video of Gaddafi’s savage
death three times, a video that shows him being
sodomised with a bayonet. The JCS adviser also told
me of a US intelligence assessment which concluded
that Putin had been appalled by Gaddafi’s fate:
‘Putin blamed himself for letting Gaddafi go, for
not playing a strong role behind the scenes’ at the
UN when the Western coalition was lobbying to be
allowed to undertake the airstrikes that destroyed
the regime. ‘Putin believed that unless he got
engaged Bashar would suffer the same fate –
mutilated – and he’d see the destruction of his
allies in Syria.’
In a speech
on 22 November, Obama declared that the ‘principal
targets’ of the Russian airstrikes ‘have been the
moderate opposition’. It’s a line that the
administration – along with most of the mainstream
American media – has rarely strayed from. The
Russians insist that they are targeting all rebel
groups that threaten Syria’s stability – including
Islamic State. The Kremlin adviser on the Middle
East explained in an interview that the first round
of Russian airstrikes was aimed at bolstering
security around a Russian airbase in Latakia, an
Alawite stronghold. The strategic goal, he said, has
been to establish a jihadist-free corridor from
Damascus to Latakia and the Russian naval base at
Tartus and then to shift the focus of bombing
gradually to the south and east, with a greater
concentration of bombing missions over IS-held
territory. Russian strikes on IS targets in and near
Raqqa were reported as early as the beginning of
October; in November there were further strikes on
IS positions near the historic city of Palmyra and
in Idlib province, a bitterly contested stronghold
on the Turkish border.
Russian
incursions into Turkish airspace began soon after
Putin authorised the bombings, and the Russian air
force deployed electronic jamming systems that
interfered with Turkish radar. The message being
sent to the Turkish air force, the JCS adviser said,
was: ‘We’re going to fly our fighter planes where we
want and when we want and jam your radar. Do not
fuck with us. Putin was letting the Turks know what
they were up against.’ Russia’s aggression led to
Turkish complaints and Russian denials, along with
more aggressive border patrolling by the Turkish air
force. There were no significant incidents until 24
November, when two Turkish F-16 fighters, apparently
acting under more aggressive rules of engagement,
shot down a Russian Su-24M jet that had crossed into
Turkish airspace for no more than 17 seconds. In the
days after the fighter was shot down, Obama
expressed support for Erdoğan, and after they met in
private on 1 December he told a press conference
that his administration remained ‘very much
committed to Turkey’s security and its sovereignty’.
He said that as long as Russia remained allied with
Assad, ‘a lot of Russian resources are still going
to be targeted at opposition groups … that we
support … So I don’t think we should be under any
illusions that somehow Russia starts hitting only
Isil targets. That’s not happening now. It was never
happening. It’s not going to be happening in the
next several weeks.’
The Kremlin
adviser on the Middle East, like the Joint Chiefs
and the DIA, dismisses the ‘moderates’ who have
Obama’s support, seeing them as extremist Islamist
groups that fight alongside Jabhat al-Nusra and IS
(‘There’s no need to play with words and split
terrorists into moderate and not moderate,’ Putin
said in a speech on 22 October). The American
generals see them as exhausted militias that have
been forced to make an accommodation with Jabhat
al-Nusra or IS in order to survive. At the end of
2014, Jürgen Todenhöfer, a German journalist who was
allowed to spend ten days touring IS-held territory
in Iraq and Syria, told CNN that the IS leadership
‘are all laughing about the Free Syrian Army. They
don’t take them for serious. They say: “The best
arms sellers we have are the FSA. If they get a good
weapon, they sell it to us.” They didn’t take them
for serious. They take for serious Assad. They take
for serious, of course, the bombs. But they fear
nothing, and FSA doesn’t play a role.’
*
Putin’s
bombing campaign provoked a series of anti-Russia
articles in the American press. On 25 October, the
New York Times reported, citing Obama
administration officials, that Russian submarines
and spy ships were ‘aggressively’ operating near the
undersea cables that carry much of the world’s
internet traffic – although, as the article went on
to acknowledge, there was ‘no evidence yet’ of any
Russian attempt actually to interfere with that
traffic. Ten days earlier the Times
published a summary of Russian intrusions into its
former Soviet satellite republics, and described the
Russian bombing in Syria as being ‘in some respects
a return to the ambitious military moves of the
Soviet past’. The report did not note that the Assad
administration had invited Russia to intervene, nor
did it mention the US bombing raids inside Syria
that had been underway since the previous September,
without Syria’s approval. An October op-ed in the
same paper by Michael McFaul, Obama’s ambassador to
Russia between 2012 and 2014, declared that the
Russian air campaign was attacking ‘everyone except
the Islamic State’. The anti-Russia stories did not
abate after the Metrojet disaster, for which Islamic
State claimed credit. Few in the US government and
media questioned why IS would target a Russian
airliner, along with its 224 passengers and crew, if
Moscow’s air force was attacking only the Syrian
‘moderates’.
Economic
sanctions, meanwhile, are still in effect against
Russia for what a large number of Americans consider
Putin’s war crimes in Ukraine, as are US Treasury
Department sanctions against Syria and against those
Americans who do business there. The New York
Times, in a report on sanctions in late
November, revived an old and groundless assertion,
saying that the Treasury’s actions ‘emphasise an
argument that the administration has increasingly
been making about Mr Assad as it seeks to press
Russia to abandon its backing for him: that although
he professes to be at war with Islamist terrorists,
he has a symbiotic relationship with the Islamic
State that has allowed it to thrive while he has
clung to power.’
*
The
four core elements of Obama’s Syria policy remain
intact today: an insistence that Assad must go; that
no anti-IS coalition with Russia is possible; that
Turkey is a steadfast ally in the war against
terrorism; and that there really are significant
moderate opposition forces for the US to support.
The Paris attacks on 13 November that killed 130
people did not change the White House’s public
stance, although many European leaders, including
François Hollande, advocated greater co-operation
with Russia and agreed to co-ordinate more closely
with its air force; there was also talk of the need
to be more flexible about the timing of Assad’s exit
from power. On 24 November, Hollande flew to
Washington to discuss how France and the US could
collaborate more closely in the fight against
Islamic State. At a joint press conference at the
White House, Obama said he and Hollande had agreed
that ‘Russia’s strikes against the moderate
opposition only bolster the Assad regime, whose
brutality has helped to fuel the rise’ of IS.
Hollande didn’t go that far but he said that the
diplomatic process in Vienna would ‘lead to Bashar
al-Assad’s departure … a government of unity is
required.’ The press conference failed to deal with
the far more urgent impasse between the two men on
the matter of Erdoğan. Obama defended Turkey’s right
to defend its borders; Hollande said it was ‘a
matter of urgency’ for Turkey to take action against
terrorists. The JCS adviser told me that one of
Hollande’s main goals in flying to Washington had
been to try to persuade Obama to join the EU in a
mutual declaration of war against Islamic State.
Obama said no. The Europeans had pointedly not gone
to Nato, to which Turkey belongs, for such a
declaration. ‘Turkey is the problem,’ the JCS
adviser said.
Assad,
naturally, doesn’t accept that a group of foreign
leaders should be deciding on his future. Imad
Moustapha, now Syria’s ambassador to China, was dean
of the IT faculty at the University of Damascus, and
a close aide of Assad’s, when he was appointed in
2004 as the Syrian ambassador to the US, a post he
held for seven years. Moustapha is known still to be
close to Assad, and can be trusted to reflect what
he thinks. He told me that for Assad to surrender
power would mean capitulating to ‘armed terrorist
groups’ and that ministers in a national unity
government – such as was being proposed by the
Europeans – would be seen to be beholden to the
foreign powers that appointed them. These powers
could remind the new president ‘that they could
easily replace him as they did before to the
predecessor … Assad owes it to his people: he could
not leave because the historic enemies of Syria are
demanding his departure.’
*
Moustapha
also brought up China, an ally of Assad that has
allegedly committed more than $30 billion to postwar
reconstruction in Syria. China, too, is worried
about Islamic State. ‘China regards the Syrian
crisis from three perspectives,’ he said:
international law and legitimacy; global strategic
positioning; and the activities of jihadist Uighurs,
from Xinjiang province in China’s far west. Xinjiang
borders eight nations – Mongolia, Russia,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan,
Pakistan and India – and, in China’s view, serves as
a funnel for terrorism around the world and within
China. Many Uighur fighters now in Syria are known
to be members of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement
– an often violent separatist organisation that
seeks to establish an Islamist Uighur state in
Xinjiang. ‘The fact that they have been aided by
Turkish intelligence to move from China into Syria
through Turkey has caused a tremendous amount of
tension between the Chinese and Turkish
intelligence,’ Moustapha said. ‘China is concerned
that the Turkish role of supporting the Uighur
fighters in Syria may be extended in the future to
support Turkey’s agenda in Xinjiang. We are already
providing the Chinese intelligence service with
information regarding these terrorists and the
routes they crossed from on travelling into Syria.’
Moustapha’s
concerns were echoed by a Washington foreign affairs
analyst who has closely followed the passage of
jihadists through Turkey and into Syria. The
analyst, whose views are routinely sought by senior
government officials, told me that ‘Erdoğan has been
bringing Uighurs into Syria by special transport
while his government has been agitating in favour of
their struggle in China. Uighur and Burmese Muslim
terrorists who escape into Thailand somehow get
Turkish passports and are then flown to Turkey for
transit into Syria.’ He added that there was also
what amounted to another ‘rat line’ that was
funnelling Uighurs – estimates range from a few
hundred to many thousands over the years – from
China into Kazakhstan for eventual relay to Turkey,
and then to IS territory in Syria. ‘US
intelligence,’ he said, ‘is not getting good
information about these activities because those
insiders who are unhappy with the policy are not
talking to them.’ He also said it was ‘not clear’
that the officials responsible for Syrian policy in
the State Department and White House ‘get it’.
IHS-Jane’s Defence Weekly estimated in October
that as many as five thousand Uighur would-be
fighters have arrived in Turkey since 2013, with
perhaps two thousand moving on to Syria. Moustapha
said he has information that ‘up to 860 Uighur
fighters are currently in Syria.’
China’s
growing concern about the Uighur problem and its
link to Syria and Islamic State have preoccupied
Christina Lin, a scholar who dealt with Chinese
issues a decade ago while serving in the Pentagon
under Donald Rumsfeld. ‘I grew up in Taiwan and came
to the Pentagon as a critic of China,’ Lin told me.
‘I used to demonise the Chinese as ideologues, and
they are not perfect. But over the years as I see
them opening up and evolving, I have begun to change
my perspective. I see China as a potential partner
for various global challenges especially in the
Middle East. There are many places – Syria for one –
where the United States and China must co-operate in
regional security and counterterrorism.’ A few weeks
earlier, she said, China and India, Cold War enemies
that ‘hated each other more than China and the
United States hated each other, conducted a series
of joint counterterrorism exercises. And today China
and Russia both want to co-operate on terrorism
issues with the United States.’ As China sees it,
Lin suggests, Uighur militants who have made their
way to Syria are being trained by Islamic State in
survival techniques intended to aid them on covert
return trips to the Chinese mainland, for future
terrorist attacks there. ‘If Assad fails,’ Lin wrote
in a paper published in September, ‘jihadi fighters
from Russia’s Chechnya, China’s Xinjiang and India’s
Kashmir will then turn their eyes towards the home
front to continue jihad, supported by a new and
well-sourced Syrian operating base in the heart of
the Middle East.’
*
General
Dempsey and his
colleagues on the Joint Chiefs of Staff kept their
dissent out of bureaucratic channels, and survived
in office. General Michael Flynn did not. ‘Flynn
incurred the wrath of the White House by insisting
on telling the truth about Syria,’ said Patrick
Lang, a retired army colonel who served for nearly a
decade as the chief Middle East civilian
intelligence officer for the DIA. ‘He thought truth
was the best thing and they shoved him out. He
wouldn’t shut up.’ Flynn told me his problems went
beyond Syria. ‘I was shaking things up at the DIA –
and not just moving deckchairs on the Titanic.
It was radical reform. I felt that the civilian
leadership did not want to hear the truth. I
suffered for it, but I’m OK with that.’ In a recent
interview in Der Spiegel, Flynn was blunt
about Russia’s entry into the Syrian war: ‘We have
to work constructively with Russia. Whether we like
it or not, Russia made a decision to be there and to
act militarily. They are there, and this has
dramatically changed the dynamic. So you can’t say
Russia is bad; they have to go home. It’s not going
to happen. Get real.’
Few in the
US Congress share this view. One exception is Tulsi
Gabbard, a Democrat from Hawaii and member of the
House Armed Services Committee who, as a major in
the Army National Guard, served two tours in the
Middle East. In an interview on CNN in October she
said: ‘The US and the CIA should stop this illegal
and counterproductive war to overthrow the Syrian
government of Assad and should stay focused on
fighting against … the Islamic extremist groups.’
‘Does it
not concern you,’ the interviewer asked, ‘that
Assad’s regime has been brutal, killing at least
200,000 and maybe 300,000 of his own people?’
‘The things
that are being said about Assad right now,’ Gabbard
responded, ‘are the same that were said about
Gaddafi, they are the same things that were said
about Saddam Hussein by those who were advocating
for the US to … overthrow those regimes … If it
happens here in Syria … we will end up in a
situation with far greater suffering, with far
greater persecution of religious minorities and
Christians in Syria, and our enemy will be far
stronger.’
‘So what
you are saying,’ the interviewer asked, ‘is that the
Russian military involvement in the air and
on-the-ground Iranian involvement – they are
actually doing the US a favour?’
‘They are
working toward defeating our common enemy,’ Gabbard
replied.
Gabbard
later told me that many of her colleagues in
Congress, Democrats and Republicans, have thanked
her privately for speaking out. ‘There are a lot of
people in the general public, and even in the
Congress, who need to have things clearly explained
to them,’ Gabbard said. ‘But it’s hard when there’s
so much deception about what is going on. The truth
is not out.’ It’s unusual for a politician to
challenge her party’s foreign policy directly and on
the record. For someone on the inside, with access
to the most secret intelligence, speaking openly and
critically can be a career-ender. Informed dissent
can be transmitted by means of a trust relationship
between a reporter and those on the inside, but it
almost invariably includes no signature. The dissent
exists, however. The longtime consultant to the
Joint Special Operations Command could not hide his
contempt when I asked him for his view of the US’s
Syria policy. ‘The solution in Syria is right before
our nose,’ he said. ‘Our primary threat is Isis and
all of us – the United States, Russia and China –
need to work together. Bashar will remain in office
and, after the country is stabilised there will be
an election. There is no other option.’
The
military’s indirect pathway to Assad disappeared
with Dempsey’s retirement in September. His
replacement as chairman of the Joint Chiefs, General
Joseph Dunford, testified before the Senate Armed
Services Committee in July, two months before
assuming office. ‘If you want to talk about a nation
that could pose an existential threat to the United
States, I’d have to point to Russia,’ Dunford said.
‘If you look at their behaviour, it’s nothing short
of alarming.’ In October, as chairman, Dunford
dismissed the Russian bombing efforts in Syria,
telling the same committee that Russia ‘is not
fighting’ IS. He added that America must ‘work with
Turkish partners to secure the northern border of
Syria’ and ‘do all we can to enable vetted Syrian
opposition forces’ – i.e. the ‘moderates’ – to fight
the extremists.
Obama now
has a more compliant Pentagon. There will be no more
indirect challenges from the military leadership to
his policy of disdain for Assad and support for
Erdoğan. Dempsey and his associates remain mystified
by Obama’s continued public defence of Erdoğan,
given the American intelligence community’s strong
case against him – and the evidence that Obama, in
private, accepts that case. ‘We know what you’re
doing with the radicals in Syria,’ the president
told Erdoğan’s intelligence chief at a tense meeting
at the White House (as I reported in the LRB
of 17 April 2014). The Joint Chiefs and the DIA were
constantly telling Washington’s leadership of the
jihadist threat in Syria, and of Turkey’s support
for it. The message was never listened to. Why not?
Seymour
Myron "Sy" Hersh is an American investigative
journalist and political writer based in Washington,
D.C.
© LRB Limited
2015 |