Balkanizing
the Middle East
The REAL Goal of America and Israel
Shatter
Syria and Iraq Into Many Small Pieces
By WashingtonsBlog
February 25, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "WashingtonsBlog"
-
The hawks in the U.S. and Israel
decided long ago to break up Iraq and Syria into
small fragments.
The
Guardian
noted in 2003:
President Hosni Mubarak of Egypt predicted
devastating consequences for the Middle East if
Iraq is attacked. “We fear a state of disorder
and chaos may prevail in the region,” he said.
***
They
are probably still splitting their sides with
laughter in the Pentagon. But Mr Mubarak and the
[Pentagon] hawks do agree on one thing: war with
Iraq could spell disaster for several regimes in
the Middle East. Mr Mubarak believes that would
be bad. The hawks, though, believe it
would be good.
For the
hawks, disorder and chaos sweeping through the
region would not be an unfortunate side-effect
of war with Iraq, but a sign that
everything is going according to plan.
***
The
“skittles theory” of the Middle East – that one
ball aimed at Iraq can knock down several
regimes – has been around for some time on the
wilder fringes of politics but has come to the
fore in the United States on the back of the
“war against terrorism”.
Its
roots can be traced, at least in part, to a
paper published in 1996 by an Israeli thinktank,
the Institute for Advanced Strategic and
Political Studies. Entitled “A clean break: a
new strategy for securing the realm”, it was
intended as a political blueprint for
the incoming government of Binyamin Netanyahu.
As the title indicates, it advised the
right-wing Mr Netanyahu to make a complete break
with the past by adopting a strategy “based on
an entirely new intellectual foundation, one
that restores strategic initiative and provides
the nation the room to engage every possible
energy on rebuilding Zionism …”
***
The
paper set out a plan by which Israel would
“shape its strategic environment”, beginning
with the removal of Saddam Hussein and the
installation of a Hashemite monarchy in Baghdad.
With
Saddam out of the way and Iraq thus brought
under Jordanian Hashemite influence, Jordan and
Turkey would form an axis along with Israel to
weaken and “roll back” Syria. Jordan, it
suggested, could also sort out Lebanon by
“weaning” the Shia Muslim population away from
Syria and Iran, and re-establishing their former
ties with the Shia in the new Hashemite kingdom
of Iraq. “Israel will not only contain its foes;
it will transcend them”, the paper concluded.
***
The
leader of the “prominent opinion makers” who
wrote it was Richard Perle – now
chairman of the Defence Policy Board at the
Pentagon.
Also
among the eight-person team was Douglas
Feith, a neo-conservative lawyer, who now holds
one of the top four posts at the Pentagon as
under-secretary of policy.
***
Two
other opinion-makers in the team were
David Wurmser and his wife, Meyrav (see
US thinktanks give lessons in foreign policy,
August 19). Mrs Wurmser was co-founder of Memri,
a Washington-based charity that distributes
articles translated from Arabic newspapers
portraying Arabs in a bad light. After working
with Mr Perle at the American Enterprise
Institute, David Wurmser is now at the State
Department, as a special assistant to John
Bolton, the under-secretary for arms control and
international security.
A fifth
member of the team was James Colbert, of the
Washington-based Jewish Institute for National
Security Affairs (Jinsa) – a bastion of
neo-conservative hawkery whose advisory board
was previously graced by Dick Cheney (now US
vice-president), John Bolton and Douglas Feith.
***
With
several of the “Clean Break” paper’s authors now
holding key positions in Washington, the plan
for Israel to “transcend” its foes by reshaping
the Middle East looks a good deal more
achievable today than it did in 1996. Americans
may even be persuaded to give up their lives to
achieve it.
(Before
assuming prominent roles in the Bush administration,
many of the same people – including
Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, Dick Cheney, John
Bolton and others – advocated their imperial
views during the Clinton administration via their
American think tank, the “Project for a New American
Century”.)
Thomas
Harrington – professor of Iberian Studies at Trinity
College in Hartford, Connecticut –
writes:
[While
there are some good articles on the chaos in
Iraq, none of them] consider whether the
chaos now enveloping the region might, in fact,
be the desired aim of policy planners in
Washington and Tel Aviv.
***
One of the prime goals of every
empire is to foment ongoing internecine conflict
in the territories whose resources and/or
strategic outposts they covet.
***
The
most efficient way of sparking such open-ended
internecine conflict is to brutally smash the
target country’s social matrix and physical
infrastructure.
***
Ongoing
unrest has the additional perk of justifying the
maintenance and expansion of the military
machine that feeds the financial and political
fortunes of the metropolitan elite.
In
short … divide and rule is about as close as it
gets to a universal recourse the imperial game
and that it is, therefore, as important to bear
it in mind today as it was in the times of
Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, the Spanish
Conquistadors and the British Raj.
To
those—and I suspect there are still many out
there—for whom all this seems too neat or too
conspiratorial, I would suggest a
careful side-by side reading of:
a) the
“Clean Break” manifesto generated by the
Jerusalem-based Institute for Advanced Strategic
and Political Studies (IASPS) in 1996
and
b) the
“Rebuilding America’s Defenses” paper generated
by The Project for a New American Century (PNAC)
in 2000, a US group with deep personal and
institutional links to the aforementioned
Israeli think tank, and with the ascension of
George Bush Junior to the White House, to the
most exclusive sanctums of the US foreign
policy apparatus.
To read
the cold-blooded imperial reasoning in both of
these documents—which speak, in the first case,
quite openly of the need to destabilize
the region so as to reshape Israel’s
“strategic environment” and, in the second of
the need to dramatically increase the number of
US “forward bases” in the region ….
To do
so now, after the US’s systematic destruction of
Iraq and Libya—two notably oil-rich countries
whose delicate ethnic and religious balances
were well known to anyone in or out of
government with more than passing interest in
history—, and after the its carefully calibrated
efforts to generate and maintain murderous and
civilization-destroying stalemates in Syria and
Egypt (something that is easily substantiated
despite our media’s deafening silence on the
subject), is downright blood-curdling.
And
yet, it seems that for even very well-informed
analysts, it is beyond the pale to raise the
possibility that foreign policy elites in the US
and Israel, like all virtually all the ambitious
hegemons before them on the world stage, might
have quite coldly and consciously fomented
open-ended chaos in order to achieve their
overlapping strategic objectives in this part of
the world.
Antiwar’s
Justin Raimondo
notes:
Iraq’s
fate was sealed from the moment we invaded: it
has no future as a unitary state. As I pointed
out
again and
again in the early days of the conflict,
Iraq is fated to split apart into at least three
separate states: the Shi’ite areas around
Baghdad and to the south, the Sunni regions to
the northwest, and the Kurdish enclave which was
itching for independence since well before the
US invasion. This was the War Party’s
real if unexpressed goal from the very
beginning: the atomization of Iraq, and indeed
the entire Middle East. Their goal, in short,
was chaos – and that is precisely what
we are seeing today.
***
As I
put it
years ago:
“[T]he actual purpose was to blow the country to
smithereens: to atomize it, and crush it, so
that it would never rise again.
“When we invaded and occupied
Iraq, we didn’t just militarily defeat Iraq’s
armed forces – we
dismantled their army, and
their police force, along with all the other
institutions that held the country together. The
educational system was destroyed, and not
reconstituted. The infrastructure was
pulverized, and never restored.
Even the physical hallmarks of a civilized
society –
roads,
bridges,
electrical plants,
water facilities,
museums,
schools – were bombed out of
existence or else left to fall into disrepair.
Along with that, the spiritual and psychological
infrastructure that enables a society to
function – the bonds of trust, allegiance, and
custom – was
dissolved,
leaving Iraqis to fend for themselves in a war
of all against all.
“… What
we are witnessing in post-Saddam Iraq is the
erasure of an entire country. We can say, with
confidence: We came, we saw, we atomized.”
Why?
This is the question that inevitably arises in
the wake of such an analysis: why deliberately
destroy an entire country whose people were
civilized while our European ancestors were
living in trees?
The
people who planned, agitated for, and executed
this war are the very same people who have
advanced Israeli interests – at America’s
expense – at every opportunity. In “A
Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing the
Realm,” a 1996 document prepared by a gaggle
of neocons – Perle, Douglas Feith, James
Colbert, Charles Fairbanks, Jr., Robert
Loewenberg, David Wurmser, and Meyrav Wurmser –
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was
urged to “break out” of Israel’s alleged
stagnation and undertake a campaign of “regime
change” across the Middle East, targeting
Lebanon, Libya, Syria, Iraq, and eventually
Iran. With the exception of Iran – and that
one’s still cooking on the back burner – this is
precisely what has occurred. In 2003, in the
immediate wake of our Pyrrhic “victory” in Iraq,
then Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
declared to a visiting delegation of
American members of Congress that these “rogue
states” – Iran, Libya, and Syria – would have to
be next on the War Party’s target list.
(Indeed.)
And
Michel Chossudovsky points
out:
The division of Iraq along
sectarian-ethnic lines has been on the drawing
board of the Pentagon for more than 10 years.
What is
envisaged by Washington is the outright
suppression of the Baghdad regime and the
institutions of the central government, leading
to a process of political fracturing and
the elimination of Iraq as a country.
This
process of political fracturing in Iraq along
sectarian lines will inevitably have an impact
on Syria, where the US-NATO sponsored terrorists
have in large part been defeated.
Destabilization and political
fragmentation in Syria is also contemplated:
Washington’s intent is no longer to pursue the
narrow objective of “regime change” in Damascus.
What is contemplated is the break up of both
Iraq and Syria along sectarian-ethnic lines.
The
formation of the caliphate may be the first step
towards a broader conflict in the Middle East,
bearing in mind that Iran is supportive of the
al-Maliki government and the US ploy may indeed
be to encourage the intervention of Iran.
The
proposed re-division of both Iraq and Syria is
broadly modeled on that of the Federation of
Yugoslavia which was split up into seven
“independent states” (Serbia, Croatia,
Bosnia-Herzegovina, Macedonia (FYRM), Slovenia,
Montenegro, Kosovo). According to Mahdi Darius
Nazemroaya, the re division of Iraq into three
separate states is part of a broader process of
redrawing the Map of the Middle East.
The
above map was prepared by Lieutenant-Colonel
Ralph Peters. It was published in the Armed
Forces Journal in June 2006, Peters is a retired
colonel of the U.S. National War Academy. (Map
Copyright Lieutenant-Colonel Ralph Peters 2006).
Although the map does not officially reflect
Pentagon doctrine, it has been used in a
training program at NATO’s Defense College for
senior military officers”. (See
Plans for Redrawing the Middle East: The Project
for a “New Middle East”
By
Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya, Global Research,
November 2006)
Breaking
Apart Syria
Similarly,
Neooconservatives in the U.S. and Israel have long
advocated for the balkanization of Syria into
smaller regions based on ethnicity and religion. The
goal was to break up the country, and to do
away with the sovereignty of Syria as a separate
nation.
In 1982, a
prominent Israeli journalist formerly attached to
the Israeli Foreign Ministry allegedly
wrote a book expressly calling for the break up
of Syria:
All the
Arab states should be broken down, by Israel,
into small units …. Dissolution of Syria
and Iraq later on into ethnically or
religiously unique areas such as in
Lebanon, is Israel’s primary target on the
Eastern front in the long run.
It is
well-documented that – in 1996 – U.S. and Israeli
Neocons
advocated:
Weakening, containing, and even rolling
back Syria ….
As
Michel Chossudovsky points
out:
Destabilization and political fragmentation in
Syria is also contemplated: Washington’s intent
is no longer to pursue the narrow objective of
“regime change” in Damascus. What is
contemplated is the break up of both Iraq and
Syria along sectarian-ethnic lines.
In 2013,
former Israeli diplomat Alon Pinkas
said:
Let
them both [sides] bleed, haemorrhage to death:
that’s the strategic thinking here. As long as
this lingers, there’s no real threat from Syria.
Indeed, in May 2015, one of the
key architects of the Iraq war – John Bolton –
said:
The
Arabs divided between Sunnis and Shias – I think
the Sunni Arabs are never going to agree to be
in a state where the Shia outnumber them 3-1.
That’s what ISIS has been able to take advantage
of.
I think
our objective should be a new Sunni
state out of the western part of Iraq, the
eastern part of Syria run by moderates
or at least authoritarians who are not radical
Islamists. What’s left of the state of Iraq, as
of right now, is simply a satellite of the
ayatollahs in Tehran. It’s not anything we
should try to aid.
In
September 2015, Pentagon intelligence chief Lt. Gen.
Vincent Stewart
said that he has “a tough time” seeing either
Iraq or Syria really coming back together as
sovereign nations.
Dan Sanchez
noted last week:
In
general, Israel ideally prefers regime changes
that result in the installation of stable
puppets. That is Plan A. But Plan B is
to balkanize. Better to divide and
conquer than to countenance a “rogue”
(independent) neighbor.
So it is
noteworthy that Israel is endorsing its
Plan B for Syria just when its enemies
are making it plain that Plan A (“Assad
Must Go”) is not happening any time soon.
And
SecState John Kerry
confirmed just yesterday that “Plan B” is to
break Syria up into different states.
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