US
Military Leadership Resisted Obama's Bid
for Regime Change in Syria, Libya
By
Gareth Porter
January 04, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- "MEE"
- Seymour Hersh’s
recent revelations about an effort
by the US military leadership in 2013 to
bolster the Syrian army against jihadist
forces in Syria shed important new light
on the internal bureaucratic politics
surrounding regime change in US Middle
East policy. Hersh’s account makes it
clear that the Obama administration’s
policy of regime change in both Libya
and Syria provoked pushback from the
Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS).
That account and another report on a
similar episode in 2011 suggest that the
US military has a range of means by
which it can oppose administration
policies that it regards as
unacceptable. But it also shows that the
military leadership failed to alter the
course of US policy, and raises the
question whether it was willing to use
all the means available to stop the
funnelling of arms to al-Nusra Front and
other extremist groups in Syria.
Hersh details a JCS initiative in the
summer of 2013 to share intelligence on
Islamic State and al-Qaeda organisations
with other German, Russian and Israeli
militaries, in the belief that the
information would find its way to the
Syrian army. Hersh reports that the
military leadership did not inform the
White House and the State Department
about the “military to military”
intelligence sharing on the jihadist
forces in Syria, reflecting the hardball
bureaucratic politics practised within
the national security institutions.
The 2013 initiative approved by the
chairman of the JCS, General Martin
Dempsey, was not the first active effort
by the US military to mitigate Obama
administration regime change policies.
In 2011, the JCS had been strongly
opposed to the effort to depose the
Muammar Gaddafi regime in Libya led by
then secretary of state Hillary
Clinton.
When the Obama administration began its
effort to overthrow Gaddafi, it did not
call publicly for regime change and
instead asserted that it was merely
seeking to avert mass killings that
administration officials had suggested
might approach genocidal levels. But the
Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), which
had been given the lead role in
assessing the situation in Libya, found
no evidence to support such fears and
concluded that it was based on
nothing more than “speculative
arguments”.
The JCS warned that overthrowing the
Gaddafi regime would serve no US
security interest, but would instead
open the way for forces aligned with
al-Qaeda to take over the country. After
the Obama administration went ahead with
a NATO air assault against the Gaddafi
regime the US military sought to head
off the destruction of the entire Libyan
government. General Carter Ham, the
commander of AFRICOM, the US regional
command for Africa
gave the State Department a proposal for
a ceasefire to which Gaddafi had
agreed. It would have resulted in
Gaddafi’s resignation but retain the
Libyan military’s capacity to hold off
jihadist forces and rescind the
sanctions against Gaddafi’s family.
But the State Department
refused any negotiation with Gaddafi
on the proposal. Immediately after
hearing that Gaddafi had been captured
by rebel forces and killed, Clinton
famously
joked in a television interview, “We
came, we saw, he died” and laughed.
By
then the administration was already
embarked on yet another regime change
policy in Syria. Although Clinton led
the public advocacy of the policy, then
CIA director David Petraeus, who had
taken over the agency in early September
2011, was a major ally. He immediately
began working on a
major covert operation to arm rebel
forces in Syria. The CIA operation used
ostensibly independent companies in
Libya to ship arms from Libyan
government warehouses to Syria and
southern Turkey. These were then
distributed in consultation with the
United States through networks run by
Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. The plan
went into operation within days of
Gaddafi’s death on October 20, 2011 just
before NATO officially ended its
operation at the end of that month, as
the DIA later
reported to the JCS.
But the result of the operation was to
accelerate the dominance of al-Qaeda and
their Islamist allies. The Turks,
Qataris and Saudis were
funnelling arms to al-Qaeda’s Syrian
franchise, al-Nusra Front or other
closely related extremist groups. That
should not have surprised the Obama
administration. The same thing had
happened in Libya in spring 2011 after
the Obama administration had endorsed a
Qatari plan to send arms to Libyan
rebels. The White House had
quickly learned that the Qataris had
sent the arms to the most extremist
elements in the Libyan opposition.
The original Petraeus covert operation
ended with the torching of the US
consulate in Benghazi in September 2012
in which Ambassador Chris Stevens was
killed. It was superseded by a new
programme under which Qatar and Saudi
Arabia financed the transfer of weapons
from other sources that were supposed to
be distributed in cooperation with CIA
officials at a base in southern Turkey.
But “thousands of tons of weapons” were
still going to groups fighting alongside
the jihadists or who actually joined
them as Vice-President Joe Biden
revealed in 2014.
By
spring 2013, al-Nusra Front and its
Islamic extremist allies were already in
control of wide areas in the north and
in the Damascus suburbs. The Islamic
State had separated from al-Nusra Front
and established its own territory south
of the Turkish border. The secular armed
opposition had ceased to exist as a
significant force. The “Free Syrian
Army”, the nominal command of those
forces, was actually a fiction within
Syria, as was
reported by specialists on the Syrian
conflict. But despite the absence of
a real “moderate opposition”, the Obama
administration continued to support the
flood of arms to the forces fighting to
overthrow Assad.
In
mid-2013, as Hersh recounts, the DIA
issued an intelligence assessment
warning that the administration’s regime
change policy might well result in a
repeat of what was already happening in
Libya: chaos and jihadist domination.
The JCS also pulled off a clever
manoeuvre to ensure that the jihadists
and their allies were getting only
obsolete weapons. A JCS representative
convinced the CIA to obtain much cheaper
arms from Turkish stocks controlled by
officials sympathetic to the CIA’s
viewpoint on Syria.
But the JCS failed to alter the
administration’s policy of continuing to
support the flow of arms into Syria. Did
the military leadership really use all
of its leverage to oppose the policy?
In
2013, some officials on the US National
Security Council staff pushed for a
relatively modest form of pressure on
Qatar to get it to back off its
continued supply of arms to extremists,
including al-Nusra Front, by pulling out
a US fighter squadron from the US air
base at al-Udeid in Qatar. But as the
Wall Street Journal
reported earlier this year, the
Pentagon, obviously reflecting the JCS
position, vetoed the proposal, arguing
that the forward headquarters of the
Central Command at the airbase was
“vital” to US operations in the Middle
East.
The political implications of the
episode are clear: bureaucratic
self-interest trumped the military’s
conviction that US security is being
endangered. No matter how strongly the
JCS may have felt about the recklessness
of administration policy, they were not
prepared to sacrifice their access to
military bases in Qatar, Saudi Arabia or
Turkey to pressure their Middle Eastern
allies.
- Gareth
Porter is an independent
investigative journalist and winner of
the 2012 Gellhorn Prize for journalism.
He is the author of the newly published
Manufactured Crisis: The Untold Story of
the Iran Nuclear Scare.
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