No, We’re Not Here to Help…We’re Here to Stir the Sh*t
I believe that President Obama tipped his hand as to the basic
US strategy for IS in Iraq and Syria when he stated that the US goal was to
reduce IS to “a manageable problem” .
Once the appalling implications of this apparent endorsement
of a permanent presence for the transnational, decapitation-happy caliphate sank
in, Joe Biden was sent out for damage control with the hyperbolic message that
the US would pursue IS “to the gates of hell”.
Well, truth be told, actually entering the gates of hell and thoroughly sorting out the mess it created in the Middle East is apparently the one thing that the US isn't very eager to do.
One of the ironic things about the current situation is
that, as the United States has pinned the “Hitler of the Month” label on a
succession of adversaries--Saddam Hussein, Muammar Gaddafi, Kim Jung Un, Bashar
al Assad, Vladmir Putin—it seems unwilling and unable to so characterize the
most Hitlery of forces to emerge in recent years, the IS Caliphate.
The IS Caliphate is an expansionist, belligerent, intolerant,
and eliminationist threat to people and states in the region.
If the UN Security Council clubbed together to mount a
genuine transnational effort against IS, it would be doing the kind of thing it
was originally designed to do at the close of World War II.
It would also involve an intensive counter-insurgency
operation in Iraq and Syria along the lines of the Anbar Awakening which, not
to put too fine a point on it, was a tag-team exercise in local identification
of, and JSOC death squad liquidation of, al Qaeda assets in Anbar province,
coupled with massive financial subsidies to employ and sideline potential AQ
fighters and allies. The current analog
would be clubbing together with Bashar Assad in Syria, the Saudi and Turkish
military, and, hopefully, some cooperative sheiks in Sunni Iraq, to drive IS to
ground.
But we’re not going to get that. For one thing, the US and UK have already
stated that they will not work with Bashar Assad in planning their anti-IS air
strikes in Syria because “we don’t like him” is sufficient justification for
brushing aside Syrian sovereignty.
As Ian Black approvingly tells us in that reliable chronicle of
neoliberal folly, the Guardian:
…
Obama and Cameron are not buying this. Additional arguments deployed against engagement with Assad are that he cannot be trusted and that helping bolster his position would alienate Sunnis in Iraq and Syria whose support is needed to fight Isis. In the words of Nadim Shehadi, the Chatham House analyst, the Syrian leader has all the credibility of a convicted arsonist offering his services as a firefighter.
It could also be said that working with Assad would alienate
Sunnis more powerful and influential than local figures in Iraq and Syria,
specifically the leaders running Saudi Arabia and Turkey—both of whom has
invested considerable political capital in the “Assad must go” campaign and
have accelerated Syria’s slide into hell by pouring money, arms, and jihadis
into the conflict.
The US, which also
bet on the oust-Assad line, probably didn’t need much convincing to slap aside
Assad’s offer of assistance.
There is also a more dubious game afoot.
The West has apparently decided to put its chips on a
reworking of the heretofore terminally inept and corrupt “moderate” anti-Assad
alliance instead of working out a modus vivendi with the Syrian government,
Cynically and, I’m afraid, accurately, the US position might
be characterized as: Assad was beating
the West and GCC in Syria, but the unnerving rise of IS has upset the
chessboard. Now the US has an
opportunity to go in, help set up the chessboard, rearrange the pieces in a
more favorable configuration…and add a few pieces of its own.
And I expect the prospect of sticking it to Assad was the
deciding factor in White House deliberations as to the political advisability
of dipping America’s toe into the Middle East inferno once again. Peace and stability in the Middle East might
be beyond our reach in other words, but nailing Assad after four years of
invective, sanctions, anti-diplomacy, and subversion: that’s a Win! for a beleaguered
foreign policy team that has not much to show for its recent tenure.
The devolution of President Obama’s foreign policy in his
second term into what I characterize to be moronic, reactive, middle finger
hugger-mugger from China to Ukraine to Gaza to the Middle East has not, I
believe, received the attention it deserves from America’s army of plugged-in
Washington journos. Instead of “not
doing stupid sh*t” and pivoting away from the Middle Eastern morass to Asia,
the US is back in the thick of it, stirring the sh*t in a manner clumsy and
shortsighted enough to put America’s friends as well as adversaries on notice
that having the US apply its foreign policy expertise to their region is not
necessarily an unalloyed good.
The obvious explanation is the reign of Susan Rice, National
Security Advisor, and the president’s first choice for Secretary of State
before Benghazi sidelined her and John Kerry got shoehorned into the
position. She appears to be a combative
short-term oriented pol who—I never thought I’d say this—makes me nostalgic for
the calculated opportunism of Hillary Clinton.
So, instead of a multinational effort to uproot IS and
perhaps restore Syria and Iraq to some semblance of normalcy, we get an alliance of the usual neoliberal suspects, led by the United States and NATO—the “core coalition”
of Christian Atlanticist powers plus Turkey--to pursue a few agenda items that
were previously unattainable and are not exactly harbingers for a return to
stability in the Middle East.
First, NATO, America’s murderously dysfunctional European
strategic asset, is reaffirmed as the global U.S. partner in geopolitical
mischief, ready to reprise the role as handmaiden to disaster that it performed
so enthusiastically in Afghanistan and Libya.
Second, the ouster of Maliki as Prime Minister, whose removal was unambiguously linked to the provision of US military support to
Iraq against IS, but seems to mean little more than reassurance to Saudi Arabia
that the US is not dancing exclusively to a Shia/Iranian tune in Iraq.
Maliki is now a VP in the new Iraqi government and the PM is
a Shia empty suit, Haidar al-Abadi. The breakthrough
Maliki’s removal was supposed to catalyze—the appearance of an anti-IS alliance
of Iraqi Sunni politicians—has yet to materialize. Or, per Reuters:
A senior Kurdish politician listed the tasks, which include
winning Sunnis back from armed revolt, persuading Kurds not to break away and
convincing Abadi's own Shi'ites that he has the steel to protect them from
fighters bent on their annihilation.
"He has to make Maliki happy. He has to make the
(Shi'ite religious leadership) happy. He has to make the Sunnis happy to turn
them against IS. He has to make us very, very happy. He has to make the
Americans happy, he has to make the Iranians happy."
"Can he? I don't think so."
…
Sheikh Mohammed Saleh al-Bashari, a 52-year old leader of
Sunni anti-government demonstrations Maliki tried to crush last year, said
Abadi must distance himself from his predecessor.
“Abadi should let the Sunnis feel that they are first class
citizens, not like Maliki, who made them feel that they are not part of this
country."
He said Abadi will fail to woo the Sunnis
unless he can disband the Shi'ite militias that Maliki first opposed but in the
past year increasingly relied on to defend Iraqi cities when the army proved incapable.
"Maliki was stronger than him and he couldn’t do
it," Bashari said, adding that Sunnis would never fight against Islamic
State as long as they see the Sunni Islamist fighters as protectors against the
Shi'ite militias.
"The tribes will never fight any group which defended
their cities, including the Islamic State.
Not quite time for US to get the “Iraq—We Fixed It!” gold
star in my opinion.
Third, a renewed effort to use the anti-IS campaign to reconstitute
and enhance the anti-Assad opposition without helping Assad.
Job one: use the IS threat to compel the Syrian Kurds—an
effective regional military force which to date showed a wise distaste for
joining the floundering anti-Assad crusade and instead concentrated on securing
its ethnic stronghold—to join hands with the Free Syrian Army. Per Reuters on the grand strategy, which is scheduled for a test drive in a joint operation north of Aleppo:
The fight against Islamic State could at last win Syria's Kurds the Western help they have sought, but they
must first clarify their relationship to President Bashar al-Assad and reassure
Turkey that they won't
cause trouble on its border.
…
Part of his plan is to
enhance support for moderate Sunni Arab groups, who are fighting against both
Assad and Islamic State. The Kurds say they are cooperating with the same
groups, notably in a battle for territory north of Aleppo.
…
For such cooperation
to take hold, the Syrian Kurds and moderate Sunni Arabs must shelve suspicions
of each other's aims. Aleppo could be a test case. The Islamic State's advance
in territory north of the city is threatening supply lines for other Sunni Arab
groups and also poses a risk for Kurdish interests in the town of Afrin and
elsewhere.
On the other hand, I don’t think we’ll be seeing the U.S. helping the Syrian
government reconquer the key provincial capital of Raqqa and sweep IS fighters
out of the Taqba Air Base very soon.
Safe to say, an important calculus for the United States in
striking against IS will be, can the “moderate Syrian opposition”, and not
Assad, seize and hold the territory that IS abandons? Can attacks and the promise of close US
support and weapons be orchestrated to achieve the redefection of FSA fighters
out of the IS ranks and into the “moderate” coalition? Can the war against IS be fought while
demanding the departure of Assad and the establishment of a “government of
national unity” in Damascus as the price for US aid?
Plenty of employment, in other words, for America’s eager
but not particularly successful Middle East boffins, who have campaigned
through the region for the last three decades under the banner “This Time We’re
Really Gonna Get It Right!” (alternate mottos:
“There Are No Bad Policies, Only Bad Clients” and “When In Doubt,
Elevate Process Above Results”).
Assad, of course, will not stand idly by, nor will his
allies in Russia and Hezbollah. And, if
the US plans for Syria hinge on Iran throwing Assad under the bus for the sake
of the nuclear deal, that may not happen either. My chosen metaphor is, The US is trying to
play the Syria regime change melody on a piano as it’s thrown out of a window. I’m expecting crashing, screaming, and
horror, and not much beautiful music.
In an attempt to explain away the US/KSA/Turkish role in the
rise of IS and justify giving the back of the hand to Assad, a considerable
amount of flummery has been printed in the Western press along the lines of “Assad
allowed the IS threat to burgeon”. Actually,
Assad had his hands full dealing with a foreign supported insurrection that the
US, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey laid on after the outgunned domestic democratic movement
and the woeful MB-dominated émigré opposition failed to seal the regime-change
deal.
In real time, I wrote about Assad’s attempt to close the
books on the Syrian uprising (with Russian and Chinese support) by crushing
resistance inside Homs, Tiananmen-like, in February 2012 and then offering
parliamentary elections. The US and its
buddies were adamant this not happen, and opened the doors to two years (and
counting) of hell in Syria.
From China
Matters, May 16, 2012:
Back
in February I wrote for Asia Times about the Chinese
diplomatic initiative on Syria, which is now largely represented by the Annan
peace plan. At the time, I wrote China’s plan had a chance, albeit slim,
because, for all the brave talk emanating from the Gulf, Turkey, the EU, and
the West nobody seemed particularly eager to step up and destroy the Assad
regime.
Simply imploding the Assad regime to spite Iran would appear to be easy, but has not happened.
Turkey is already providing safe havens for the Free Syrian Army, but apparently has not unleashed it. Western Iraq is aboil with doctrinaire Sunni militants happy to stick it to the Alawite regime, and Qatar has allegedly already laid the groundwork for underemployed Libyan militants to find profitable occupation fighting alongside the opposition in Syria, but utter bloody chaos has yet to erupt.
The fact that Aleppo and Damascus have only been ravaged by two car bombs is perhaps a sign of Wahabbist restraint, and may have been taken by the PRC as a sign that the Gulf Cooperation Council's commitment to overthrowing Assad is not absolute.
Of
course, recently Damascus was ravaged by two 1000 kg car bombs and a similar
attack in Aleppo was averted by Syrian government security.
And
today there was this
in the Washington Post:
Syrian rebels battling the regime of President Bashar al-Assad have begun receiving significantly more and better weapons in recent weeks, an effort paid for by Persian Gulf nations and coordinated in part by the United States, according to opposition activists and U.S. and foreign officials.…Material is being stockpiled in Damascus, in Idlib near the Turkish border and in Zabadani on the Lebanese border. Opposition activists who two months ago said the rebels were running out of ammunition said this week that the flow of weapons — most still bought on the black market in neighboring countries or from elements of the Syrian military — has significantly increased after a decision by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and other gulf states to provide millions of dollars in funding each month.Syria’s Muslim Brotherhood also said it has opened its own supply channel to the rebels, using resources from wealthy private individuals and money from gulf states, including Saudi Arabia and Qatar, said Mulham al-Drobi, a member of the Brotherhood’s executive committee.The new supplies reversed months of setbacks for the rebels that forced them to withdraw from their stronghold in the Baba Amr neighborhood of Homs and many other areas in Idlib and elsewhere.“Large shipments have got through,” another opposition figure said. “Some areas are loaded with weapons.”The effect of the new arms appeared evident in Monday’s clash between opposition and government forces over control of the rebel-held city of Rastan, near Homs. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said rebel forces who overran a government base had killed 23 Syrian soldiers.
Helluva
way to run a cease-fire.
The
simplest explanation is that the United States and the Gulf nations have
decided to drive a stake into the heart of the shaky ceasefire and let ‘er rip
in Syria, consequences be damned.
This
would fit in with the near-universal desire to get rid of Assad, while having
the collateral benefit of administering a ostentatious public rebuke to China’s
efforts to drive the Middle Eastern political process in ways that don’t suit
the United States and Saudi Arabia.
That’s
the most likely explanation.
However,
the Obama administration’s queasiness concerning uncontrolled regime collapse
in Syria driven by hardened Islamist fighters and the Muslim Brotherhood
instead of cuddly, pro-Western liberal intellectuals seems to have become more
overt since the car bombings in Damascus.
So
I wonder if this article is something in the nature of a push by Saudi Arabia
to reinforce the narrative of inevitable Syrian Armageddon fueled by aid from
the Gulf, and thereby encourage the Obama administration to give up on the
peace process, indeed any ideas of a managed process, and let the insurrection
take its course…and of course, take on the responsibility for dealing with
Syria, or what’s left of it, once Assad is gone.
To
me, the takeaway paragraphs were:
Officials in the region said that Turkey’s main concern is where the United States stands, and whether it and others will support armed protection for a safe zone along the border or back other options that have been discussed.…The Sunni-led gulf states, which would see the fall of Assad as a blow against Shiite Iran, would welcome such assistance, but they would like a more formal approach. One gulf official described the Obama administration’s gradual evolution from an initial refusal to consider any action outside the political realm to a current position falling “between ‘here’s what we need to do’ and ‘we’re doing it.’”
“Various people are hoping that the U.S. will step up its efforts to undermine or confront the Syrian regime,” the gulf official said. “We want them to get rid” of Assad.
Not
exactly a profile in courage by the counter-revolutionary kings, sheiks, and
emirs of the Arabian peninsula.
I’m
pretty sure that the Gulf states could bring down Assad by themselves, albeit
through proxies, at the cost of a few million dollars.
So
the issue here is mainly of GCC gutlessness and an attempt to get America on
the hook for dealing with the Syria mess once Assad is in exile in Russia,
hanging from a lamp post or whatever.
Think it is worth noting that at that time
total fatalities in Syria were somewhere around 2 to 3000. They now number well over 200,000.
Speaking once more of courage deficits in the Middle East, conspicuously
missing in action today (as well as two years ago) are two major regional
powers whose active military participation would be very useful in knocking
down IS: Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
Saudi money and Turkish havens have been central to IS’
success. Both of them, while engaging in
extravagant public excoriations of IS, are well aware of the blowback that will
result from genuine and excessively vigorous anti-IS moves.
The IS rear--both its havens in Turkey and its military front
lines in northern Syria--would appear to be quite vulnerable to Turkish attack.
Turkey, however, is wound up in the issue of 46 Turkish
hostages seized by IS in Mosul. The
Turkish government has instituted a national press blackout on discussion of
the hostages, many of whom are Turkish government consular workers, but it
appears likely the fear is that “heads will roll” if Turkey makes aggressive
moves against IS. Even as the United
States has bombed IS positions in Iraq, the Turkish government has been
extremely anxious to declare the jets did not take off from the NATO base in
Turkey at Incirlik.
Another interesting IS hostage is the handsome tomb of
Suleyman Shah. In an interesting quirk
of history and treaty-writing, Turkey claims the environs of the tomb, the “exclave”,
a term with which I was previously not familiar. The original tombsite was flooded under Lake
Assad when the Taqba Bam was completed in 1973; the relocated tomb lies about
20 miles over the Turkish border in Syria, and
is guarded by Turkish troops.
As the anti-IS coalition groaned into life, IS threatened to
destroy the tomb, which would put a dent in the neo-Ottoman pretensions to regional
hegemony entertained by the current Turkish government and, I would imagine,
add to Turkey’s hostage woes by seizure of the guards. (Since any situation in the Middle East
cannot be addressed without recourse to irony, a phone conversation leaked in
March 2014 revealed that then Turkish PM Recip Erdogan, when he was as hot to
intervene in Syria as he is today keen to stay out, considered mounting a false
flag attack on the tomb in order to justify a Turkish military incursion.)
Per Reuters, on Turkey’s IS "predicament":
In deference to Turkey's predicament, Washington aims to
have Ankara focus on halting the flow of foreign militants, including many from
the United States and Western Europe, who have crossed its territory to join
the fight in Syria.
"Everybody understands that the Turks are in a special
category," said a U.S. official on condition of anonymity, alluding to the
safety of Turkey's hostages and the reluctance of one neighbor to attack
another for fear of retaliation.
"Turkey will be part of the coalition but what does
that mean? It doesn't cost much to get your flag up on the wall."
Bookended with Turkish timidity is Saudi Arabia's trademark passivity in openly
and honestly confronting Wahabbist jihadi forces.
As to what Saudi Arabia, as opposed to Assad, can bring to
the party (excluding its military assets like its 300 combat aircraft, 315 main
battle tanks, eight artillery battalions and three armored brigades), a Saudi
op-ed in the New York Times tell us it is the invincible power of Saudi Arabian
theological legitimacy:
Saudi Arabia is
the only authority in the region with the power and legitimacy to bring ISIS
down. Having effectively eradicated Al Qaeda in the kingdom, the Saudi
government, with its experience fighting terrorism, is uniquely positioned to
deal with ISIS, which is, after all, an Al Qaeda-aligned organization. The
kingdom has built up an impressive counterterrorism program and its
counterterrorism strategies are considered some of the most sophisticated and
effective in the world.
More importantly,
the Saudi leadership has a unique form of religious credibility and legitimacy,
which will make it far more effective than other governments at delegitimizing
ISIS’ monstrous terrorist ideology. The message sent to the Muslim and Arab
worlds as Saudi Arabia takes on ISIS is radically different from — and much
preferable to — the message sent if the United States does so, especially given
America’s recent disastrous record in the Middle East.
This op-ed seems to be saying that Saudi Arabia sees its
main role in the struggle as orchestrating anti-IS invective in Friday sermons
by bespoke clerics, and then it’s simply the job of the West to roll up the
delegitimized, isolated, and demoralized IS terrorists.
When one considers that the main tactic of Saudi Arabia in
dealing with terrorism is to try to export it and its practitioners outside of
the Kingdom, its ability to wrangle IS in Iraq and Syria to its knees with the
irresistible power of Salafist orthodoxy is open to question.
The one fight that I believe Saudi Arabia is pursuing with
immense vigor is its efforts to tar its regional rival, Qatar, with the IS-supporter
accusation. When I consider that IS and
Saudi Arabia share a hard-core Salafist orientation, and Qatar was supporting,
both through its diplomacy and via the Al Jazeera media platform, a rival form
of modernized political Islam, the Muslim Brotherhood, which Saudi Arabia
considers an existential threat to its theocratic rule and drove out of power
in Libya, Egypt, and from the leadership of the Syrian opposition, I take this
assertion with more than a grain of salt.
Safe to say, the anti-IS campaign will not involve
acknowledging the Assad regime’s legitimacy and sovereignty over Syria, let
alone the US, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey trying to redress the horrific regional
and human consequences of their botched regime-change policy in Syria and Iraq.
Instead, the United States, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and the
various pilot fish that follow the Western/GCC policy will pursue a triple game
of weakening IS, seeking to strengthen the FSA through US-brokered alliances
and hiving support away from IS, and putting the FSA in a stronger position—buttressed
by the hardened fighters it had lost to IS, and closer support and coordination—to
bring down Assad.
IS will probably be “managed’ i.e. it will be deemed
impossible to uproot it and restore the writ of secular inclusive national
governments in the Sunni regions of Iraq and Syria, areas that in the future
may be something other than the IS Caliphate, but can be called the “Jihadi
Archipelago” a neologism I am tempted to trademark.
Unfortunately, the main weapons for managing IS do not
appear to be unity, resolve, and “chasing to the gates of hell” brio. The tools to be employed are cupidity,
cowardice, and cowardly opportunism.
Even with US air, missile, and drone strikes, that’s not a sure recipe
for success.
I would say good luck with that, but I think that the people
of Syria deserve better after two and a half years of jihadi insurrection
brokered by the United States and Saudi Arabia.
As a final reminder of what the Syrian and Iraqi people
want, it’s peace.
1 comment:
As a layman, it appears to me that the US of A and her allies have for all practical purposes been waging a war against Syria without declaring it by funding mercenary armies. Isn't that against International Law and at the same level as the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor?
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