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Empowering Terrorism to “Stop” Terrorism: America’s Foreign Policy in Syria Summed Up in Three Headlines
Global Research, September 05, 2016
The New At;as 2 September 2016
US foreign policy regarding Syria publicly vacillates between
seeking to defeat the Islamic State to achieving regime change in
Damascus. Even at face value, these two objectives are contradictory,
even paradoxical.
Overthrowing the government of Libya in 2011 thrust extremist groups
(used by the US to overthrow Tripoli in the first place) into power
across the nation, leaving it bitterly divided and in constant conflict
since. The collapse of a unified Libya also allowed Al Qaeda and its
spin-off, the Islamic State, to flourish unchecked. There is little
evidence to suggest that anything else but precisely this scenario would
also unfold should the government in Damascus likewise be overthrown.
The conflict in Syria, raging since it was triggered by US-backed
armed groups in 2011, has in fact created the very conditions in which
the Islamic State rose to prominence, springing forth from designated
terrorist organisation, Jabhat Al Nusra, also known as Al Qaeda in
Syria. In other words, it was the pursuit of regime change by the US
that gave rise to the very extremism it now claims it is involved in
Syria, Iraq and now also Libya to defeat.
In order to defeat armed extremism, order must be returned to a
unified Syria under a government capable of maintaining it. The only
government capable of doing this is being intentionally dismembered and
undermined by Washington and its allies.
Newsweek published an article titled, “How the U.S. Can Win in Syria,” written by Brookings Institution policymaker Michael O’Hanlon. In it, he claims;
…we need to be somewhat more willing to work with groups that are tainted by past association with the Nusra Front, as long as we can vouch for the fact that they are not themselves Nusra members. We should give them anti-tank missiles—though not anti-aircraft missiles—and much more help in terms of ammunition, logistics assistance and food, to help them build up their forces.
Quite literally, a US policymaker is calling for the bolstering of
groups tied to Jubhat Al Nusra, a US State Department designated foreign
terrorist organisation and the very source of the Islamic State’s rise
to power in the first place to ”defeat ISIS, defeat the Nusra Front and
replace Assad.”
Not only are there few groups that have “past” rather than very
current associations with Jubhat Al Nusra, many more groups, including
those directly backed by the US have recently, openly joined under the terrorist organisation’s banner to fight in and around Syria’s northern city of Aleppo.
In reality, only the toppling of the Syrian government will be
achieved by such a policy, leaving Syria divided and destroyed, overrun
by heavily armed extremist groups empowered by US foreign policy.
And while this may seem like rudderless policy by a Western centre of
power losing its grip on reality, it is in fact an intentional, very
cynical effort to turn Syria into a failed state, just as was done to
Libya and use it as a springboard to launch large-scale, armed proxy
military campaigns against Syria’s neighbours and allies, most notably
Iran and southern Russia. It should be remembered that in 2011, after
the fall of the Libyan government, US-armed militants were immediately
moved into Turkey from where they launched operations into northern
Syria and in particular, Aleppo.
Thus, US foreign policy, no matter how many times it is claimed that
it seeks to confront and defeat extremism in Syria and Iraq, fully
intents to expand it not only in the region, but far beyond it as well.
2. Perpetuating the Misery of the Syrian People
While the US publicly claims its seeks to end the destructive
conflict in Syria often citing humanitarian concerns as a pretext for
greater direct involvement in the conflict and for placing greater
pressure on Damascus and its allies, in reality the US seeks to deepen,
widen and indefinitely perpetuate the destruction of Syria, just as it
has done in Libya.
In a Washington Post article titled, “Syria’s message to tourists: Come back, enjoy our beaches,”
writer Adam Taylor condemns any notion that parts of Syria may be
returning to normal as US-backed militants face defeats and Damascus
gains the upper hand.
The article concludes by claiming:
The message sent by all this publicity might not only be aimed at tourists — but foreign governments and Syrians as well. Wael Aleji of the Syrian Network for Human Rights told the Telegraph last year that these tourism efforts were in fact “psychological warfare” against Assad’s opponents, designed to send the message that the parts of the country — exclusively those held by the Syrian regime — are safe again.
That the Western media reacts with scorn to the notion of normality
returning to the lives of Syrians reflects a Western foreign policy that
seeks to achieve its goals in Syria or burn the nation to the ground.
It illustrates the truth behind the West’s use of “humanitarian
concerns” as a facade behind which human misery is created and
perpetuated, not exposed and defused. It is an example of the depravity
that truly underpins the West’s direct and proxy interventions
worldwide.
3. The US Fully Plans to Betray all of its Allies in Syria
Considering the above facts, it would be foolish for interests within
Syria, including the Kurds, to believe that the US is involved for any
other purpose other than serving US interests. The very moment those
interests diverge from assisting US allies on the ground, such
assistance will be terminated. If for some reason these allies become an
obstacle to US ambitions in the region, they will be terminated as
well.
So obvious is this reality that even the New York Times in its article, “Kurds Fear the U.S. Will Again Betray Them, in Syria,” notes:
There is little sign that the United States has abandoned the Syrian Kurds. American officials have worked to negotiate a truce on the ground between the rebels backed by Turkey and the Kurdish militia, known as the People’s Protection Units, and fighting has calmed in recent days.
But many Kurds say they now see the writing on the wall and worry that once the Islamic State is driven from its capital in the Syrian city of Raqqa, the United States will sell them out.
And of course, careful study of American history proves that not only
will the United States ”sell out” the Kurds, they will stand by, even
possibly assist the necessary “pruning” of emerging Kurdish influence in
northeastern Syria to satisfy much more important requirements
regarding relations between Ankara and Washington.
US foreign policy has always been cynical, violent, treacherous and
even disastrously shortsighted and self-serving. The above three
headlines shows merely the continuation of these policies unfolding in
an information space where hiding the true characteristics of US
ambitions behind either patriotic or humanitarian rhetoric is becoming
increasingly difficult.
Whether or not this opportunity to more frankly appraise US ambitions
sways public opinion either within the US or abroad to discourage such
policies in favour of a more reasonable and constructive American
engagement with the rest of the world remains to be seen.
The New Atlas is a media platform providing geopolitical analysis and op-eds. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.
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