Western and Gulf regime support for rebel fighters isn't bringing freedom to
Syrians but escalating sectarian conflict and war
By Seumas Milne
By Seumas Milne
August 8, 2012
THE DESTRUCTION OF SYRIA
IS NOW IN
FULL FLOW.
What
began as a popular uprising 17 months ago is now an all-out civil war fuelled by
regional and global powers that threatens to engulf the entire Middle East. As
the battle for the ancient city of Aleppo grinds on and atrocities on both
sides multiply, the danger of the conflict spilling over Syria's borders is
growing.
The
defection by Syria's prime minister is the most high-profile coup yet in
a well-funded programme, though unlikely to signal any imminent regime
collapse. But the capture of 48 Iranian pilgrims ~ or
undercover Revolutionary Guards,
depending who you believe – along with the increasing risk of a Turkish attack
on Kurdish areas in Syria and an influx of jihadist fighters gives a taste of
what is now at stake.
Driving
the escalation of the conflict has been western and regional intervention. This
isn't Iraq, of course, with hundreds of thousands of troops on the ground, or
Libya, with a devastating bombardment from the air. But the sharp increase in
arms supplies, funding and technical support from the US, Saudi Arabia, Qatar,
Turkey and others in recent months has dramatically boosted the rebels'
fortunes, as well as the death toll.
Barack
Obama has so far resisted the demands of liberal hawks and neoconservatives for
a direct military assault. Instead he's authorized more traditional forms of
CIA covert military backing, Nicaragua-style, for the Syrian rebels.
The
US, which backed its first Syrian coup in 1949, has long funded opposition groups.
But earlier this year Obama gave a secret order authorizing covert (as well as overt
financial and diplomatic) support to the armed opposition. That includes CIA paramilitaries on the ground, "command and control" and
communications assistance, and the funneling of Gulf arms supplies to favoured
Syrian groups across the Turkish border. After Russia and China blocked its
last attempt to win UN backing for forced regime change last month, the US
administration let it be known it would now step up support for the rebels and
co-ordinate "transition" plans for Syria with
Israel and Turkey.
.
The “Friends of Syria.” Syria’s problem does not revolve around
the “political aspirations” of armed rebels, but rather the conspiring and
machinations of the global elite, who long-ago premeditated the destruction of
Syria for their own, larger, overarching geopolitical agenda.
"You'll
notice in the last couple of months, the opposition has been
strengthened," a senior US official told the New York Times last Friday. "Now we're ready to accelerate
that."
Not to be outdone, William Hague boasted that Britain was also increasing "non-lethal" support
for the rebels. Autocratic Saudi Arabia and Qatar are providing the cash and weapons, as the western-backed Syrian National
Council acknowledged this week, while Nato member Turkey has set up a logistics and training
base for the
Free Syrian Army in or near the Incirlik US air base.
For
Syrians who want dignity and democracy in a free country, the rapidly
mushrooming dependence of their uprising on foreign support is a disaster ~
even more than was the case in Libya. After all, it is now officials of the
dictatorial and sectarian Saudi regime who choose which armed groups get
funding, not Syrians. And it is intelligence officials from the US, which
sponsors the Israeli occupation of Syrian territory and dictatorships across
the region, who decide which rebel units get weapons.
Opposition
activists insist they will maintain their autonomy, based on deep-rooted
popular support. But the dynamic of external backing clearly risks turning
groups dependent on it into instruments of their sponsors, rather than the
people they seek to represent. Gulf funding has already sharpened religious
sectarianism in the rebel camp, while reports of public alienation from rebel
fighters in Aleppo this week testifies to the dangers of armed groups relying
on outsiders instead of their own communities.
The
Syrian regime is of course backed by Iran and Russia, as it has been for
decades. But a better analogy for western and Gulf involvement in the Syrian
insurrection would be Iranian and Russian sponsorship of an armed revolt in,
say, Saudi Arabia. For the western media, which has largely reported the Syrian
uprising as a one-dimensional fight for freedom, the now unavoidable evidence
of rebel torture and prisoner executions ~ along with kidnappings by
al-Qaida-style groups, who once again find themselves in alliance with the US ~
seems to have come as a bit of a shock.
In
reality, the Syrian crisis always had multiple dimensions that crossed the
region's most sensitive fault lines. It was from the start a genuine uprising
against an authoritarian regime. But it has also increasingly morphed into a
sectarian conflict, in which the Alawite-dominated Assad government has been
able to portray itself as the protector of minorities ~ Alawite, Christian and
Kurdish ~ against a Sunni-dominated opposition tide.
The
intervention of Saudi Arabia and other Gulf autocracies, which have tried to
protect themselves from the wider Arab upheaval by playing the anti-Shia card,
is transparently aimed at a sectarian, not a democratic, outcome. But it is the
third dimension ~ Syria's alliance with Tehran and Lebanon's Shia resistance
movement, Hezbollah ~ that has turned the Syrian struggle into a proxy war
against Iran and a global conflict.
Many
in the Syrian opposition would counter that they had no choice but to accept
foreign support if they were to defend themselves against the regime's
brutality. But as the independent opposition leader Haytham Manna argues, the militarization of the uprising
weakened its popular and democratic base ~ while also dramatically increasing
the death toll.
There
is every chance the war could now spread outside Syria. Turkey, with a large
Alawite population of its own as well as a long repressed Kurdish minority,
claimed the right to intervene against Kurdish rebels in Syria after Damascus pulled its troops out
of Kurdish towns. Clashes triggered by the Syrian war have intensified in
Lebanon. If Syria were to fragment, the entire system of post-Ottoman Middle
East states and borders could be thrown into question with it.
That
could now happen regardless of how long Assad and his regime survive. But
intervention in Syria is prolonging the conflict, rather than delivering a
knockout blow. Only pressure for a negotiated settlement, which the west and
its friends have so strenuously blocked, can now give Syrians the chance to
determine their own future ~ and halt the country's descent into darkness.
Twitter: @SeumasMilne
Some truth from the Guardian!
ReplyDelete- Aangirfan
Well,Noor.. It does appear that this has always been the plans of the criminal group of nations comprising.. Israel, France, United Kingdom,Turkey, and the United States.. or Israel F UK T US group...or Israel FUKTUS for short...
ReplyDelete