Saudis Push
Washington Revolt Against Obama on Syria
By Finian
Cunningham
June 23, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "SCF"
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That 51 US diplomats reproached
President Obama’s Syria policy by calling for
greater American military force deployed against the
Damascus government was itself a remarkable sign of
official dissent within Washington. But the
president’s authority was further brazenly
undermined when a few days later the Saudi rulers
endorsed the dissenting US diplomats – while being
received at the White House.
Several things can be discerned here.
For one, the US policy on Syria is reeling from
failure. The objective of regime change – which has
impelled the whole war in that country for the past
five years – seems to be fading as an obtainable
goal. Russia’s military intervention beginning last
October to stabilize the Syrian state put paid to
that. Reports that Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the top
commander of the so-called Islamic State (IS or
Daesh), has been killed in a Syrian/Russian air
strike in the group’s eastern stronghold of Raqqa
suggests that the foreign-backed terrorist
insurgency is indeed facing final defeat.
The US covert tactic of using a
dual-track political process of supposed peace
negotiations to allow for mercenary proxies to
regroup has also come unstuck. Syria and its
Russian, Iranian and Hezbollah allies have not
relented in targeting terrorist militia, even those
whom Washington disingenuously refers to as
«moderates» and «on ceasefire». The cessation in
hostilities called for by Russia and the US back in
February is sundered because it never was a bona
fide ceasefire in the first place, as far as
Washington was really concerned. It was only a
side-way maneuver to facilitate regime change by
political means.
As it stands, US policy has been
checked decisively in Syria. And that would seem to
explain the eruption in frustration among the US
diplomats and the foreign planners at the State
Department – as illustrated by the «leaking» of
large-scale criticism of the Obama administration
last week. Failure begets frustration.
The contrarian diplomats are calling
for the US to directly attack the Syrian government
forces of President Bashar al-Assad. For the past
two years, US air strikes in Syria are purportedly
aimed at targeting the Islamic State while staying
clear of Syrian army units. The rebellious
Washington diplomats want US firepower to be
henceforth directed at the Syrian army.
Russia immediately slammed the
would-be American proposal as a grave violation of
international law. Moscow knows that such a move
seriously risks bringing US and Russian forces into
direct confrontation.
Obama, for his part, is unlikely to
go along with a change in his Syrian policy. He
knows the risks of escalation are too dangerous, and
with only months to go before his second term
finishes, the 44th president is loath to end his
White House stint in ignominy.
Nevertheless, the gung-ho restiveness
within Washington for a wider war in Syria could
well be countenanced by Obama’s successor. Democrat
Hillary Clinton has called for a wider air campaign
in Syria, and whoever the Republicans select can be
safely assumed to be equally gung-ho, if not more.
Washington’s dissent on Syria is thus
a signal for ramped-up war. It may be put on hold
for a few months, but it seems almost certain that a
wider war is being prepared. And that’s largely
because US regime change objectives in Syria have
been thwarted up to now. Failure begets petulance.
The extraordinary show of defiance
towards President Obama is a disturbing calling card
for future escalation in Syria and the wider Middle
East. It seems beyond recklessness that Washington
is, firstly, drumming up support for military
intervention to salvage the lost cause of its proxy
armies, and secondly, pushing for its forces to
clash with those of Russia, Iran and Hezbollah.
The seriousness of the revolt in
Washington over Syria is testified by reports that
John Kerry, the US Secretary of State, is planning
to meet with the 51 diplomats calling for direct
military intervention. Kerry went as far as
describing their proposals as «very good», although
he did not explicitly say whether he endorsed them.
However, the fact that Obama’s
foreign minister and Washington’s top diplomat is
openly meeting with a caucus that has thrown down a
gauntlet to the president over Syria goes to show
that the War Party is building momentum.
Last week, Kerry issued a foreboding
warning to Moscow that the US is «losing patience»
on the future of Assad in Syria, indicating again
that he appears to be stepping into the militarist
camp. This after Kerry was almost tripping on his
tears earlier this year about how the bloodshed in
Syria has to stop. Well, after all, Vietnam War
«hero» Kerry is a past-master at opportunistic
political careering. Russia’s Chief of Staff General
Valery Gerasimov hit back at Kerry’s belligerence,
saying it is not the US that is losing patience, but
rather it is Russia, which is fed up with
Washington’s cynical games of peek-a-boo with
terrorists and continually refusing to cooperate
with Moscow in delineating terrorist targets.
In any case, the salient point, as
noted in the opening of this commentary, is the way
that the Saudi regime quickly rowed in behind the
Washington show of defiance towards the American
president. That is a sinister portent.
Only a matter of days after the
broadside by the US diplomats, a Saudi delegation
was received at the White House, with the customary
sycophancy. The delegation included Saudi defense
minister and deputy crown prince Mohammed bin Sultan
(the king’s son) and the kingdom’s foreign minister
Adel al-Jubeir. The Saudis later told a press
briefing that they backed the call by the diplomats
for Obama to «get tough» on Syria.
Of course, that has been the mantra
of the Saudi regime over the past five years. When
Obama reneged on his «red line» for open military
intervention at the end of 2013, the House of Saud
has been in a huge huff ever since.
But the audacious undermining of the
American president by his Saudi guests shows how
deeply in tune the House of Saud is with the War
Party in Washington.
The sense of arrogant entitlement on
the steps of the White House speaks of a formidable
relationship between the House of Saud and powerful
elements of secret American government. It also
explains why the Saudis were so aghast by
Congressional attempts to probe alleged Saudi
involvement in the 9/11 terror attacks. Such probing
will probably never arise to much anyway, and
already the CIA director John Brennan has
confidently stated that classified official
documents from a Congressional inquiry into 9/11
will clear the Saudi state of alleged complicity.
Given the long historical collusion
between US covert state power and the Saudi regime
one can understand why the Saudis are so vexed by
even mere tepid attempts within Washington to hang
out the dirty laundry on the Arab despots.
From the Saudi point of view, knowing
full well the depths of US collusion in covert ops,
the mere mention of incriminating the oil-rich
kingdom must seem like the height of treachery.
This murky US-Saudi relationship was
alluded to in a rare report in the New York
Times earlier this year when it was divulged
that decades of American covert operations across
the globe have been heavily reliant on Saudi money
for financing. The NY Times candidly tells
how the CIA’s clandestine subversive projects and
rogue operations have been bankrolled by the Saudi
regime. This partnership in crime goes well beyond
the more notorious instance of how the Americans and
the Saudis created and armed jihadist extremists in
Afghanistan during the 1980s to fight the Soviet
Union.
That is, the jihadi proxies that
later went on to form Al Qaeda and various offshoots
like Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra in Syria and
Iraq, are but just one arm of a global terrorist or
insurgency machine, which the US has deployed to
topple governments and destabilize enemies. Implicit
here is that Saudi oil money has greased the wheels
of covert US operations on a global scale, from
Central and South America, to Iraq, to again in
Afghanistan, Chechnya, the Balkans, Georgia, Libya
and Syria, and as recently as the coup d’état in
Ukraine in February 2014. Perhaps even in recent
disturbances in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.
In his book on the Bush dynasty,
«Family of Secrets», award-winning author Russ Baker
documents how it was George H W Bush Sr, as head of
the CIA in the mid-1970s, who cemented the Saudi
role in funding US dirty operations around the
world. That shadowy relationship has been a staple
ever since, redoubled under the presidency of his
son, George W Bush Jr.
Why the CIA courted billions of
dollars of Saudi money from the mid-1970s onwards to
fund its dirty work was because various
Congressional committees and a recurring public
outcry over the 1963 assassination of President John
F Kennedy had furnished a political backlash against
the CIA and its suspected involvement in clandestine
activities, including the murder of political
leaders. From the mid-1970s onwards, the CIA and its
adjuncts within the US Deep State desperately needed
a way to fund their operations with off-the-books
money, not accountable to the Congress. Enter the
Saudis, who glad-handed their way into perhaps the
most destructive covert alliance since the Second
World War.
And there is every reason to believe
that this US-Saudi covert relationship pertains to
this day. Hence, the fundamental reluctance within
the Washington establishment to incite disfavor with
its de facto covert-operations banker.
The converse of that arrangement is
that the Saudi rulers know that they have important
push within Washington when it comes to promoting a
militarist agenda.
Obama up to now has, for whatever
reason, resisted calls from within the CIA, the
State Department and Saudi rulers for more military
intervention in Syria.
The audacious undermining of Obama by
the Saudis in their backing of a Washington revolt
against the president’s policy strongly suggests
that the war in Syria is going to escalate.
Finian
Cunningham is former editor and writer for major
news media organizations. He has written extensively
on international affairs, with articles published in
several languages |