Syrian
Elections Confirm West’s Worst Fears
By Tony
Cartalucci
April 23, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "NEO"-
Despite
Syria’s ongoing conflict, life in many parts of the
nation goes on. Syria’s election schedule is no
exception. The last parliamentary elections before
the latest held this month were in 2012. Since these
elections are held every 4 years, the recent
elections were far from a “political stunt” to
bolster the legitimacy of the current government,
but instead represented the continuity of Syria’s
ongoing, sovereign political process.
Attempts to
undermine the credibility of the elections have
become the primary objective of US and European news
agencies, however, even the US government’s own
election monitoring nongovernmental (NGO) agencies
have conceded the last presidential election in 2014
saw soaring voter turnout, and despite attempts to
leave voter turnout this year omitted from
US-European press reports, it appears to also have
been high.
The
Washington-based, USAID-funded “Election
Guide” reported a 73.42% voter turnout in
Syria’s 2014 presidential election, a turnout that
would be astounding had they been US elections.
Voter turnout for the 2008 and 2012 presidential
elections in the US, for example, were 57.1% and
54.9% respectively. The 2016 Syrian parliamentary
elections appear to have also enjoyed a high
turnout, with the International Business Tribune in
its article, “Syria
Elections 2016 Updates: Geneva Peace Talks Resume
Amid Scrutiny Of Country’s Ballot Process,”
reporting that:
Voting
hours for the Syrian parliamentary elections
Wednesday were extended for an additional five
hours because of such a high voter turnout. A
religious leader there lauded the number of
voters participating, saying that it was an
indication to voters’ apparent opposition to the
“cruelty, terrorism and destruction” experienced
in Syria’s civil war.
Despite high
turnouts in previous elections and indicators like
that reported in the International Business Tribune
regarding this latest poll, US papers like the New
York Times (NYT) decided to sidestep facts and
intentionally indulged in unconfirmed, anecdotal
stories to portray turnout as low as possible and
the credibility of the elections nonexistent.
Anne Barnard’s
questionable NYT article titled, “Syrian
Parliamentary Elections Highlight Divisions and
Uncertainty,” claimed that:
Large
parts of the country that are controlled by
insurgent groups did not participate in the
voting on Wednesday. Despite a fragile partial
cease-fire, government and Russian warplanes
have continued to hit areas controlled by
nationalists and Islamist rebels, as well as
territory held by the Islamic State, also known
as ISIS and ISIL. An American-led coalition is
also bombing areas held by the group.
Throughout
Barnard’s NYT piece, she categorically fails to
inform readers that while the geographical areas
“controlled by insurgent groups” might be “large,”
the majority of Syria’s population does not reside
within them, and clearly chose to vote in large
numbers both in 2014 and 2016 for the current
government.
Claims that
Kurdish regions also did not participate, omitted
the fact that Syria’s total Kurdish population is
less than 10% of Syria’s population and that not all
Syrian Kurds reside in these regions and refused to
vote.
Dispelling the
Displacement Myths
It is usually
the US that reminds the world of Syria’s displaced
population. What it often doesn’t mention is the
fact that most of these displaced Syrians have not
fled abroad either to Turkey or Jordan or further
beyond to Europe, but have instead sought safe haven
in Syria’s capital of Damascus and the protection of
its government and the Syrian Arab Army.
The
US-EU-funded Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre
(IDMC) would reveal precisely this in its 2012
report, “Syria:
No safe haven – A country on the move, a nation on
the brink,” stating:
Syria’s
two biggest cities Damascus and Aleppo were seen
as safe havens from the violence and gradually
saw a large influx of IDPs [internally displaced
persons] fleeing from the zones of conflict.
It is clear
that the majority of Syria’s population are fleeing
from US-EU backed “freedom fighters” and seeking
sanctuary under the protection of the “regime”
Western powers have attempted to convince the world
led by villains. With this in mind, poll results in
favor of the ruling government should be of no
surprise, despite rhetoric circulating in
US-European media.
The West’s
Worst Fears Confirmed
This reality
confirms the West’s worst fears, that despite all
attempts to divide and destroy the modern
nation-state of Syria, the people remain relatively
united in cause to restore peace and order within
the nation, and to do so with the current government
leading the way.
It is also
ironic that the United States and Europe endlessly
expound the virtue of self-determination but now
attempt to undermine an exercise in that very
self-determination by the Syrian people.
It is clear by
the statements made by the United States and several
European nations regarding the recent elections that
the problem was not necessarily the manner in which
the elections were held, but who they included. It
was not candidates Syrian law excluded from the
elections, but candidates the United States and
Europe simply do not approve of. In other words, the
US and Europe are doing precisely the opposite of
promoting self-determination in Syria and are in
fact attempting to undo or otherwise undermine the
credibility of the results of the recent elections.
NPR in an
article titled, “Parts
Of Syria Vote In Parliamentary Elections That
Critics Say Are A Sham,” would report that:
Mark
Toner, U.S. State Department deputy
spokesperson, said this week that “to hold
parliamentary elections now given the current
circumstances, given the current conditions in
the country, we believe is at best premature and
not representative of the Syrian people.”
A French Foreign Ministry spokesman called the
elections a “sham,” while his German counterpart
said that country “will not accept the results,”
Reuters reported.
It should be
remembered that the US and its European allies eagerly
supported elections held in Ukraine amid fierce
fighting in the nation’s easternmost region. Despite
the inability or unwillingness of many in Ukraine to
vote, the elections were both held and recognized by
the US and Europe. The reason for this hypocrisy
should be clear. Those running in Ukraine’s
elections were candidates the US and Europe approved
of, supported, and knew would win, while those
running and most likely to win in Syria’s elections
are not.
Thus,
“democracy” from an American or European point of
view, is more about special interests in the West
selecting a foreign nation’s future government, not
its people, unless of course, the people can be
convinced to back those candidates Washington and
Brussels supports as well.
Not only does
the recent election in Syria confirm the West’s
worst fears of a failed campaign to divide and
destroy the nation, casting doubts on the viability
of installing a Western-friendly regime into power
during the proposed “transition,” but rather than
exposing the alleged illegitimacy of Syrian
democracy, it is the West’s brand of selective
meddling and manipulation of polls that has been
laid out for all the world to see.
With any luck,
Syria may serve as an example for other nations to
follow in resisting and overcoming foreign
interference in their domestic political processes.
Tony
Cartalucci, Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher
and writer, especially for the online magazine“New
Eastern Outlook”. |