Which are the
governments generally regarded as “rogue” by
an overwhelming majority of the world’s
nations? If you answered either Russia or
China you would be wrong, even though many
countries have condemned Russia’s attack on
Ukraine on grounds that no government has an
intrinsic right to invade another unless
there is an imminent serious threat that
would excuse such an intervention. I would
however expect that most readers of this
review would have made the right choice,
which is that the United States is probably
number one based on its ability to
destabilize whole regions with a military
reach that spans the globe. And indeed, it
is important to note that the Russian
“special military operation” directed
against Ukraine would not have happened at
all if the Joe Biden Administration had
simply indicated clearly and non-ambiguously
to the Russian government that there was no
intention of allowing Ukraine to join the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
alliance. Ironically, the White House knew
very well that inviting Kiev to enter into
the alliance was a legitimate red-line,
existential issue for the Kremlin, but opted
to push hard on the issue instead. Instead
of opting for a negotiated peaceful
settlement, Biden and his clown show foreign
and national security policy team opted to
kill possibly hundreds of thousands of
Ukrainians and Russians to somehow “weaken”
Russia, an intention that has borne no fruit
even after more than a year and a half of
fighting.
So yes, by the
world’s reckoning the United States of
American is both “exceptional” and “number
one,” which a series of White House
inhabitants have aspired to, though perhaps
not in the same way as buffoons like
Senators Tom Cotton and Ted Cruz refer to
it. Most non-Americans see the US as the
greatest threat to world peace. And then
there is America’s “closest ally and best
friend in the whole world” Israel in second
place, a government which commits crimes
against humanity and even war crimes on a
nearly daily basis with absolute impunity as
it is protected and defended by the very
same United States, where the Jewish state
runs the foremost and most powerful foreign
policy lobby. It is a lobby that has
inserted itself in all levels of government
and which has corrupted huge majorities of
politicians and both major political parties
while also controlling the “message” on the
Middle East promoted by the media.
Even as I write this,
41 Democratic Party politicians are
spending their recess on a Lobby
sponsored trip to Israel. Their leaders
include the inimitable traitor 80 year old
Congressman Steny Hoyer of Maryland, who is
on his twenty-third trip to the country that
he loves and admires beyond all others, and
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries.
Jeffries is on his second trip to Israel
this year. He should be ashamed but, of
course, isn’t. It is the largest-ever
delegation of Democratic lawmakers on a tour
of Israel, sponsored in this case by the
American Israel Education Foundation, an
affiliate of the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee (AIPAC). Not to be outdone
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy is leading 31
Republican Congressmen on the same mission
though the groups will not mingle and the
speaker will be careful to render his own
obeisance separately to the Israeli
leadership.
The Democrats and
Republicans, will as always be unable to
enunciate any good reasons for American
bondage to Israel beyond bromides like
“Israel has a right to defend itself,” which
will be repeated over and over before the
Solons head back to Washington to send
billions more of US taxpayer dollars to the
Jewish state. While in Israel they will be
fed a special diet of “all Arabs are
terrorists” and good old Steny will be
nodding his head in time with the song. That
is before he and his colleagues engage in
crawling on their bellies before Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as a sign
of their total submission to his will.
If one is seeking a
single example of the failure of the United
States and its ally Israel to abide by the
clearly mythical “rules based international
order” one might well examine what is going
on in Syria, where both the US and the
Jewish state have been punishing the country
through lethal sanctions and direct military
intervention for many years with no sign
that the interaction will be ending any time
soon. The activity is rarely reported in the
US and European media, which somehow has
decided that Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad is some kind of tyrant who deserves
whatever he gets, even if it is dished out
by “apartheid” Israel and the clueless US,
which has been illegally militarily
occupying roughly
one third of Syria since 2015, including
the areas that have producing oil facilities
and good agricultural land, both of which
are being exploited or stolen. Israel
meanwhile has annexed the Syrian Golan
Heights, which it occupied in 1967. Donald
Trump gave his blessing to the illegal
annexation and also gave his consent to
whatever the Jewish state decides to do both
with the Syrians and the Palestinians while
also conniving at the nearly daily air
attacks carried out by Israel against
targets in both Palestine-Gaza and Syria,
killing scores of local soldiers and
civilians.
The US military
occupation has been supplemented by an
increasingly harsh series of sanctions
that have effectively cut off food,
medicines and other basic commodities to the
Syrian people while also denying access to
international banking services. Russia,
which is assisting Syria at the invitation
of the country’s government, has made up for
some of the shortages but there is
considerable suffering among the ordinary
people, not the country’s leaders. The claim
by Washington is that Syria has to be
protected from its own “totalitarian”
government and the US is there to fight
terrorists, most particularly ISIS.
Ironically perhaps, but Tel Aviv and
Washington
actually support some of the groups that
many would consider to be themselves
terrorists, including providing direct US
aid to al-Qaeda clone Hayat Tahrir al Sham
and Israeli support for ISIS to include
treating wounded terrorists in Israel’s
hospitals. The US air base at Al-Tanf, near
the border with Iraq and Jordan, has, in
fact, become a support hub for terrorist
groups opposing the al-Assad government.
Sanctions on energy
imports were temporarily lifted by the US
and EU after the disastrous earthquakes the
shook the region in February, but in June,
US lawmakers introduced the Assad Regime
Anti-Normalization Act of 2023 which would
use secondary sanctions to penalize those
countries that might be tempted to help
restore services to the areas of Syria
affected by both war and the impact of the
quakes.
Israel reportedly has exploited the
opportunity provided by the natural disaster
to increase its air attacks on Syrian
infrastructure.
Indeed, recent
history tells us that both Israel and the
United States are particularly fond of
occupying someone else’s land and are
capable of coming up with excuses for doing
so at the drop of a hat. The reasons
generally sound like saying “Hey! We are the
good guys who support democracy!” Repeat as
necessary until the audience either goes to
sleep or wanders off. The western media
reporting on what is taking place in Syria
can be regarded as being in the “wanders
off” category.
I certainly am not
the only one who has noted that the United
States tends to do everything ass-backwards
in its conduct of foreign policy since the
time of the Clintons. That has certainly
been the case in dealing with nations like
Syria and Russia, where ambassadors Robert
Ford and Michael McFaul were openly hostile
to the respective local governments and
openly sought to empower declared opponents
of the countries’ leaders. Syria presumably
was demonized to please Israel, beginning
with the seeking to destabilize Syria
through the passage of the
Syria Accountability Act in 2003, even
though Damascus posed no threat whatsoever
to American interests. The current sanctions
come at a time when Syria is continuing to
struggle to rebuild after a still active
twelve year civil war that destroyed much of
the country’s infrastructure. US sanctions
are making more difficult ongoing
reconstruction efforts and are de facto
largely punishing the Syrian people, with
only minor impact on its government.
And sanctioning to
punish Syria is bipartisan, perhaps
reflecting a desire to satisfy Israeli
demands. Donald Trump, who ran for president
pledging to end America’s pointless wars
overseas, on June 17th 2020
nevertheless
initiated new sanctions against Syria
and its government. US Ambassador to the
United Nations Kelly Craft informed the
Security Council that the Trump
Administration would implement the measures
to “prevent the Assad regime from securing a
military victory. Our aim is to deprive the
Assad regime of the revenue and the support
it has used to commit the large-scale
atrocities and human rights violations that
prevent a political resolution and severely
diminish the prospects for peace.”
Subsequently, the
most recent block of sanctions was imposed
through the Caesar Syria Civilian Protection
Act, signed by President Trump in December
2020 after he was due to leave office, with
the objective of stopping “bad actors who
continue to aid and finance the Assad
regime’s atrocities against the Syrian
people while simply enriching themselves.”
At that time, the existing US sanctions on
Syria had already frozen all government
assets and had also targeted companies and
even individuals. The new sanctions gave the
White House and Treasury the power to apply
so-called “secondary sanctions” to freeze
the assets of any entity or even individual,
regardless of nationality, for doing any
business in Syria. The threat of secondary
sanctions have in fact had a major negative
impact on Damascus’s remaining trading
partners, to include Lebanon and Iran.
Russia might also be impacted as it is
involved in Syrian reconstruction.
The United States and
Israel clearly hope that punitive sanctions
will eventually force the starving Syrian
people to rise up against the government, as
some sought to do during the so-called Arab
Spring in 2011. That means that a sanctions
routine, much favored by both the Trump and
Biden Administrations, never succeeds in
compelling rogue governments to behave
better because the way it works it is always
really about regime change no matter how it
is packaged. In the case of Syria, and
contrary to the claims made by Ambassador
Craft at the United Nations, the Bashar al-Assad
government has already won the war in spite
of US and Turkish intervention on behalf of
the largely terrorist group supported
insurgency. And the evidence for Syria’s
having carried out “large scale atrocities
and human rights violations” has mostly been
manufactured by enemies of the government,
to include the Hollywood and Washington
think tank favorite, the White Helmets, a
terrorist front group funded at least in
part by western intelligence agencies, which
was featured in a self-generated documentary
that won a Hollywood Motion Pictures Academy
Award in 2017. The film was effusively
praised by the usual celebrity brain-deads
including Hillary Clinton and George
Clooney. It is indeed overall a very
impressive piece of propaganda. The National
Holocaust Museum even gave the coveted
2019 Elie Wiesel Award to the group. The
White Helmets are still active in Syria in
areas that are still held by the so-called
rebels and they featured in a film clip just
last week. They are still being funded by
western governments and Israel to
destabilize the government of Bashar al-Assad.
One might well ask
what the US objective in continuing to
promote the carnage and suffering in a Syria
that poses no threat to Americans or to any
vital security interests. It is similar to a
question that might well be raised regarding
Ukraine, which is confronting an unneeded
escalation of 3,000 US military reservists
to reinforce the 20,000 American soldiers
that have arrived in theater since February
2022. And then there is Iran, which
responded to its oil tankers being hijacked
in international waters under the
unilaterally imposed authority granted by US
sanctions. Iran has
sought to respond in kind and now the US
will dispatch Marines to the Persian Gulf to
ride shotgun on foreign tankers and other
commercial vessels traversing the Straits of
Hormuz. If Iranian vessels come too close,
they will shoot to kill. It is another
escalation that is asking for trouble. Why
can’t the United States leave the rest of
the world alone? That is perhaps the
fundamental question for our times.