Obama
Chooses
War
against Syria
Yohannan
Chemarapally
THE
month of March witnessed a deadly spike in violence in the
Syrian conflict. It
was fuelled to a large extent by the surge of weaponry
supplied from the West
to the rebel factions operating inside Syria
and along its borders with Jordan
and Turkey.
President Barack Obama is still insisting that the US
is only supplying non-lethal aid
to the Syrian rebels, despite ample evidence being available
since the
beginning of the conflict that the West was arming and
training many of the
rebels with the help of its allies in the region. The New York Times (NYT)
reported in late March that Turkey,
Saudi Arabia
and Qatar
had
sharply increased their military aid to the Syrian rebels
with significant help
from the American Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
According to the
newspaper, more than 160 military cargo planes, overflowing
with lethal
weaponry, had landed in Turkey
and Jordan.
Officially, the US
has only committed non-lethal military assistance to the
Syrian opposition
worth 60 million dollars.
CIA
VERY MUCH BEHIND
ILLICIT
ARMS TRANSFER
The
CIA, according to multiple sources, helped in the sourcing
and procuring of the
weaponry from countries like Croatia.
The arms from Croatia,
being
used by the rebel groups inside Syria,
include portable M79 OSA rocket launchers and RBG-6 grenade
launchers capable
of piercing tank amour. The governments backing the rebels
are desperately
hoping that the huge influx of new weaponry would act as a
“game changer” and pave
the way for regime change in Damascus.
The NYT report
said that the CIA is
directing the flow of weapons to rebel groups it favours in
the ongoing
conflict that has entered its third year. The Obama
administration favours the
“National Council of the Syrian Revolution.” This group has
nominated Ghassan
Hitto as its candidate for prime minister. Coincidentally,
Hitto also happens
to be an American citizen and is adamantly opposed to
holding talks with the
government. Moaz
al-Khatib, the
“National Council” president, had resigned in March. He had
expressed himself
in favour of holding talks with the government.
“A
conservative estimate of the payload of these flights would
be 3,500 tonnes of
military equipment,” estimates Hugh Griffiths of the
Stockholm International
Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) which monitors the illicit
transfer of arms.
“The intensity and frequency of these flights are suggestive
of a well planned
and coordinated clandestine military logistics operation,” Griffith
told the NYT. Former CIA chief, David Petraeus,
according to sources quoted
in the newspaper, had played a key role in organisation of
the clandestine
network supplying weapons to the rebel groups, which have
been responsible for
horrendous acts of terrorist violence inside Syria.
Western governments had
blamed the Syrian government for the massacre in Houla last
year that claimed
the life of over 90 people and were quick to expel the
Syrian envoys from their
capital. It was later conclusively proved that it was in
fact the rebels who
were responsible for the killings.
An
unnamed Arab official told the media that the arms airlift
was doubled in the
month of March so as to put in motion a “master plan” to
seize Damascus.
The rebels have been increasingly
targeting civilian areas in Damascus
with mortar fire. It is the continuing supply of weapons and
funds that has
motivated the disparate rebel groups to keep on fighting.
Otherwise they would
have been defeated a long time ago and spared the Syrian
populace unnecessary
chaos and suffering. Even key elements within the rebel
groups want to have a
negotiated settlement with the government to end the bloody
conflict that has
already claimed thousands of lives and made many Syrians
flee their homeland.
US
DOUBLE STANDARDS
IN
COMBATING TERRORISM
The
Christian community, numbering around two million, is among
the most affected.
They have been selectively victimised by the Salafist
factions among the rebels
who are doing most of the fighting. There is growing fear
that they too will
meet the same fate as their compatriots in neighbouring Iraq.
Most of
the Iraqi Christians, who constituted around five per cent
of the population
before the American invasion, have fled from the country.
“The so called Free
Syrian Army, or rebels, or whatever you choose to call them
in the West,
emptied the city of Christian, and very soon there will be
no Christians left
in the country,” a refugee from the town of Rasel-Eyn, which
was briefly
overrun by the rebels, told a Swedish journalist Nuti Kino.
Kino’s visit was
sponsored by a Swedish charity. He filed a report “Between
the Barbed Wires,”
based on hundreds of interviews with refugees.
Most
recently there was a chemical attack on a government
controlled suburb in Aleppo
and the targeting of the Damascus University,
when students were in attendance; 16 Syrian soldiers were
killed in the
chemical attack along with 11 civilians. Syria
wasted no time in calling for
an UN enquiry into the use of chemical weapons by the rebel
groups supported by
the West. The Syrian military has said that the weapons that
the rebels fired
contained chlorine, which is used among other things to
clean swimming pools.
The Army has blamed the jihadist Jabel al Nusra for the
chemical attack, the
first serious one of its kind in the ongoing conflict.
The
rebels have now come out with the incredulous claim that the
Syrian army
accidentally bombed itself with chemical weapons. The Obama
administration has
been repeatedly warning Syria
that there would be severe consequences if it crosses the
“red line” of using
chemical weapons. After the Aleppo
incident, senior Obama administration officials accused the
Syrian government
of not “securing” its chemical weapons. In other words, Washington
was blaming Damascus
for allowing the rebels to use chemical weapons on its
territory. President
Obama again warned Syria
on the use of chemical weapons saying that he was “deeply
sceptical” about
claims that it were the rebels who had used chemical
weapons. The mortar attack
on the Damascus
university cafeteria killed 15 students. Again, the rebels
claimed with a
straight face that it was the government that was
responsible for bombing the
prestigious centre of learning located in the heart of the
country’s capital.
The
US has of
course refused to condemn
the serial terror attacks in Syria.
In February, Washington
blocked a Russian
sponsored UN Security Council resolution condemning multiple
terror attacks
that had taken place in Damascus
in that month. Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, had
strongly condemned
the US
vote in the Security Council. “We believe these are double
standards, and see
in it a very dangerous tendency by our American colleagues
to depart from the
fundamental principle of unconditional condemnation of any
terrorist act --- a
principle which assures the unity of the international
community in the fight
against terrorism,” Lavrov told the media.
ROLE
OF THE
NEIGHBOURS
While
Turkey is
openly assisting
the rebel groups, Syria’s
other
neighbour Jordan, is professing to play a neutral role while
actually
lending a helping hand to those opposed to the government in
Damascus.
Syrian officials have warned the
Jordanian authorities that they “are playing with fire” by
allowing the US and its
allies to train and arm the opposition fighters on its
territory. Syria’s
official daily newspaper, Al Thawra,
in an editorial, accused the Jordanian government of
adopting a “policy of
ambiguity” by publicly calling for a political settlement of
the crisis while
at the same time training the rebel forces. There are more
than a thousand
militias fighting inside Syria.
The biggest groups are the Al Qaeda linked Al Nusra and an
Islamist Front led
by Salafists.
Israel, which is in illegal
occupation of Syrian territory, has always viewed Syria
as its major foe in the
region, has also got into the act. As some Syrian opposition
leaders started
expressing a desire for a dialogue with the Syrian
government, the Israeli
government saw it fit to order a bombing raid on a Damascus
suburb in late January. The Israeli
army has since been intermittently lobbing artillery shells
across the border
as Syrian security forces battle rebel groups. There are
reports in the western
media that Israel
wants to
create a 20 km buffer zone along its border with Syria,
using the ongoing crisis as
a pretext. A former Mossad chief, Efraim Helavy, had
admitted in an article
that the crisis in Syria
had created a third option “to rid the world of the Iranian
menace.” Helavy
argued that regime change in Syria
would radically alter “the entire balance of forces” in the
region in favour of
Israel
and the West.
Former
Israeli military intelligence chief, Maj Gen Amos Yadlin,
described the Syrian
Army as “the most significant” one along the country border.
He observed that
its ability to confront Israel
is declining by the day as it “is wearing itself down” in
the struggle to
preserve Syria’s
national
integrity. “This is a positive development both from the
military and
political aspect. The radical anti-Israel axis that goes
through Teheran, Damascus, Beirut and Gaza is falling apart,”
said Yadlin.
Apparently
it is not only Israel
that
is interested in undermining the “axis of resistance”
comprising of Syria,
Iran
and the Hezbollah. The Arab
League, which is supposed to be representative of all the
Arab nations, took
the unilateral and unprecedented step of giving Syria’s
seat in the organisation to
the opposition. The move was initiated by Qatar,
one of the main sponsors of the opposition, despite the
objections of many
leading Arab League members like Algeria.
Syria
was suspended from the Arab
League in 2011 under pressure from the Gulf monarchies which
today effectively
bankroll and run the organisation.
“The
Arab League lacks legitimacy. It is a League that represents
the Arab states,
not the Arab people, so it can’t grant or retract
legitimacy,” Syrian president,
Bashar al Assad, told a Turkish newspaper. The Russian
foreign minister said
that the Arab League has in effect voted against a peaceful
resolution to the
conflict in Syria.
“A huge question emerges as regards the mandate of Lakhdar
Brahmi, who until
the summit was the UN and Arab League representative for
promoting and
developing contacts between the government and the
opposition,” Lavrov said. He
said that it would now be difficult to consider Brahmi as
the representative of
the Arab League anymore.
REBELS NOT WILLING TO
ACCEPT GENEVA
ACCORD
Bouthaina
Shaaban, the political and media adviser to President Bashar
al Assad, who was
in Delhi
in
March, also questioned the bona fides of the Arab League.
She reminded the
media about the dubious role the organisation had played in
covering up the
report presented by Gen Mohammad al Daby, head of its
observer mission to Syria in
2011.
The report, prepared under the auspices of the Arab League,
had blamed the
rebels for much of the violence. Shaaban also pointed out
that Kofi Annan, who
briefly headed the UN peace keeping mission to Syria,
also blamed those countries supplying
arms to the rebels for fuelling the cycle of violence.
President Assad in his
recent interview to a Turkish paper said that his country is
surrounded by
enemies. He specifically blamed the Turkish government for
supervising and the
vetting of the “terrorists” who were allowed to cross into Syria.
The
Syrian President excluded Iraq
from the list of hostile neighbours, saying that the
government in Baghdad
was unable to
control the flow of fighters and arms across its long porous
borders. The Iraqi
government has promised to introduce tougher monitoring
measures to secure its
border with Iraq.
Shaaban,
who was in India to canvass support for Syria’s position
prior to the BRICS
summit in Durban, said that the rebels are unwilling to
accept the Geneva
agreement between the US and Russia signed in the middle of
last year, which
called for a negotiated settlement of the conflict. “Every
passing day is a
tragedy for Syria. Two million Syrians have been displaced.
Some 1800
factories, many of them producing essential items like
medicines, have been
destroyed or transported to Turkey. Museums have been
looted,” she said. “It is
a war against the Syrian people and an attempt to infuse
sectarian behaviour
into our system,” stressed Shaaban. According to her, the
war in Syria can be
stopped “in one day” if the US cooperates with Russia in
implementing the five
point Geneva agreement. She said that the Syrian army
remains united and strong.
“It will not be defeated but at what cost!” Shaaban
pondered. She stressed that
the priority is to end the fighting that has already taken a
huge toll on the
civilian populace.