American Intelligence officials are acknowledging that the bulk
of the weapons flowing into Syria for the US-backed war to topple the
regime of Bashar al-Assad are going into the hands of Al Qaeda and
like-minded Islamist militias.
A lead article appearing in the New York Times Monday
confirms the mounting reports from the region that jihadist elements are
playing an increasingly prominent role in what has become a sectarian
civil war in Syria.
“Most of the arms shipped at the behest of Saudi Arabia and Qatar to
supply Syrian rebel groups fighting the government of Bashar al-Assad
are going to hard-line Islamic jihadists, and not the more secular
opposition groups that the West wants to bolster, according to American
officials and Middle Eastern diplomats,” the Times reports.
The article reflects the growing disquiet within US ruling circles
over the Obama administration’s strategy in Syria and, more broadly, in
the Middle East, and adds fuel to the deepening foreign policy crisis
confronting the Democratic president with just three weeks to go until
the election.
In the distorted public debate between Democrats and Republicans,
this crisis has centered around the September 11 attack on the US
consulate and a secret CIA headquarters in the eastern Libyan city of
Benghazi that claimed the lives of the US ambassador, J. Christopher
Stevens, and three other Americans.
Republicans have waged an increasingly aggressive public campaign,
indicting the Obama administration for failure to protect the American
personnel. They have also accused the White House of attempting to cover
up the nature of the incident, which the administration first presented
as a spontaneous demonstration against an anti-Islamic video, before
classifying it as a terrorist attack.
In Sunday television interviews, Republicans pressed this line of
attack while Democrats countered that it was a political “witch-hunt”
and that the initial description of the attack was based on available
intelligence at the time.
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, appearing on the NBC news program
“Face the Nation,” argued that the description of the fatal attack in
Benghazi as a spontaneous event was politically motivated. The Obama
reelection campaign, he charged, is “trying to sell a narrative that… Al
Qaeda has been dismantled—and to admit that our embassy was attacked by
Al Qaeda operatives undercuts that narrative.”
What is involved, however, is not merely the disruption of an
election campaign “narrative.” The events in Benghazi blew apart the
entire US policy both in Libya and Syria, opening up a tremendous crisis
for American foreign policy in the region.
The forces that attacked the US consulate and CIA outpost in Benghazi
were not merely affiliates of Al Qaeda, they were the same forces that
Washington and its allies had armed, trained and supported with an
intense air war in the campaign for regime-change that ended with the
brutal murder of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi one year ago.
Ambassador Stevens, who was sent into Benghazi at the outset of this
seven-month war, was the point man in forging this cynical alliance
between US imperialism and forces and individuals that Washington had
previously branded as “terrorists” and subjected to torture, rendition
and imprisonment at Guantanamo.
The relationship between Washington and these forces echoed a similar
alliance forged in the 1980s with the mujahideen and Al Qaeda itself in
the war fostered by the CIA in Afghanistan to overthrow a government
aligned with Moscow and to bloody the Soviet army.
Just as in Afghanistan, the Libyan arrangement has led to “blowback”
for US imperialism. Having utilized the Islamist militias to follow up
NATO air strikes and hunt down Gaddafi, once this goal was achieved
Washington sought to push them aside and install trusted assets of the
CIA and the big oil companies as the country’s rulers. Resenting being
cut out of the spoils of war, and still heavily armed, the Islamist
forces struck back, organizing the assassination of Stevens.
The Obama administration cannot publicly explain this turn of events
without exposing the so-called “war on terror,” the ideological
centerpiece of American foreign policy for over a decade, as a fraud,
along with the supposedly “humanitarian” and “democratic” motives for
the US intervention in Libya.
Moreover, it is utilizing the same forces to pursue its quest for
regime-change in Syria, which is, in turn, aimed at weakening Iran and
preparing for a US-Israeli war against that country. And, as the Times article indicates, an even more spectacular form of “blowback” is being prepared.
The Times quotes an unnamed American official familiar with
US intelligence findings as saying, “The opposition groups that are
receiving most of the lethal aid are exactly the ones we don’t want to
have it.”
The article points to the role of the Sunni monarchies in Qatar and
Saudi Arabia in funneling weaponry to hard-line Islamists, based upon
their own religious sectarian agendas in the region, which are aimed at
curtailing the influence of Shia-dominated Iran.
It attributes the failure of CIA personnel deployed at the
Turkish-Syrian border in attempting to vet groups receiving weapons to a
“lack of good intelligence about many rebel figures and factions.”
What the article fails to spell out, however, is precisely what
“secular opposition groups” exist in Syria that the US wants to arm. The
Turkish-based leaderships of the National Syrian Council and the Free
Syrian Army have little influence and are largely discredited inside
Syria.
A report issued by the International Crisis Group (ICG) on October 12
entitled “Tentative Jihad, Syria’s Fundamentalist Opposition” suggests
that the so-called “secularist” armed opposition does not exist. It
notes that, “the presence of a powerful Salafi strand among Syria’s
rebels has become irrefutable,” along with a “slide toward ever-more
radical and confessional discourse and… brutal tactics.”
It cites the increasingly prominent role played by groups like Jabhat
al-Nusra [the Support Front] and Kata’ib Ahrar al-Sham [the Freemen of
Syria Battalions],” both of which unambiguously embraced the language of
jihad and called for replacing the regime with an Islamic state based
on Salafi principles.”
Finally, it attributes the rising influence of these elements to “the
lack of moderate, effective clerical and political leadership,” under
conditions in which more moderate Sunni elements have opposed the
so-called “rebels.”
“Overall, the absence of an assertive, pragmatic leadership, coupled
with spiraling, at times deeply sectarian, violence inevitably played
into more hard-line hands,” the ICG report concludes.
Increasingly, elements within the US ruling establishment are citing
the growing influence of the Islamist militias in Syria as a
justification for a direct US military intervention. Representative of
this view is Jackson Diehl, the Washington Post’s chief foreign
affairs editor and a prominent advocate of the 2003 US invasion of
Iraq. In an October 14 column, Diehl describes the situation in Syria as
“an emerging strategic disaster” attributable to Obama’s
“self-defeating caution in asserting American power.”
“Fixed on his campaign slogan that ‘the tide of war is receding’ in
the Middle East,” Diehl writes, “Obama claims that intervention would
only make the conflict worse—and then watches as it spreads to NATO ally
Turkey and draws in hundreds of al-Qaeda fighters.”
Chiding Romney and the Republicans for focusing on the terrorist
attack in Benghazi, Diehl notes that this is easier than asking
“war-weary Americans” to contemplate yet another war of aggression.
Nonetheless, he suggests, once the election is over, such a war will be
on the agenda, no matter who sits in the White House.
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