Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya,
and now Syria had peace and calm until Washington intervened belligerently.
Strategies and tactics vary. Objectives are consistent. They involve
replacing independent regimes with pro-Western ones by any means, including
war.
Three unwinnable ones rage. Nonetheless, Obama plans more. Syria's target
one. For the past year, US-instigated violence ravaged parts of the
country. Thousands have been killed, many others injured.
Syria's gripped by fear. Heavily armed killer gangs rage out of control,
and direct foreign intervention looms. More on that below.
Assad's wrongly blamed. The blame game targets victims, not villains.
As a result, ongoing conflict continues.
February 26 was potentially historic. Syrians overwhelmingly approved
constitutional reform. Only the fullness of time will tell if promised
change, in fact, happens. Western intervention may prevent it.
After 90% of Syrians supported draft constitutional changes, Assad issued
decree No. 94 officially approving it, effective February 27.
Russia's Foreign Ministry said referendum results show Syrians support
him. Moscow called on all sides to concur, stop violence, and engage
in dialogue with no preconditions.
On February 27, in an article titled "Russia and the Changing World,"
Vladimir Putin noted similarities between Syria and Libya. He warned
against foreign intervention.
He called Arab Spring changes replacement of one force for another.
In other words, everything changed by stayed the same, and in countries
like Egypt, got worse. He said "Moscow won't allow anyone to repeat
the Libyan scenario in Syria."
Washington's hell bent on initiating it. Obama asked international leaders
to protect Syrians from "abhorrent" (US instigated) violence. Calling
for regime change, he said Assad('s rule) must come to an end."
Russian and Chinese Security Council vetoes thwarted his UN strategy.
Hillary Clinton called doing so "despicable." She represents the worst
of US lawlessness. Shamelessly attacking Russia and China shows how
low America has sunk.
Security Council passage assured replicating Libyan style intervention.
As a result, Obama plans circumventing UN Charter authority entirely.
Throughout the conflict, Washington's been involved in arming insurgent
killer gangs. Congressional hawks call openly for doing it.
On February 25, Israel's YNet News headlined, "US to announce aerial
blockade on Syria." Citing the London-based Asharq Al-Awsat Arabic international
newspaper, it said Pentagon officials "call for the establishment of
a buffer zone on the Turkish border, in order to receive Syrian refugees."
Buffer zones replicate no-fly ones. Military protection's needed. Doing
so involves eliminating command and control sites belligerently. In
stark terms, it means war. Humanitarian intervention's cover to wage
it.
America doesn't give a damn about protecting civilians and never did.
It cares only for unchallenged dominance. Wars become the strategy of
choice. When waged, mass deaths, destruction, and human misery follow.
YNet said "intercession is to be modeled after NATO's" Yugoslavia war.
It's "plan of action included prolonged aerial shelling."
In 1999, for 78 days, around 600 aircraft flew about 3,000 sorties.
Thousands of tons of ordnance were dropped, as well as hundreds of ground-launched
cruise missiles. Up to then, the campaign's ferocity was unprecedented.
Nearly everything was struck, causing massive destruction and disruption.
Included were known or suspected military sites; power plants; factories;
transportation; telecommunications facilities; vital infrastructure,
including roads, bridges and rail lines; fuel depots; schools; a TV
station; China's Belgrade Embassy; hospitals; government offices; churches;
historic landmarks; and more in cities and villages throughout the country.
It was lawless aggression portrayed as humanitarian intervention. Around
$100 billion in damage was caused. Environmental contamination was extensive.
Mass deaths and injuries occurred. Many others were displaced.
Millions lost livelihoods, many others their homes, communities, and
futures under military occupation. It always happens when America shows
up. Washington plans it for Syria, then Iran.
Pentagon officials anticipate no Moscow or Beijing change of heart.
But they expect both nations to support humanitarian aid efforts, including
a ceasefire and UN monitors to determine conditions on the ground.
Doing so requires "aerial protection, which would eventually lead to
an aerial blockade" and belligerence. Obama supports it saying "every
available tool" will be used to end bloodshed.
Of course, calling off his dogs would do it. Instead, protracted conflict
continues. Daily body count numbers increase. Civilians always suffer
most.
Major Media Back Intervention
When America goes to war or plans it, major media scoundrels cheerlead
supportively. Rule of law principles and human carnage aren't considered,
just imperial aims.
Former State Department official Anne-Marie Slaughter got feature New
York Times op-ed space. Her "How to Halt the Butchery in Syria" commentary
followed.
It shamelessly urged arming killer gangs, and called foreign military
intervention "the best hope for curtailing a long, bloody and destabilizing
civil war."
She also favors "no-kill zones." Pentagon officials call them "buffer
zones." They assure war if established.
In addition, she supports sending in Special Forces from neighboring
and Western countries. Of course, they've been there for months, supporting
insurgents along with CIA and MI6 elements.
Slaughter, of course, wants Libyan style regime change and war replicated.
Her name reflects her view.
Times op-ed contributor Roger Cohen also wants Syrian insurgents armed.
He blames thousands of deaths on Assad, not responsible Western-backed
killer gangs. He's for providing them more firepower to cause many more
deaths.
Times op-ed space features reprehensible commentaries like his, Slaughter's,
and many others. At the same time, responsible voices are shut out.
Cohen supports proxy war. "Arm Syria's rebels," he says. His convoluted
logic believes ending violence depends on increasing it. In other words,
killing's good, the more the better, so supply insurgents with heavy
firepower to reign greater terror on defenseless civilians.
Blame Assad, and unleash NATO to replicate Libyan style charnel house
devastation and protracted violence without end. Cohen calls doing it
"a no-brainer."
Washington Post contributor Jackson Diehl uses similar reasoning in
his op-ed headlined, "Why the US should arm the Syrian opposition."
He also said America "has reason to provide material support for the
Syrian opposition precisely so it can be a player in Syria if and when
Assad" falls.
He knows little about America's longstanding Middle East agenda. Unchallenged
dominance is planned, using war as a strategic weapon of choice.
Expect it in Syria, then Iran, no matter the potentially catastrophic
consequences. Only dominance matters, not the toll.
A Final Comment
On February 27, the UN Human Rights Council (HRC) convened its 19th
regular session in Geneva. It runs until March 23. Syria dominated emergency
Tuesday discussions. Mostly one-sided views were presented.
An Arab League/Turkey resolution will be adopted condemning "use of
heavy artillery and tanks to attack residential areas....that have led
to the death of thousands of innocent civilians." It accuses Assad of
"widespread and systematic violations."
Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov called debate counterproductive
because of its "confrontational nature," adding:
"The important thing today is that we give a chance to the Syrians themselves
to overcome this crisis."
"Today it is clear aims to instill democracy through force are doomed
to disaster and achieve the opposite. What is important today is that
we do not allow for a full scale civil war in Syria."
The 47-member body met to condemn Syria, not judge conditions on the
ground impartially and fairly. Syria's Permanent HRC Representative,
Fayssal Al-Hamwi, denounced its manipulative procedure and violation
of procedural rules.
He said:
"We reaffirm to all those alleged friends of the Syrian people that
the simple step to immediately help the Syrian people is to stop inciting
sectarianism, providing arms and weapons and funding and putting the
Syrian people one against the other."
"Unjust and unilateral sanctions imposed by some countries on the Syrian
people are preventing access to medicines, to fuel in all forms as well
as electricity, and are also impeding bank transfers to buy these materials."
''Unilateral economic sanctions are the ugliest violations of human
rights, because they target foremost civilian populations including
children, women and the elderly."
He added:
"We're convinced that the true goal of holding today's session is covering
up the violence and murder committed by armed terrorist groups against
innocent civilians which were clearly mentioned by Agence France-Presse
on February 25."
Through February 9, he said armed groups attacked 18 hospitals, 48 health
centers and 129 ambulances.
Before walking out in protest, Al-Hamwi announced Syria's "non-acknowledgement
of the legitimacy of this session." It convened to vilify Assad, not
judge him and killer gang caused conditions on the ground fairly.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge
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