"Indeed,
I asked myself, how could this happen, how could this happen in a country we
helped liberate, in a city we helped save from destruction." – Hilary
Clinton, US Secretary of State.
By : NILE BOWIE
THE RECENT armed attack on a
lightly defended United States diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya that took
the life of Ambassador Christopher Stevens is an alarming reminder of the disastrous
foreign policy direction being taken by Washington.
Tired euphemisms of
“liberation” and “freedom fighters” have grossly distorted public opinion into
supporting a narrative that has very little relationship with reality. Images
of the Ambassador being dragged through the streets of Benghazi are the product
of a stark reality that the general public must recognize – one that is absent
of the romance and fervor of televised “revolutions.”
For Ambassador Stevens, an
early proponent of the no-fly zone and a staunch supporter of NATO’s campaign
in Libya, the untimely death he was dealt came delivered by the very militants
he enabled in brazen.
The pathological reasoning
of bombing a country to “save it from destruction” reflects the unrestrained
irrationality of the foreign policy direction being taken under the Obama
Administration and its rabid Secretary of State.
While mainstream accounts of
the unrest now transpiring in the Middle East credit an incendiary film with
provoking attacks on US diplomatic compounds, sources have claimed the attack
in Libya was well-coordinated and planned in advance, using protests outside
the consulate as a diversion.
Regardless of the specifics,
the event has provided Washington with a pretext to deploy two warships carrying
Tomahawk cruise missiles to the Libyan coast. As the militant fighters once
supported by NATO persecute ethnic minorities, loyalists of the Gaddafi regime,
and demolish ancient Sufi shrines and religious sites throughout the country,
one wonders what President Obama alludes to in his assertions that “justice
will be done.”
It is within reason that the
United States, contrasting its prolonged presence in Afghanistan to counter the
Mujahideen it once supported, may now attempt to maintain an increased presence
in Libya to assist its client leaders in Tripoli with restoring order.
Events in Libya are being
framed to heighten the perception that Washington is at war with Islamic
militants, not partnered with them to achieve their foreign policy objectives.
Michael Weiss, Research Director of The Henry Jackson Society, argues in a piece
published with the Telegraph titled, “The killing of Chris Stevens is not an
excuse to attack America's pro-democratic foreign policy,” that Washington
should not let the spoiled fruits of its operation in Libya hinder its quest to
remove Bashar al-Assad, who Weiss stalely refers to as a “mass-murdering
tyrant.”
The support given to
militants in Libya and Syria have caused tragic violence on an enormous scale
for the citizens of those nations – the death of Ambassador Stevens must be a
warning that such policy will invariably sow destruction and irreparable damage
not only to those nations, but to the United States.
In Syria, the dominant
narrative of “an authoritarian government murdering its own people,” as
reported by media outlets such as the BBC and Al-Jazeera has proven to be a
disingenuous cover for external powers attempting to topple the government in
Damascus.
For the past
eighteen-months, those nations allied to Syria’s militant opposition fighters
have shown nothing but contempt and disregard for the principles of
international law. Although direct intervention has been blocked by Russia and
China in the United Nations, the Washington Post has confirmed that the United
States, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and other Gulf States are supplying weapons,
funding, and logistical support to rebel forces in Syria.
Despite official claims that
Washington has not yet begun equipping Syrian rebels, The New York Times
confirmed in their June 2012 article, "C.I.A. Said to Aid in Steering Arms
to Syrian Opposition," that President Obama approved the deployment of a
small number of C.I.A. officers to southern Turkey, who are providing arms to
opponents of the Syrian government.
While leaders such as US
Secretary of State Hilary Clinton have scolded Assad’s government for failing
to abide by the UN-proposed ceasefire, Washington itself has helped fuel the
increasingly belligerent attacks on civilians carried out by Syrian rebels.
Reuters’ April 2012 article
titled "Outgunned Syria rebels make shift to bombs," includes
admissions from the rebels that they have been behind the spate of bombings
ravaging the country.
Western and Gulf nations
have supported the rebel “Free Syrian Army” and recognized its political wing,
the “Syrian National Council” as the legitimate representatives of the Syrian
people, while media outlets owned by those nations have dishonestly framed
their coverage of events to fit their sponsors’ foreign policy.
The BBC has been plagued by
controversy for censoring a news story and video showing Syrian rebels forcing
a captured prisoner to detonate himself in a suicide bombing, a blatant
terrorist tactic and a war crime under the Geneva Conventions.
Human Rights Watch has
issued reports condemning Syria’s rebel fighters for conducting a systematic
campaign of kidnapping, torture, and atrocities carried out against security
forces, government supporters, and civilian victims.
In late May 2012, 108 people
were brutally murdered with knives and other short-range weapons in the Syrian village
of Houla. Syria’s state-owned news agencies reported that terrorist groups had
committed the atrocities, as it consistently maintained throughout the duration
of the unrest.
Before UN monitors even
arrived in Houla, the United States and its allies were already calling for the
"international community" to move against the Syrian government.
Rainer Hermann, a correspondent of the German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine
Zeitung published an account of the events in Houla, alleging that extremist
anti-Assad Sunni militants carried out the massacre, targeting pro-government
civilians and religious minorities.
Investigations conducted by
the German Federal Intelligence Service (BND) confirmed that al-Qaeda
terrorists carried out “about 90 terrorist attacks” in Syria between late
December 2011 and early July 2012, including the Houla massacre.
Clearly, reports of killings
were framed to fit a pre-determined conclusion, in line with the foreign policy
objectives of Western capitals by implicating the Assad regime in orchestrating
violence in order to build popular support for aggressively toppling the Syrian
government.
An article published by
Foreign Policy in late July 2012 titled, "Inside the quiet effort to plan
for a post-Assad Syria," lays bare the methodology being used by the
United States to establish a client regime in Damascus. Washington, through the
"United States Institute of Peace" is working directly with Syrian
opposition groups to formulate a new Syrian constitution.
The United States Institute
of Peace is a direct functionary of the American government, staffed by acting
members of the US State Department, hardly a “legitimate representative” of the
Syrian people.
The dubious objectives of
the United States are apparent in the New York Times' article, "US to
Focus on Forcibly Toppling Syrian Government,” which confirms that the Obama
administration has abandoned efforts for a diplomatic settlement to the
conflict in Syria, and has instead increased aid to Syrian rebels in an attempt
to trigger a “controlled demolition of the Assad regime.”
Throughout the conflict,
independent analysts reported the presence of foreign mercenaries and al-Qaeda
fighters among Syria’s rebel forces. For months, Western media outlets
obfuscated such reports, until their validity could be denied no longer.
Disturbingly, influential
think tanks such as the US-based Council on Foreign Relations have not
condemned the increasing presence of terrorist fighters in Syria; it has
whole-heartedly embraced them. Ed Husain, senior fellow at the Council on
Foreign Relations argues in his August 2012 article, “Al-Qaeda's Specter in
Syria,” in favor of al-Qaeda and their inclusion in the Free Syrian Army:
The Syrian rebels would be
immeasurably weaker today without al-Qaeda in their ranks. By and large, Free
Syrian Army (FSA) battalions are tired, divided, chaotic, and ineffective.
Feeling abandoned by the West, rebel forces are increasingly demoralized as
they square off with the Assad regime's superior weaponry and professional
army. Al-Qaeda fighters, however, may help improve morale.
The influx of jihadis brings
discipline, religious fervor, battle experience from Iraq, funding from Sunni
sympathizers in the Gulf, and most importantly, deadly results. In short, the
FSA needs al-Qaeda now.
Husain’s commentary is a
testament to the desperate and bizarre illogicality of the US position on
Syria, characterized by a willingness to sponsor the very monsters against whom
Washington has long cried foul. Foreign Policy’s Gary Gambill followed suit by
publishing an article titled, "Two Cheers for Syrian Islamists,"
confirming that the violence in Syria is the work of sectarian extremists, not
"pro-democracy activists" as reported by the Western media. Gambill
continues his "two cheers" for terrorism in perhaps the most perverse
statement found to-date in the Western press on the subject:
Islamists -- many of them
hardened by years of fighting U.S. forces in Iraq -- are simply more effective
fighters than their secular counterparts. Assad has had extraordinary
difficulty countering tactics perfected by his former jihadist allies,
particularly suicide bombings and roadside bombs. So long as Syrian jihadis are
committed to fighting Iran and its Arab proxies, we should quietly root for
them -- while keeping our distance from a conflict that is going to get very
ugly before the smoke clears.
Reuters’ August 2012 report,
“Libyan freedom fighters join with Syrian rebels,” confirms that members of the
Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) are stationed in Syria, and leading
offensives against the Syrian government.
The LIFG is designated as an
al-Qaeda affiliate by the United Nations pursuant to resolutions 1267 (1999)
and 1989 (2011), noting several prominent LIFG terrorists occupying the highest
echelons of al-Qaeda's command structure. The US State Department's own website
features a list of designated foreign terrorist organizations (FTO) upon which
both al-Qaeda (#37) & the LIFG (#28) are clearly listed.
The misconduct of the United
States with respect to aiding and abetting terrorist organizations in Syria and
Libya constitute high crimes and treason. Under the current definition of
United States’ anti-terrorism legislation, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
Senator John McCain, and UN Ambassador Susan Rice can be charged under USC §
2339A & 2339B - Providing material support or resources to designated
foreign terrorist organizations.
Reuters’ August 2012
article, “Securing Syria chemical weapons may take tens of thousands of
troops,” illustrates the frightening possibility of direct military
intervention in Syria, confirming that the United States is considering sending
50,000 or 60,000 ground forces in Syria to secure chemical and biological
weapons sites following the fall of President Bashar al-Assad's government.
Washington has long talked
of “tipping the balance” of the conflict to their favor, and it appears highly
plausible that the threat of chemical weapons and their use may be used to justify
forcibly toppling Damascus.
The implications of both
foreign military intervention and regime change in Syria hold unacceptable
consequences for the Syrian people and the entire region. While Damascus has
responded to this campaign of insurgency much like any government would, the
lack of restraint and the individual misconduct of members of the Syrian
military have regrettably contributed to the loss of life.
Any political transition in
Syria must be through dialogue and not through force. Before any transition
occurs, the Syrian government has the responsibility to restore order and
safety to the civilian population. As allied nations convene together to decide
the fate of Damascus, it would appear that the right of Syria’s own people to
decide their political destiny has been overlooked.
Russian Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov has received harsh criticism from the West for calling
Washington’s position on Syria a “direct endorsement of terrorism.”
By acknowledging the reality
that Western nations are supporting mercenary fighters and extremists, it is
the hope that other nations stand with Russia and China in the United Nations
to oppose all forms of foreign military intervention in Syria. Those who
enabled the tragedy of Libya and the continued violence wrought upon its people
as a result of foreign intervention must be punished – not by sword, but by
gavel.
(NOTE
: Nile Bowie is a Kuala Lumpur-based American writer and photographer for the
Centre for Research on Globalization based in Montreal, Canada. He explores
issues of terrorism, economics and geopolitics.)
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