The reason is quite understandable given the fact that the West & NATO allies, with support from Israel & gulf monarchy, propped up IS and continue to fund, arm and provide logistical support to oust Bashar Al Assad...
RT, 19 Aug, 2016
Russia’s Middle East breakthrough… no wonder Washington’s grouchy
Russia’s air raids in Syria, launched from Iranian territory
this week, were received by Washington with a mixture of consternation
and disappointment. Understandably, too. It marks a breakthrough in
Russia’s standing in the Middle East.
Russia
is working closely in a quartet that includes Iran, Iraq and Syria. We
can add Lebanon because of the cooperation on the ground in Syria with
Hezbollah, which is one of the governing coalition partners in Beirut.
Even
Middle East countries, thought of as Washington’s partners, are showing
a newfound appreciation of Russia and the leadership provided by
President Vladimir Putin. The notably conciliatory relations between
Turkey and Russia – in the wake of a failed coup that Ankara implicates a
cleric who lives in the US in – speaks of a tectonic shift in regional
geopolitics.
Despite deep differences over Syria, Russia has managed to retain
cordial relations with other states normally considered American
proteges and enemies of Moscow’s ally in Syria. Putin has over the past
year warmly received Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, while
also respectfully hosting Saudi leaders in Moscow. Russia’s foreign
minister Sergey Lavrov was recently welcomed in the Persian Gulf’s Qatari capital, Doha, for high-level talks on Middle East conflict resolution.
Contrast
this all-round respect for Russia with America’s increasingly dismal
reputation. Decades of US-led destructive wars, failed nation-building
schemes and regime-change machinations have diminished Washington’s
standing in the region, even among its supposed partners. Privately and
publicly, the Israelis, Turks and Saudis seem to harbor contempt towards
their American patron in spite of official designation as allies.
When
Russian long-range Tu-22M3 bombers took off from western Iran this week
to conduct missions in Syria it signaled that Moscow is the emerging
dominant player in the region after decades of presumed American
hegemony.
The very fact that the Islamic Republic of Iran for the first time since the 1979 revolution made the unprecedented provision
to its constitution to allow a foreign power to use its territory for
military purpose is testimony to Russia’s sway in the sensitive region.
Even official enemies of Iran – Israel and Saudi Arabia – cannot but
acknowledge the significance. Iran, which has defied decades of
Western-imposed sanctions out of principle for its sovereign rights, is
willing to trust Russia’s military with territorial access.
This
must be seen as a measure of Russia’s integrity in conducting
international relations. Unlike Washington which is mired in double
dealing and treachery as even its supposed closest allies all too well
know. In short, Washington has a trust deficit.
Whereas Russia –
whatever some states may feel about its allies in Syria and Iran – can
nevertheless be seen for genuinely sticking by its commitments.
Before Vladimir Putin ordered Russian military intervention in Syria
at the end of last September, the government of President Bashar Assad
was on the ropes. Rebels and foreign-backed militants were threatening
to topple Assad in accordance with the objective of regime change
supported by Washington and its NATO allies, Britain and France, and
partners across the region – Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Israel.
Putin’s
bold intervention in defense of Russia’s longtime ally in Damascus
completely reversed the tide of war. In less than a year, the Syrian
state has recovered much of its territory, and it is the foreign-backed
militants who are now facing defeat.
The recent about-turn by
Turkey – once a gung-ho backer of the militants in Syria – to call for
closer cooperation with Russia and Iran in settling the Syrian conflict
is tacit admission that the covert war for regime change is all but
over. And it is Russia’s power that achieved the outcome.
A New York Times report earlier this month was candid in its assessment of Russia’s strategic success in Syria.
Alluding the wider geopolitical ramifications, the newspaper editorializes: “For
the first time since Afghanistan in the 1980s, the Russian military for
the past year has been in direct combat with rebel forces trained and
supplied by the CIA. The American-supplied Afghan fighters prevailed
during that Cold War conflict. But this time the outcome – thus far –
has been different.”
The NY Times added: “Russia’s battlefield successes in Syria have
given Moscow, isolated by the West after its annexation [sic] of Crimea
and other incursions into Ukraine, new leverage in decisions about the
future of the Middle East.”
This is why Washington’s reaction
to Russia’s breakthrough military cooperation with Iran in the Syrian
war was weirdly downcast.
The US State Department described the more effective deployment of Russian air power in Syria as “unfortunate”. And it decried the closer liaison between Russia, Iran, Iraq and Syria as “doubling down” to prop up the Assad “regime”.
Russia had notified the US of its overflights from Iran through Iraq to Syria in accordance with their “deconfliction procedure”.
But it was evident that Russia was not seeking consultation from
Washington. Moscow had determined the plan and was going ahead with it
regardless of Washington’s misgivings.
American disquiet over the Russian-Iranian move was revealing. At
first, Washington tried to quibble about legalities, claiming that the
Russian military flights contravened a UN Security Council resolution
barring “supply, sale or transfer of combat aircraft to Iran”.
But as Russia’s Sergey Lavrov pointed out the arrangement involved none of these.
“These
military aircraft are used by air forces after Iran’s authorization for
taking part in the anti-terrorist operation in Syria after a legitimate
request from its government,” he said on Wednesday.
Then Washington objected with the threadbare trope that the Russian air raids on Deir ez-Zor, Aleppo and Idlib were striking “moderate rebels”. State Department spokesman Mark Toner assured reporters
that the Russian targets were not extremists belonging to Islamic State
or Jabhat Fateh al-Sham (rebranded from Al-Nusra), but rather were “predominantly moderate” rebels supported by the United States.
Strangely
though in his press conference response to the Russian operations, US
military spokesman for Syria and Iraq, Colonel Chris Carver said that he did not know where the proscribed terror groups were located in the targeted areas.
So how come the State Department knows it was “moderates” that the Russians were hitting but the Pentagon can’t say where the “terrorists” are?
While
Russia is winning the war in Syria on behalf of the sovereign
authorities with the majority support of the Syrian people, Washington
is seen doubling down on double talk and double think in its collusion
with terrorist proxies.
Washington is losing all credibility in the strategically pivotal
region because it has for too long pivoted between criminal schemes and
duplicity. Even traditional partners and clients can see this unedifying
spectacle of sordid US conduct. Feckless, unreliable American power is
something to disdain, if not dread.
Russia has stood firm with
its allies, and, as Syria attests, has carried out the mission it said
it would, without mendacity or intrigue. That integrity is surely worthy
of respect among allies, non-aligned states and foes alike.
For
too long Russia witnessed the Americans carve up and mutilate the Middle
East with wars and subversions, from Afghanistan to Iraq, Libya and
Syria. Syria has marked a historic turning point in Washington’s
depredations in the Middle East.
And Russia has emerged as a serious countervailing force to be reckoned with. Fortunately.
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