On December 26, Arab League observers began monitoring Syrian
cities. They'll remain another month, despite calls to remove them.
Al Arabiya, Saudi Arabia's state-controlled media, reported Foreign
Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal saying:
"My country will withdraw its monitors because the Syrian government
did not execute any of the elements of the Arab resolution plan."
"We are calling on the international community to bear its
responsibility, and that includes our brothers in Islamic states and
our friends in Russia, China, Europe and the United States."
He also called for "all possible pressure" against Assad.
Saudi Arabia kowtows to Washington. It's also repressive and lawless
with no legitimacy whatever. In its latest 2011 human rights
assessment, America's State Department accused it of arbitrary
arrests and detention, torture and other abuses, political
prisoners, absence of basic freedoms, and other international law
violations.
It was said because it’s not reported. It also doesn't deter America
from supporting Saudi policies and pursuing far worse ones globally.
Pressure's relentlessly building on Assad. Washington, Israel, and
rogue allies plan regime change. Short of direct intervention,
Western-generated uprisings began in March. Libya's model was
replicated.
Syria's been ravaged for months. Thousands died, including security
forces killed with heavy weapons.
Assad's wrongfully blamed for a Western/Israeli/rogue regional
alliance-generated insurgency. So far, he's holding on. At issue is
regime change, isolating Iran from its key ally.
Expect greater pressure on Tehran ahead. War's an option, including
against Syria, if sanctions and other destabilization methods fail.
On January 22, New York Times writer Kareem Fahim headlined, "Arab
League Floats Ambitious New Peace Plan for Syria," saying:
"Faced with the failure of its observer mission to curb violence,"
League members "on Sunday unexpectedly floated an ambitious peace
proposal that would require (Assad) to hand over power to a deputy
and start negotiations with his opponents within two weeks."
They also proposed a national unity government within two months,
followed by presidential and parliamentary elections within six
months.
In Cairo, Qatar's Emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, said:
"The formation of a national unity government within two months,
with the participation of both the regime and the opposition, headed
by an individual, previously agreed upon, and whose mission would be
the implementation of the terms of the Arab League's plan."
Qatar's Foreign Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani said:
"We ask that the Syrian regime leave and hand over power. We are
with the Syrian people, with their will and with their aspirations."
Qatar's an absolute monarchy. People have no say whatever. Its prime
minister, Hamad bin Jasim bin Jabir Al Thani (a royal family
member), said:
"We're going to the Security Council. We know what the Syrian people
are going through. We are doing as much as we can."
Assad categorically rejected League demands. SANA, Syrian Arab News
Agency, said:
"Syria rejects the decisions taken by the Arab League (AL) Council
on the ministerial level on Syria which are outside an Arab work
plan and the Protocol signed with the AL."
These decisions "violat(e Syrian) sovereignty, (and) blatant(ly
interfere) in its internal affairs (as well as) violat(e the)
objectives for which the AL was established and the Article VIII of
its Charter."
"Syria condemns this decision, which came in the framework of the
conspiratorial scheme hatched against Syria which have been exposed
(as attacks on) people and the Arab Homeland."
Instead of "halting (the) financing and arming (of) armed terrorist
groups which (killed) innocent Syrian civilians and attack the
state's facilities and infrastructures, (and) stop the misleading
media campaigns responsible for the bloodshed, we listened to
instigatory statements which reflect their owners' connection with
the schemes targeting the security of our people through demanding
the foreign interference in Syria's affairs."
Qatar and most other League members are lawless rogue states.
Pro-Western despots head the worst of them. Duplicity, lawlessness,
repression, and complicity with Western imperialism define their
agenda.
They actively supported Libya's ravaging, colonization,
exploitation, and plunder. They're silent about ongoing atrocities
in Bahrain, Yemen, Somalia, Palestine, and elsewhere in the region.
Since March, they also supported Western-backed, armed and funded
anti-Syrian insurgents. Assad calls them "outlaws, saboteurs and
armed terrorist groups." He holds Western states and complicit
regional allies responsible.
Repeatedly, most League members attack, kill, arrest, imprison,
and/or brutalize their own people for protesting against political,
economic and social injustice.
League leaders have no legitimacy, nor does international law
support their proposal.
Provisions of International Law
The 1933 Montevideo Convention of Rights and Duties codified them in
international law. Article 3 states:
"The political existence of the state is independent of recognition
by the other states. Even before recognition, the state has the
right to defend its integrity and independence, to provide for its
conservation and prosperity, and consequently to organize itself as
it sees fit, to legislate upon its interests, administer its
services, and to define the jurisdiction and competence of its
courts."
Article 4 calls states "juridically equal," with rights the same as
all others.
Article 5 says fundamental state rights "are not susceptible of
being affected in any manner whatsoever."
Article 8 says "No state has the right to intervene in the internal
or external affairs of another."
Under Article 10, differences between states "should be settled by
recognized pacific methods."
Article 11 calls sovereign state territory "inviolable...."
The UN Charter recognizes the following state rights and
obligations:
sovereignty;
equality among all states;
non-interference in their domestic affairs;
self-determination;
non-interference in other states' domestic affairs;
settling disputes peacefully; and
refraining from threats or force.
In other words, states' rights entail obligations to others.
Montevideo and UN Charter provisions defined them.
In October 1970, the General Assembly approved the Declaration on
Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and
Co-operation among States in accordance with the Charter of the
United Nations.
The above sovereign rights are included in them. All UN members are
bound by them. Washington, rogue NATO partners, Israel, and
complicit Arab League states spurn them.
Violence, instability and war result. Syria and Iran are threatened.
As a result, Fidel Castro sees world peace "hanging by a thread,"
saying:
"I believe that the political situation surrounding Iran (and Syria)
and the associated risks of a nuclear war that involves us all (are)
extremely delicate because they threaten the very existence of our
species."
"The sheer tranquility with which the United States and civilized
Europe carry out (their) campaign(s) with the incredible and
systematic acts of terrorism is enough to shock anybody....Is it an
exaggeration to say that world peace is hanging by a thread?"
Yet major media scoundrels threaten it. Their rhetoric supports
imperial lawlessness. In 2011, they cheerled NATO's Libya war. They
now target Syria and Iran.
They endorse Washington's agenda, ignore rule of law principles,
turn a blind eye to facts on the ground, and maintain a steady
hostile drumbeat, mindless of potential consequences.
New York Times Supports Wealth and Power Lawlessness
Bill Keller formerly served as New York times executive editor. In
other words, he called the shots on editorial policy. In June 2011,
he stepped down to focus on writing. Too bad he didn't opt for
something else.
On January 22, his article titled, "Bomb-Bomb-Bomb, Bomb-Bomb-Iran?"
stopped short of endorsing it, but regurgitated the same hostile
canards infesting Times' pages.
Truth and full disclosure aren't its long suit. Managed news and
opinion define it. Keller proliferates it with comments like "for
all its denials, the Iranian regime is determined to acquire nuclear
weapons, or at least the capacity to make them quickly in the event
of an outside threat."
No matter that America's latest intelligence assessment dismisses
the allegation. Keller didn't explain nor do other Times writers or
commentators.
Instead he endorses hard-line lawlessness short of war, including
sanctions, refusal to exclude military action, and regime change for
a US client one.
"The point of tough sanctions, of course, is to force Iranians to
the bargaining table, where we can do a deal that removes the
specter of a nuclear-armed Iran," even though there is none.
Keller knows but didn't say. Instead, he betrayed Times readers with
misinformation. So do other major media scoundrels.
Why else would Castro and like-minded analysts see world peace
hanging by a thread. Possible nuclear war threatens it. Yet
America's media risk it.
So do rogue politicians vying to be president, Republican and
Democrat. As a result, humanity also hangs by a thread. It's no
threat to take lightly.
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 discussions with distinguished guests on the
Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network
Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon.
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