There is No
U.S. War Against ISIS; Instead, Obama is Protecting
His “Assets”
Two years ago,
President Obama said he had no strategy to combat
the Islamic State. The U.S. is still not waging war
against ISIS or “jihadists of any brand in Syria.”
The international iihadist network is a U.S.
imperial asset. “The general aim of the Obama
administration’s jihadist policy, now deeply in
crisis, is to preserve the Islamic State as a
fighting force for deployment under another brand
name, under new top leadership.”
By Glen
Ford
June 03,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "BAR"
-
The U.S. claim
that it is waging a global “war on terror” is the
biggest lie of the 21st century, a
mega-fiction on the same historical scale of evil as
Hitler’s claim that he was defending Germany from an
assault by world Jewry, or that the trans-Atlantic
slave trade was a Christianizing mission. In
reality, the U.S. is the birth
mother and chief nurturer of the global jihadist
network – a truth recognized by most of the world’s
people, including the 82
percent of Syrians that believe “the U.S.
created the Islamic State.” (Even 62 percent of
Syrians in Islamic State-controlled regions believe
this to be true.)
Only “exceptionalism”-addled
Americans and colonial-minded Europeans give
Washington’s insane cover story the slightest
credibility. However, it is dangerous in the extreme
for any country to state the fact clearly: that it
is the United States that has inflicted Islamic
jihadist terror on the world. Once the charade has
been abandoned; once there is no longer the
international pretense that Washington is not the
Mother Of All Terror, what kind of dialogue is
possible with the crazed and desperate perpetrator?
What do you do with a superpower criminal, once you
have accused him of such unspeakable evil?
President
Vladimir Putin came closest last November, after
Russia unleashed a devastating bombing and missile
campaign against the Islamic State’s industrial
scale infrastructure in Syria – facilities and
transportation systems that the U.S. had left
virtually untouched since Obama’s phony
declaration of war against ISIS in September of
2014. The Islamic State had operated a gigantic oil
sales and delivery enterprise with impunity, right
under the eyes of American bombers. “I’ve shown our
colleagues photos taken from space and from aircraft
which clearly demonstrate the scale of the illegal
trade in oil and petroleum products,” said
Putin. “The motorcade of refueling vehicles
stretched for dozens of kilometers, so that from a
height of 4,000 to 5,000 meters they stretch beyond
the horizon.” Russian bombers destroyed hundreds of
the oil tankers within a week, and cruise missiles
launched from Russian ships on the Caspian Sea
knocked out vital ISIS command-and-control sites.
Putin’s
derision of U.S. military actions against ISIS
shamed and embarrassed Barack Obama before the world
– an affront that only a fellow nuclear superpower
would dare. Yet, even the Russian president chose
his words carefully, understanding that deployment
of jihadists has become central to U.S. imperial
policy, and cannot be directly confronted without
risks that could be fatal to the planet. Simply put,
Washington has no substitute for the jihadists, who
have been a tool of U.S. policy since the last days
of President Jimmy Carter’s administration.
That’s why,
in August of 2014, President Obama admitted “We
don’t have a strategy yet” to deal with ISIS. It had
been thirteen years since 9/11, but none of the
U.S./Saudi-sponsored jihadists had ever “gone off
the reservation,” spitting on the hands that fed
them, attacking the al-Qaida fighters (al-Nusra)
that are the real force behind so-called “moderate”
anti-Assad “rebels,” and threatening to overthrow
the Saudi and other Persian Gulf monarchies.
Obama had no strategy to combat ISIS, because the
U.S. had no strategy to fight jihadists of any brand
in Syria, since all the other terrorists worked for
the U.S. and its allies.
Obama is
still not waging a “war” against the Islamic State –
certainly not on a superpower scale, and not nearly
as vigorously as did the far smaller Russian forces
before their partial
withdrawal in March of this year. The New
York Times last week published an article
that was half apology, half critical of the U.S. air
campaign in ISIS territory. The Americans blamed
their lackadaisical air campaign on “poor
intelligence,” “clumsy targeting,” “inexperienced
planners,” “staffing shortages,” “internal
rivalries” and – this from a nation that has caused
the deaths of 20
to 30 million people since World War Two – “fear
of causing civilian casualties.” However, the
Pentagon now claims to have hit its stride, and is
concentrating on blowing up the Islamic State’s
money, targeting cash storage sites, resulting in
reductions in salaries of about 50 percent for ISIS
troops. The U.S. military says it has destroyed
about 400 ISIS oil tankers. (The Russians claim to
have destroyed a total of 2,000.)
As a
counterpoint, the Times quoted David A.
Deptula, a retired three-star Air Force general who
planned air campaigns in Afghanistan in 2001 and in
the Persian Gulf in 1991. He called the current U.S.
air campaign against the Islamic State “symbolic”
and “anemic when considered relative to previous
operations.”
The U.S.
has averaged 14.5 air strikes a day in the combined Syrian
and Iraqi theaters of war, with a peak of 17 a day
in April. That’s far lower than NATO’s 50 strikes a
day against Libya in 2011, 85 strikes a day against
Afghanistan in 2001, and 800 a day in Iraq in 2003.
It’s way below Russia’s 55 Syrian strikes a day –
9,000 total strikes over a five and a half month
period – by an air force a fraction of the size of
the 750 U.S. aircraft stationed in the region (not
counting planes on aircraft carriers, or cruise
missiles).
The numbers
tell the tale: the U.S. is not carrying on a serious
“war” against ISIS troop formations, which remain
aggressive, mobile and effective in Syria. The
Pentagon’s claim that fear of inflicting civilian
casualties should be dismissed outright, coming from
an agency that has killed between 1.3
million and 2 million people since 9/11,
according to a 2015 study by Physicians for Social
Responsibility.
American
excuses concerning “poor intelligence,” “clumsy
targeting,” “inexperienced planners,” “staffing
shortages,” and “internal rivalries” might even
contain some kernels of truth, since one would
expect gaps in gathering intelligence and targeting
information on jihadists that were considered U.S.
assets, not enemies. And, there is no question that
“internal rivalries” do abound in the U.S. war
machine, with CIA-sponsored jihadists attacking Pentagon-sponsored
jihadists in Syria – the point being, the U.S. backs
a wide range of jihadists that have conflicts with
one another.
The U.S.
plays up the killing of Islamic State “leaders” and
the blowing up of money caches. This is consistent
with what appears to be the general aim of the Obama
administration’s jihadist policy, now deeply in
crisis: to preserve the Islamic State as a fighting
force for deployment under another brand name, under
new top leadership. The Islamic State went “rogue,”
by the Americans’ definition, when it began pursuing
its own mission, two years ago. Even so, the U.S.
mainly targeted top ISIS leaders for elimination,
allowing the main body of fighters, estimated at
around 30,000, to not only remain intact, but to be
constantly resupplied and to carry on a vast oil
business, mainly with NATO ally Turkey. (The U.S.
has also been quite publicly protecting
the al-Qaida affiliate in Syria, al-Nusra, from
Russian bombing, despite U.S. co-sponsorship of a UN
resolution calling for international war against al-Nusra.)
To a
military man like retired general Deptula, this
looks like a “symbolic” and “anemic” campaign. It’s
actually a desperate effort to balance U.S.
interests in preserving ISIS as a American military
asset, while also maintaining the Mother Of All
Lies, that the U.S. is engaged in a global war on
terror, rather than acting as the headquarters of
terror in world. To maintain that tattered fiction,
at least in the bubble of the home country, requires
the maintenance of a massive and constant
psychological operations apparatus. It’s called the
corporate news media.
BAR
executive editor Glen Ford can be
contacted at Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com.
See
also -
US asks Russia to not hit
Nusra Front in Syria: Moscow:
Russia's foreign minister says
Washington has asked Moscow not to target the
al-Qaida's branch in Syria, the Nusra Front, for
fear of hitting the moderate opposition. |