Syria -
U.S.-Russian Deal Fails (Again) Over Continued
Support For Jihadis
By Moon Of
Alabama
September
09, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Moon
Of Alabama"
-Since
the February ceasefire in Syria, which was
broken by U.S. supported Jihadis, Russia tried
to press the U.S. into fulfilling the UN Security
Council resolution 2254. The resolution signs off on
the ceasefire but demands that all nations continue
to fight the Islamic State and al-Qaeda.
But the
U.S. continued to support al-Qaeda and its various
front group in Syria like Ahrar al-Sham and Jund al-Aqsa.
"Moderate rebels" were armed with modern weapons by
the U.S. and trained in camps in Turkey and Jordan.
They were sent to Syria to integrated with al-Qaeda
and made it impossible to fight one group without
hitting the other. The U.S. used this ploy to
protect al-Qaeda from Russian and Syrian attacks.
Such attacks, it claimed, would break the ceasefire
as they would also hit its "moderate rebels".
To gain
some negotiating advantage Russia and its Syrian
allies closed all access to east-Aleppo which is
held by Jihadis. The U.S. sponsored rebels and
al-Qaeda responded with an attack in south Aleppo
which then broke the new established siege.
But that
move was a hail-Mary pass. "Rebels" from all fronts
were pulled together to support the attack. MANPADs
were delivered to deny Russia the use of attack
helicopters. With the help of an al-Qaeda mass
suicide attack the "rebels" took the artillery
college and adjacent areas in south Aleppo and
managed to open a corridor into east-Aleppo. This
was a serious set back for the Russian plans.
The
response was constant bombing of the hinterlands of
the "rebel" held parts of Aleppo and Idleb governate
which made any supply of their front difficult. The
Russian and Syrian air forces destroyed the
"rebel's" infrastructure, supply sites and their
command and control elements. This took some time to
show the inevitable effect. But today the Syrian
army and its allies reconquered the artillery
college and the Jihadi path into east-Aleppo is
again closed.
It is
likely that the now failed plan of lifting the siege
on east-Aleppo was so costly, with over a 1,000
rebels dead, that a repeat of any such attack is no
longer possible.
But the
Russian pressure to commonly fight al-Qaeda has
still not resulted in an agreement. Late in June
some hawks in the U.S. administration
leaked "conditions" under which the U.S. would
agree to Russia's demands. Those conditions were
ridiculous. The Syrian government would have to
ground its airforce and would have to stop fighting
its immediate enemies while Russia would only be
allowed to targets the U.S. agreed to. The
negotiations had only one
purpose:
The plan,
if it was correctly "leaked" to the WaPo author,
is nothing but additional delaying and
obfuscation. The U.S. has no interest in ending
the fighting in Syria. It wants to keep the
conflict going as long as possible to "bleed"
Syrian, Iran and Russia as much as it can.
But Russia
insisted. Recently it seemed that the U.S. would
finally agree to separate its "moderate rebel"
Jihadis from al-Qaeda but it continued to demand
that Ahrar al-Sham and Jund al-Aqsa should also be
excepted from attacks. This as even U.S. experts
acknowledge that these are
mere front groups for al-Qaeda itself:
The United
States risks losing the war against extremism in
Syria if it continues to allow Ahrar al-Sham and
Jabhat Fateh al-Sham to be seen by the Syrian
people as the victors in Aleppo. Ahrar al-Sham
is as much a part of al Qaeda’s long game in
Syria as Jabhat Fateh al-Sham. It shares the
same goal to shape Syria’s population in a way
that facilitates global jihad, and its pragmatic
approach advances al Qaeda’s aim to build a
durable safe haven in the Levant.
Today the
Russian-U.S. negotiations
failed again. The U.S. accused Russia, without
any specifics, of
backtracking on already agreed parts of the deal
while Russia says the U.S. insists on continued
protection of al-Qaeda elements.
The Obama
administration does not want a deal at all. It wants
to kick the can down the road for the next
administration to pick up while all parties in Syria
continue to bleed.
It also has
no interest at all to subdue or eliminate radical
Jihadis. It continues to support and supply these.
A London Times reporter recently
found that one
rebel commander, Hakim Anza, who shot the reporter
point blank while he was handcuffed and imprisoned
by rebels in Syria, is now the leader of a "vetted"
and CIA supported "moderate rebel" group:
Two of his
brothers joined the al-Qaeda affiliate the Nusra
Front. One of them spoke on record about his
loyalty to al-Qaeda to The Times. Meanwhile The
New York Times ran a story about a war crime
committed by Hakim Anza in 2012.
...
Last month, however, video surfaced of Hakim
Anza proving that he was not only free, but was
also serving in a CIA-vetted Syrian rebel group,
First Regiment (al-Fawj al-Awwal), which was
receiving US weaponry, including Tow missiles,
as well as air strikes in support of their
operations.
Hakim Anza
is one of the "moderate rebels" the U.S. wants to
protect from Syrian and Russian attacks. There is no
reason to assume that any other "rebel" the U.S.
supports in Syria is a less dangerous man. These
brutes are the people the Obama administration wants
to empower to rule that country.
One hopes
that Russia has sufficient plans to eliminate them
even while the U.S. continues to block any
cooperation. |