Losing to Russia in Syria,
Washington Bombs Libya
By Finian Cunningham
August 07, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "SCF"
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The US air strikes on Libya this week mark a major
escalation of American overseas military operations.
A Pentagon spokesman said, the air campaign would
continue indefinitely in support of the UN-backed
unity government in Tripoli against Islamic State
(IS) jihadists.
It was the first “sustained” aerial
intervention in Libya since 2011 when US and other
NATO warplanes conducted a seven-month bombing
campaign in order to oust the government of Muammar
Gaddafi.
The
timing of the latest US air strikes on the
Libyan port city of Sirte seems significant. For
nearly two months, the Tripoli-based government has
been making inroads against the IS brigades in Sirte.
So why should US air strikes be called in at this
precise juncture?
The deployment of US air power in
Libya followed within days of the decisive offensive
launched by the Syrian Arab Army and its Russian
allies on the strategic city of Aleppo in northern
Syria. As the Syrian and Russian allies move towards
defeating anti-government militias holed up in
Syria’s biggest city that victory portends the end
of the five-year Syrian war.
Frustration in Washington over
Russia’s successful prosecution of its war against
foreign-backed terror groups in Syria has been
palpable since Russian President Vladimir Putin
ordered in his forces to the Arab country – a
longtime ally of Moscow – nearly ten months ago.
American frustration reached boiling
point when Russia unilaterally announced last week
that it was proceeding, along with Syrian forces, to
take back the city of Aleppo. Syria’s second city
after the capital Damascus has been besieged by
illegally armed groups for nearly four years. With
its proximity to the border with Turkey, Aleppo has
been a crucial conduit for foreign fighters and
weapons fueling the entire war – a war that
Washington and its NATO allies and regional partners
have covertly sponsored for their political
objective of regime change against President Bashar
al-Assad.
When Russia’s Defense Minister Sergei
Shoigu announced that humanitarian corridors were
being opened around Aleppo for fleeing civilians and
surrendering fighters, the plan was mocked as a
“ruse” by US Secretary of State John Kerry. The US
ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power
described the Syrian-Russian offensive on Aleppo as
“chilling”.
However, the sovereign, elected
government of Syria has every right to take back
control of Aleppo – formerly the country’s
commercial hub – which had been commandeered by an
assortment of illegally armed groups, some of whom
are designated as internationally proscribed terror
organizations.
What the pejorative words of Kerry
and Power indicate is Washington’s perplexity at
Moscow’s success in Syria. Russia’s military
intervention has thwarted the US-led foreign
conspiracy for regime change. Washington may have
got away partially with regime-change schemes in
Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya and Ukraine. But Russia’s
intervention has put paid to a similar maneuver in
Syria.
Not only that, but as Russia and its
Syrian ally close in for a final defeat of the
anti-government mercenary networks in Aleppo, it is
becoming excruciatingly obvious that Washington’s
charade of “moderate rebels” mingling among
terrorists is also exposed. For months now,
Washington has procrastinated on Moscow’s demands
that it provide clear demarcation between so-called
moderates and extremists. Washington has studiously
balked at providing any distinction or physical
separation. As Russian and Syrian forces corner the
militants in Aleppo, it becomes evident that
Washington and the Western media are caught on a
damnable lie, which has been used for the past five
years to justify the war in Syria. Furthermore,
Russia emerges vindicated in the way it has
prosecuted its military campaign in support of the
Syrian government.
In other words, Russia is seen as
genuinely fighting a war against terrorism, whereas
Washington and its allies are evinced as having a
mercurial, if not criminal, relationship with terror
groups that they claim to be combating.
On Friday, Washington’s top diplomat
John Kerry was anxiously waiting for clarification
from Moscow on what the Aleppo offensive was about.
By Monday, it was clear that Moscow was not going to
pander to Washington’s apprehensions about the
offensive plan.
“Once again, the Obama administration
appears to have been blindsided by Mr Putin, just as
it was when Russia dispatched its forces to Syria in
September,” declared
an editorial in the Washington Post on
Tuesday.
It was on Monday-Tuesday night that
US air strikes were ordered on Libya.
Washington’s chagrin over Syria is
compounded because only a few weeks ago, Kerry flew
to Moscow to offer a “deal” on joint military
cooperation between the US and Russia, allegedly to
fight terrorist brigades in Syria. It transpired
that what the American deal was really all about was
to inveigle Russia’s concession for Assad to stand
down. That is, for Russia to acquiesce to the
American goal of regime change.
Russia was having none of it. Russian
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov reiterated the
position that the future of Syria’s presidency was a
matter for the Syrian people to determine alone,
without any external interference.
Then the military offensive embarked
on Aleppo by Syrian and Russian forces – without
regard to Washington’s concerns for its “moderate
rebels”/terror
assets – was a further sign that Moscow was
following its own strategic assessment and
objectives. To Washington that was a stinging snub.
The Washington Post
editorial cited above carried the peeved headline:
“Stop trusting Putin on Syria”. It was but the
latest in a series of tetchy editorials admonishing
the Obama administration for “caving in” to Moscow
over Syria. One such earlier
headline ran: “Obama retreats from Putin in
Syria – again”.
Within the Obama administration there
appears to be sharp dissent over its perceived
failing policy on Syria. The Defense Secretary
Ashton Carter and National Intelligence Director
James Clapper were opposed to Obama and Kerry’s
now-redundant gambit to enlist Russia’s military
cooperation.
Earlier, a list of 51 US diplomats
signed a joint letter calling on the Obama
administration to step up its military operations in
Syria against the Assad government. It is also clear
that Obama’s would-be Democrat successor in the
White House, Hillary Clinton, is surrounded by
Pentagon aides pushing for greater American
intervention in Syria – even though that poses a
grave risk of confrontation with Russian forces.
Facing mounting criticism for failure
in Syria, it seems that the US air strikes on Libya
were ordered as some kind of compensation. President
Obama
reportedly ordered the strikes on the advice of
Pentagon chief Ashton Carter. It looks like the
Obama administration is trying to fend off
accusations of being soft.
Secondly, by ordering air strikes
against Islamic State jihadists in Libya’s Sirte,
that allows Washington to regain the narrative which
it has lost to Russia in Syria.
Russia’s success in Syria has
seriously undermined Washington’s claims of waging a
war on terror. The last stand of the terror groups
in Aleppo – including militia supported by
Washington and its allies – represents an
incriminating moment of truth.
Hence, as the net tightens on Syria’s
Aleppo, Washington’s hand was forced to lash out in
Libya, in an attempt to burnish its tarnished claim
that it is fighting against Islamist terrorism.
In truth, however, the bigger net
seems to be tightening on Washington. World public
opinion increasingly understands that terrorism is
closely correlated with everywhere Washington
engages. The terrorism spawned in Afghanistan and
Iraq under US occupation, was grafted onto Libya
during NATO’s regime-change bombing operation in
2011, which in turn contaminated Syria as part of
another regime-change campaign under Obama and his
then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
For Obama to now revisit Libya with
further air strikes due to failure of a criminal
policy in Syria – a failure resulting from Russia’s
principled intervention – is simply plumbing the
depths of American degeneracy. And the rest of the
world can see it. |