Obama’s
‘Moderate’ Syrian Deception
President Obama, who once called the idea of
“moderate” Syrian rebels a “fantasy,” has maintained
the fiction to conceal the fact that many
“moderates” are fighting alongside Al Qaeda’s
jihadists, an inconvenient truth that is
complicating an end to Syria’s civil war, explains
Gareth Porter.
By Gareth Porter
February 17,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News
" - If
the tentative agreement on a Syrian ceasefire
negotiated by the United States and Russia falls
apart before it can be implemented, the reason will
be the Obama administration’s insistence that
Russian airstrikes are targeting “legitimate
opposition groups.”
That is how
Secretary of State John Kerry defined the issue on
Saturday, repeating a propaganda theme that began,
in a different form, as soon as the Russian air
offensive in Syria began in late September of 2015.
The Obama administration portrayed the Russian
campaign in support of Syrian operations as hitting
“moderate” opposition forces, suggesting that only
strikes against ISIS would be legitimate.
President
Barack Obama talks with Ambassador Samantha Power,
U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations,
following a Cabinet meeting in the Cabinet Room of
the White House, Sept. 12, 2013. (Official White
House Photo by Pete Souza)
Now Kerry
insists that the “legitimate” armed organizations
being hit by Russian airstrikes are separate from
ISIS and Al Qaeda’s Syrian franchise, the Nusra
Front, both organizationally and physically. But the
reality on the ground in Idlib and Aleppo provinces
is that there is no such separation.
Information
from a wide range of sources, including some of the
groups that the United States has been explicitly
supporting, makes it clear that every armed
anti-Assad organization unit in those provinces is
engaged in a military system controlled by Nusra.
All of them fight alongside the Nusra Front and
coordinate their military activities with it.
This
reality even slips into mainstream US news accounts
on occasion, such as Anne Barnard’s New York Times
article last Saturday about the proposed Syrian
cease-fire in which she
reported, “With the proviso that the Nusra
Front, Al Qaeda’s branch in Syria, can still be
bombed, Russia puts the United States in a difficult
position; the insurgent groups it supports cooperate
in some places with the well-armed, well-financed
Nusra in what they say is a tactical alliance of
necessity against government forces.”
At least
since 2014 the Obama administration has armed a
number of Syrian armed groups even though it knew
the groups were coordinating closely with the Nusra
Front, which was simultaneously getting arms from
Turkey and Qatar. The strategy called for supplying
TOW anti-tank missiles to the “Syrian
Revolutionaries Front” (SRF) as the core of a client
Syrian army that would be independent of the Nusra
Front.
However,
when a combined force of Nusra and non-jihadist
brigades including the SRF captured the Syrian army
base at Wadi al-Deif in December 2014, the truth
began to emerge. The SRF and other groups to which
the United States had supplied TOW missiles had
fought under Nusra’s command to capture the base.
And as one
of the SRF fighters who participated in the
operation, Abu Kumayt, recalled to The New York
Times, after the victory only Nusra and its very
close ally Ahrar al-Sham were allowed to enter the
base. Nusra had allowed the groups supported by the
United States to maintain the appearance of
independence from Nusra, according to Abu Kumyt, in
order to induce the United States to continue the
supply of US weapons.
Playing Washington
In other
words, Nusra was playing Washington, exploiting the
Obama administration’s desire to have its own Syrian
Army as an instrument for influencing the course of
the war. The administration was evidently a willing
dupe.
Former US
Ambassador to Syria Robert Ford, who had been
supporting an aggressive program of arming
opposition brigades that had been approved by the
CIA,
told a January 2015 seminar in
Washington, “For a long time we have looked the
other way while the Nusra Front and armed groups on
the ground, some of which are getting help from us,
have coordinated in military operations against the
regime.”
Reflecting
the views of some well-placed administration
officials, he added, “I think the days of us looking
the other way are finished.” But instead of breaking
with the deception that the CIA’s hand-picked
clients were independent of Nusra, the Obama
administration continued to cling to it.
Nusra and
its allies were poised to strike the biggest blow
against the Assad regime up to the time – the
capture of Idlib province. Although some
U.S.-supported groups participated in the campaign
in March and April 2015, the “operations room”
planning the campaign was run by Al Qaeda and its
close ally Ahrar al Sham.
And before
the campaign was launched, Nusra had forced another
U.S.-supported group, Harakat Hazm, to disband and
took all of its TOW antitank missiles.
Furthermore, Saudi Arabia and Qatar were financing
the “Army of Conquest,” commanded by Nusra, and were
lobbying the administration to support it. US
strategy on Syria was then shifting toward a tacit
reliance on the jihadists to achieve the US
objective of putting sufficient pressure on the
Assad regime to force some concessions on Damascus.
But the
idea that an independent “moderate” armed opposition
still existed – and that the United States was
basing its policy on those “moderates” – was
necessary to provide a political fig leaf for the
covert and indirect US reliance on Al Qaeda’s Syrian
franchise’s military success.
When the
fall of Idlib led to the Russian intervention last
September, the US immediately resorted to its
propaganda line about Russian targeting of the
“moderate” armed opposition. It had become a
necessary shield for the United States to continue
playing a political-diplomatic game in Syria.
As the
current Russian-Syrian-Iranian offensive between
Aleppo and the Turkish border unfolds, the Obama
administration’s stance has been contradicted by
fresh evidence of the subordination of non-jihadist
forces to the Nusra Front. In late January, Nusra
consolidated its role as the primary opposition
military force in the eastern part of Aleppo City by
sending a huge convoy of 200 vehicles loaded with
fighters, according to the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights in London.
BBC
reported that “thousands of troops” had just arrived
in Aleppo for the coming battle. Ahrar al-Sham
confirmed on Feb. 2 that its ally, the Nusra Front,
had deployed a large convoy of “reinforcements” to
Aleppo. The pro-Assad Beirut daily As-Safir reported
that the convoys also included artillery, tanks and
armored vehicles, and that Nusra had taken over a
number of buildings to serve as its headquarters and
offices.
How
Al Qaeda Controls
An
assessment published on Saturday by the Institute
for the Study of War, which has long advocated more
US military assistance to Syrian anti-Assad groups,
provides further insights into the Nusra Front’s
system of control over U.S.-supported groups. One
way the jihadist organization maintains that
control, according to the study, is Ahrar al Sham’s
control of the Bab al Hawa border crossing with
Turkey, which gives Nusra and Ahrar power over the
distribution of supplies from Turkey into Aleppo
City and surrounding areas.
ISW points
out that another instrument of control is the use of
“military operations rooms” in which Nusra and Ahrar
al Sham play the dominant role while allocating
resources and military roles to lesser military
units.
Although
the Nusra Front is not listed as part of the “Army
of Aleppo” formally announced to combat the Russian
offensive, it is hardly credible that it does not
hold the primary positions in the operations room
for the Aleppo campaign, given the large infusion of
Nusra troops into the theater from Idlib and its
history in other such operations rooms in the Idlib
and Aleppo regions.
Yet another
facet of Nusra’s power in Aleppo is its control over
the main water and power plants in the
opposition-controlled districts of the city. But the
ultimate source of Nusra’s power over U.S.-supported
groups is the threat to attack them as agents of the
United States and take over their assets. Al Qaeda’s
franchise “successfully destroyed two U.S.-backed
groups in Northern Syria in 2014 and early 2015,”
ISW recalls, and initiated a campaign last October
against one of the remaining U.S.-supported groups,
Nour al Din al Zenki.
The
official US posture on the current offensive in the
Aleppo theater and the proposed ceasefire obscures
the fact that a successful Russian-Syrian operation
would make it impossible for the external states,
such as Turkey and Saudi Arabia, to resupply the
Nusra Front and Ahrar al Sham and thus end the
military threat to the Syrian government as well as
the possibility of Al Qaeda’s seizure of power in
Damascus.
Russian-Syrian success offers the most realistic
prospect for an end to the bloodletting in Syria and
would also reduce the likelihood of an eventual Al
Qaeda seizure of power in Syria.
The Obama
administration certainly understands that fact and
has already privately adjusted its diplomatic
strategy to take into account the likelihood that
the Nusra Front will now be substantially weakened.
But it cannot acknowledge any of that publicly
because such a recognition would infuriate many
hardliners in Washington who still demand “regime
change” in Damascus whatever the risks.
President
Obama is under pressure from these domestic critics
as well as from Turkey, Saudi Arabia and other GCC
allies to oppose any gains by the Russians and the
Assad regime as a loss for the United States. And
Obama administration must continue to hide the
reality that it was complicit in a strategy of
arming Nusra – in part through the mechanism of
arming Washington’s “moderate” clients – to achieve
leverage on the Syrian regime.
Thus the
game of diplomacy and deceptions continues.
Gareth Porter, an investigative historian and
journalist specializing in US national security
policy, received the UK-based Gellhorn Prize for
journalism for 2011 for articles on the U.S. war in
Afghanistan. His new book is
Manufactured Crisis: the Untold Story of the Iran
Nuclear Scare. He can
be contacted at
porter.gareth50@gmail.com.
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