Why the US
anti-terror Coalition is Failing
By Finian Cunningham
January 21,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"American
Herald Tribune
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There was an
underwhelming sense when Pentagon boss Ashton Carter
met this week in Paris with other members of the
US-led military coalition supposedly fighting the
ISIL terror group.
The US-led
coalition was set up at the end of 2014 and in
theory comprises 60 nations. The main military
operation of the alliance is an aerial bombing
campaign against terrorist units of IS (also known
as ISIL, ISIS or Daesh).
At the
Paris meeting this week, Secretary of Defense
Carter was joined by counterparts from just six
countries: France, Britain, Germany, Italy,
Netherlands and Australia. Where were the other 54
nations of the coalition?
Carter and
French defense minister Jean-Yves Le Drian patted
themselves on the back about “momentum”in their
campaign against the terrorist network. However,
platitudes aside, there was a noticeable crestfallen
atmosphere at the meeting of the shrunken US-led
coalition.
One telling
point was Carter exhorting Arab countries to
contribute more. As a
headline in the Financial Times put it: “US
urges Arab nations to boost ISIS fight”.
Carter
didn’t mention specific names but it was clear he
was referring to Saudi Arabia and the other oil-rich
Persian Gulf Arab states, including Kuwait, Qatar,
United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.
When the US
initiated the anti-IS coalition in 2014, fighter
jets from the Sunni Arab states participated in the
aerial campaign. They quickly fell away from the
operation and instead directed their military forces
to Yemen, where the Saudi-led Arab coalition has
been bombing that country non-stop since March 2015
to thwart an uprising by Houthi revolutionaries.
But there
is an even deeper, more disturbing reason for the
lack of Arab support for the US-led coalition in
Iraq and Syria. That is because Saudi Arabia and the
other Sunni monarchies are implicated in funding and
arming the very terrorists that Washington’s
coalition is supposedly combating.
Several
senior US officials have at various times admitted
this. Democrat presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton
labelled Saudi Arabia as the main sponsor of “Sunni
extremist groups”in diplomatic cables when she was
Secretary of State back in 2009, as disclosed by
Wikileaks.
Vice
President Joe Biden, while addressing a Harvard
University forum in late 2014, also spilled the
beans on the Persian Gulf states and Turkey being
behind the rise of terror groups in the Middle East.
So there is
substantial reason why the US-led anti-terror
coalition in Iraq and Syria has not delivered
decisive results. It is the same reason why Carter
was joined by only six other countries in Paris this
week and why there was a glaring absence of Saudi
Arabia and other Arab members. These despotic
regimes –whom Washington claims as “allies”–are part
of the terrorist problem.
Not that
the US or its Western allies are blameless. Far from
it. It was Washington after all that master-minded
the regime-change operations in Iraq and Syria,
which spawned the terror groups.
In fact, we
can go further and point to evidence, such as the
testimony of Lt General Michael Flynn of the Defense
Intelligence Agency, which shows that the US
enlisted the terror brigades as proxies to do its
dirty work in Syria for regime change.
The US and
its Western allies conceal this collusion by
claiming that they are supporting “moderate
rebels”–not extremists. But the so-called moderates
have ended up joining the terrorists and sharing
their US-supplied weapons. The distinction between
these groups is thus meaningless, leaving the
baleful conclusion that Washington, London and Paris
are simply colluding with terrorism.
US
Republican presidential contenders and media pundits
berate the Obama administration for not doing enough
militarily to defeat IS. Or as Donald Trump’s backer
Sarah Palin would say to “kick ass”.
The
unsettling truth is that the US cannot do more to
defeat terrorism in the Middle East because
Washington and its allies are the source of
terrorism in the region. Through their meddling and
machinations, Washington and its cohorts have
created a veritable Frankenstein monster.
The
“coalition”that is actually inflicting serious
damage to IS and its various terror franchises is
that of Russia working in strategic cooperation with
the Syrian Arab Army of President Bashar al-Assad.
Since Russia began its aerial bombing campaign
nearly four months ago, we have seen a near collapse
of the terror network’s oil and weapons smuggling
rackets and hundreds of their bases destroyed.
Yet Ashton
Carter this week accused Russia of impeding the
fight against terrorism in Syria because of its
support for the Assad government. Talk about double
think!
If we strip
away the false rhetoric and mainstream media
misinformation, Washington’s “anti-terror”coalition
can be seen as not merely incompetently leading from
behind.
The US, its
Western allies and regional client regimes are in
the front ranks of the terror problem.
Finian Cunningham (born 1963) has written
extensively on international affairs, with
articles published in several languages. For
over 20 years, he worked as an editor and
writer in major news media organisations,
including The Mirror, Irish Times and
Independent.
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