The Truth Behind the Coming
"Regime Change" in Syria
By Shamus Cooke
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=28853
Global Research, January 24, 2012
After
meeting again to decide Syria's fate, the Arab League again decided to
extend its "monitoring mission" in Syria. However, some Arab League
nations under U.S. diplomatic control are clamoring for blood. These
countries — virtual sock puppets of U.S. foreign policy — want to
declare the Arab League monitoring mission "a failure,” so that military
intervention — in the form of a no fly zone — can be used for regime
change.
The United States appears to be using a strategy in
Syria that it has perfected over the years, having succeeded most
recently in Libya: arming small paramilitary groups loyal to U.S.
interests that claim to speak for the local population; these militants
then attack the targeted government the U.S. would like to see
overthrown — including terrorist bombings — and when the attacked
government defends itself, the U.S. cries "genocide" or "mass murder,”
while calling for foreign military intervention.
This is the strategy that the U.S. is using to
channel the Arab Spring into the bloody dead end of foreign military
intervention.
For example, the U.S. media and government are
fanatically giving the impression that, in Syria, the local population
would like foreign militarily intervention to overthrow their
authoritarian president, Bashar Assad. But facts are stubborn things.
After spinning these lies, The New York Times was
forced to admit, in several articles, that there have been massive
rallies in Syria in support of the Syrian government. These rallies are
larger than any pro-government demonstration that the U.S. government
could hope to organize for itself. The New York Times reports:
"The turnout [at least tens of thousands — see
picture in link] in Sabaa Bahrat Square in Damascus, the [Syrian]
capital, once again underlined the degree of backing that Mr. Assad and
his leadership still enjoy among many Syrians, nearly seven months into
the popular uprising. That support is especially pronounced in cities
like Damascus and Aleppo, the country’s two largest." (January 13,
2012).
The New York Times is forced to admit that the two
largest cities — in a small country — support the government (or at
least oppose foreign military intervention).
This was further confirmed by a poll funded by the anti-Syrian Qatar Foundation, preformed by the Doha Debates:
"According to the latest opinion poll commissioned by
The Doha Debates, Syrians are more supportive of their president with
55% not wanting him to resign." (January 2, 2012).
If people in Syria do not want foreign intervention —
a likely reason that so many attended pro-Assad demonstrations — what
about the so-called Free Syrian Army, which the United States has given
immense credibility to and which claims to speak for the Syrian people?
The Free Syrian Army — like its Libyan counterpart —
appears to be yet another Made-in-the-USA militant group, by route of
its ally Turkey, a fact alluded to by the pro U.S.-establishment
magazine, Foreign Affairs:
"Why does the Syrian [government] military not rocket
their [Free Syrian Army] position or launch a large-scale assault? The
FSA fighters are positioned about a mile from the Turkish border, near
enough to escape across if the situation turned dire."
The article also quotes a Free Syrian Army member who
states: "Every [Free Syrian Army] group in Turkey has its own job,"
Sayeed said. "[The Turks] gave us our freedom to move." (December 8,
2011).
The article also mentions that the Free Syrian Army
is calling for a "no fly zone" over certain regions of Syria, which
would destroy the Syrian government military; the possible starting
locations of this no fly zone are on the Syrian borders of either
Turkey, Jordan, or Iraq — all three are either strong U.S. allies or
client states.
A “no fly zone” is the new euphemism that means the
U.S. and its European military junior partners in NATO will intervene to
use their advanced fighter jets to destroy the Syrian military, as
happened in Libya. In Libya the no fly zone evolved into a “no drive
zone” and eventually a “no survival” zone for anything resembling the
Syrian military — or anybody who armed himself in defense of the Libyan
government.
As in Syria, Libya's largest city, Tripoli, never had
large anti-government demonstrations. The anti-Libyan
government/pro-U.S. paramilitary group that attacked Libyan forces was
so tiny that it took months to take power after 10,000 NATO bombing
sorties (bombing missions) that destroyed large portions of Libya's
infrastructure, as documented by the independent Human Rights
Investigations.
It's totally unimaginable that any large section of
Syrian society would invite a NATO-backed no fly zone, i.e. war, into
Syria. The examples of Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya are too glaring for
any Middle Eastern nation not to notice. For the Free Syrian Army to
demand a NATO invasion of Syria is enough to label the FSA a U.S. puppet
group striving for political power, deserving to be condemned.
This strategy of using a proxy army to undermine an
anti-U.S. government has a grisly past. This strategy is celebrated in
the book Charlie Wilson's War, which tells the true story of the U.S.
government sending weapons and cash to Islamic extremists to wage a
terrorist campaign against the Afghan government, which was an ally of
the Soviet Union at the time. The attacks eventually led to the Afghan
government asking for Soviet military re-enforcements, whose presence in
Afghanistan created a degree of popular support for the extremists who
eventually became known as the Taliban.
The same scenario also played itself out in Kosovo,
where the tiny, U.S.-backed Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) began a
terrorist campaign against the government of Yugoslavia, intending to
separate Kosovo into an independent nation. When the Yugoslav government
attempted to defend itself from the KLA — while imitating its violent
tactics — the U.S. and other western governments labeled it genocide,
and invaded Yugoslavia, calling it a "humanitarian invasion.” To this
day the U.S. is one of few nations that recognizes Kosovo as an
independent nation while Kosovo faithfully serves the interests of the
United States.
The same proxy war strategy — by the U.S. and other
European powers — played a crucial role in numerous wars throughout
Africa, which culminated in the massive Congo War that killed over five
million people, as French journalist Gerard Prunier describes in his
book, Africa's World War.
In Syria history is repeating itself, and some non-U.S. allies are very aware of it. The New York Times reports:
"[Russia's Foreign Minister] said that foreign
governments [the U.S., Turkey, etc.] were arming ‘militants and
extremists’ in Syria."
The Foreign minister also gave an accurate description of U.S. foreign policy towards Iran:
"Mr. Lavrov offered a similarly grave message about
the possibility of a military strike against Iran, which he said would
be a “catastrophe.” He said sanctions now being proposed against Tehran
were “intended to have a smothering effect on the Iranian economy and
the Iranian population, probably in the hopes of provoking discontent.”
(January 19, 2012).
Most ominously, the Russian Foreign Minister said
that U.S. foreign policy in Syria and Iran could lead to a "very big
war,” i.e., a war that becomes regional or even international in scope,
as other powers intervene to uphold their interests in the region.
Russia has offered a way to avoid war in Syria and is
pursuing it through the UN Security Council; it is the same path being
pursued by the pro-U.S. government in Yemen: maintaining the current
government in power until elections are called. Unfortunately, Yemen is
an ally of the U.S. and Syria is not — the U.S. and its allies are
blocking the same approach in Syria in order to pursue war.
The Syrian government opposition bloc inside of
Syria, the National Coordination Committee, opposes foreign military
intervention. A leader of the NCC is Hassan Abdul Azim, who wisely
states;
“We refuse on principle any type of military foreign
intervention because it threatens the freedom of our country,” (January
19, 2012).
This is very likely the prevailing opinion inside of
Syria, since the threat of no fly zones will result in the same mass
bombings experienced by the citizens of Tripoli in Libya. The fake
Syrian opposition outside of the country, The Syrian National Council,
is yet another U.S. puppet — now allied with the Free Syrian Army —
begging for a military invasion of Syria in order to "liberate" it. Of
course the western media tells only the perspective of the pro-U.S.
Syrian National Council.
The U.S. has proven on multiple occasions that
military solutions solve nothing, having torn asunder the social fabric
of Afghanistan, Iraq, and now Libya. The working people of Syria and
Iran do not desire "help" from the U.S. government and its allies to
prevent bloodshed. The working people of these countries could liberate
themselves from their authoritarian governments, as did the Tunisians
and Egyptians, which is precisely the point: the U.S. is intervening
militarily to re-gain control over a region that slipped out of its
hands during the Arab Spring. This military approach serves to push the
working people of the targeted country into the hands of their
government while creating a humanitarian catastrophe for the invaded
nation. The working people of the United States have no interest in
aggressive war and have a responsibility to learn about U.S. government
propaganda so that they can demand its end in the streets.
Shamus Cooke is a social worker, trade unionist, and writer for Workers Action ( www.workerscompass.org )
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