NATO
Proxies Turkey and Saudi Arabia Move to War Footing on Eve of Syrian
‘Peace Summit’
By
Finian Cunningham
June
28, 2012
The
NATO-backed covert aggression against Syria could be reaching a
tipping point for all-out war involving state forces. That should
be no surprise. For the past 16 months, NATO and its regional
proxies have been steadily increasing the violence and turmoil
inside and outside Syria, while the Western corporate-controlled
media maintain the ridiculous fiction that the bloody chaos is
largely due to the government forces of President Bashar Al Assad
cracking down on “peaceful protesters”.
Ironically,
the crisis is culminating at the same time that the United Nations
convenes an emergency summit on Syria in Geneva this weekend. The
meeting, which is ostensibly aimed at “reviving the Kofi Annan
peace plan”, will be attended by the five permanent members of
the UN security council and other “invited” regional states.
The irony is that leading NATO members, the US, Britain and
France, as well as their Turkish and Arab allies who will also be
attending the crisis conference, are the very parties that have
deliberately created the precipice for all-out war in the Middle
East.
As
dignitaries fly into Geneva to “salvage peace in Syria”, there
is a lockstep military build-up on the northern and southern
flanks of Syria underway, with news that Turkey has dispatched
battlefield tanks, missile batteries and heavy artillery to its
Syrian border, while to the south Saudi Arabia has announced that
its military forces have been put on a “state of high alert”.
Ankara’s
military mobilization along its 800km land border with Syria came
within hours of the declaration by Turkey’s prime minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan slating Syria as “a hostile state”. The
immediate cause of the deterioration in relations between the
neighbouring countries is the downing of a Turkish fighter jet
last week in Syrian territorial waters. Syria claims it was acting
in self-defence after the Phantom RF-4E warplane entered its
airspace on Friday. Ankara has so far failed to give an
explanation for why one of its warplanes was making such a
provocative low-flying manoeuvre into Syrian airspace. But the
Turkish government has announced that any move by Syrian armed
forces towards its border will be viewed as another “hostile
act” that it will respond to. How’s that for a provocative
tether? Especially towards a country that is being attacked by
armed groups crossing over its border with Turkey.
Meanwhile,
on the same day that Turkey is militarizing along its border with
Syria, Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah makes an unprecedented
announcement putting his armed forces on high alert “due to the
tense situation in the Middle East”. Using vague and contrived
language, the Saudi ruler warned against “foreign or terrorist
attacks” to justify the mobilization of the kingdom’s armed
forces.
The
military pincer movement against Syria tends to support the
analysis that the downing of the Turkish fighter jet was a
deliberate set-piece scenario designed to furnish a cause for war,
or at least a stepping up of the international psy-ops campaign of
intimidation against Syria.
It
is notable that the circumstances surrounding the shooting down of
the warplane have yet to be clarified. The Syrians seem to have
firm grounds for acting in the way they did given the provocative
conduct of the Turkish fighter jet. And there is an onus on the
Ankara government to give some explanation for the unusual
military manoeuvre, especially in the light of claims that the
aircraft was on a reconnaissance mission on behalf of anti-Assad
forces on the ground in Syria. Yet almost reflexively, before
details have been established about the incident, Turkey has moved
on to a war footing. Equally telling is that Saudi Arabia, a key
ally of Ankara in opposition to Syria, has simultaneously moved
also on to a war footing – without any substantive grounds for
such a mobilization.
Some
informed analysts have said that the Turkish-Saudi pincer on Syria
is more aimed at intensifying the psy-ops pressure on Bashar Al
Assad to cave in and relinquish power. Hisham Jaber, director of
the Beirut-based Center for Middle East Studies, told Press TV
that Ankara and Riyadh will balk at an all-out war with Syria
because both are well aware that any such conflict will bring in
Iran, Russia and China in support of their ally in Damascus.
Nonetheless,
there is an ineluctable logic towards all-out war. Ever since the
armed insurrection by foreign mercenaries was instigated in
Syria’s southern town of Deraa in mid-March 2011, Turkey and
Saudi Arabia have played key roles in fomenting the covert
campaign of aggression to overthrow the Assad government – a
campaign that is authored by leading NATO members, the US, Britain
and France. The division of labour is such that Turkey has
supplied land bases to organize the mercenaries from Libya, Saudi
Arabia, Lebanon and Iraq; while Saudi Arabia provides the money –
up to $100 million – to buy weapons and pay wages for the
soldiers of fortune; and ultimately it is Washington, London and
Paris that are calling the tactical shots in the NATO war plan on
Syria.
As
several other commentators have pointed out, this war plan is
aimed at asserting Western capitalist hegemony in the oil-rich
Middle East and Central Asia regions. Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya,
Syria are part of an overarching bid for “full-spectrum
dominance” that will eventually target, overtly, Iran, Russia
and China.
It
is this crucial wider context of war-making by the waning
capitalist powers that underscores the gravity of the military
build-up inside and outside Syria. The dynamic for war has a
compelling, nefarious logic – as the history of world wars
testifies.
Which
makes the Geneva “crisis conference” this weekend appear all
the more ludicrous. In attendance are the US, Britain, France,
Turkey and the Gulf Arab monarchical states of Kuwait and Qatar.
All are professing to support a peaceful solution in Syria even
though all the above are funnelling weapons, logistics and
personnel to wage a brutal, terrorist assault on that country –
an assault that has now led to the precipice of all-out regional
war.
Also
attending the UN conference are secretary general Ban Ki-moon and
the UN/Arab League special envoy to Syria, Kofi Annan. The UN and
the Arab League and these two figureheads in particular have shown
themselves to be willing dupes to NATO’s war of aggression on
Syria, and beyond, by indulging in the charade that the Western
powers are “supporting peace” instead of denouncing them as
“supporting war”. Significantly, the UN and Annan have not
invited Iran to attend the conference as a result of US pressure.
How provocative is that? Iran clearly has vital interests at stake
given its proximity and geopolitical threats from the encroaching
war on its Syrian ally.
The
other ghost missing from the feast in Geneva this weekend is Saudi
Arabia. The omission of Saudi Arabia should not be seen as some
kind of consolation to Syrian and Iranian sensibilities, but
rather as a way of shielding the House of Saud from embarrassment.
Considering the incendiary role of Saudi Arabia in Syria, and
possibly the region’s conflagration, the Saudi rulers should be
summoned to a top seat at the “peace summit” – to face the
most withering questions about their warmongering, criminal
interference in a neighbouring state.
Then,
using Nuremburg principles, prosecutors should proceed to arraign
the rulers in Riyadh along with their accomplices in Washington,
London, Paris and Ankara.
Finian
Cunningham
is Global Research’s Middle East and East Africa Correspondent
|
Lavrov-Clinton
talks: ‘Very good chance’ of progress on Syria in Geneva
Washington
and Moscow have a good chance of progressing on Syria in Geneva on
Saturday, said Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov as he emerged
from an hour of tense talks with US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton.
RT,
30
June, 2012
Unfortunately,
no significant agreement has been reached but Lavrov voiced cautious
optimism about the upcoming talks stressing that Friday’s meeting
with Clinton in St Petersburg was “one
of the most productive”
so far. “Syria
dominated the international affairs section. I felt Hillary Clinton’s
position has changed,”
Lavrov said after the meeting.
“She
said she understands our position. We have agreed with Hillary
Clinton to look for agreements on Syria which would bring us closer
together,”
he added.
Mr
Lavrov acknowledged however that the Geneva talks are unlikely to
resolve all the existing questions.
As
Hillary Clinton did not give a press conference following the meeting
with her Russian counterpart, it is hard to see whether the US
position has actually changed, RT’s Lucy Kafanov remarked from St
Petersburg.
Despite
Lavrov’s optimism, a US official told reporters after the meeting
that “there
are still areas of difficulty and difference.”
Talking
about the chances of an agreement being reached in Geneva, the
official said: “We
may get there, we may not.”
The
two powers discussed Kofi Annan’s unity government plan ahead of a
crucial meeting on Syria in Geneva on Saturday, which will bring
together UN Security Council members and some European and Middle
Eastern leaders.
Annan’s
plan does not call for Assad’s ouster, but pushes for the creation
of a transitional government that would exclude figures that
jeopardize stability.
“There
was no word this plan is not feasible,”
remarked Lavrov on Friday.
Political
analyst Benjamin Barber believes that the goal of everybody in the
region is to contain hostilities within Syria’s borders. “It
would be devastating for the region if hostilities broke out in
Lebanon or in Turkey or on the Iraqi border in ways that could
implicate the entire Middle East.”
He
stressed that it was therefore in everybody’s interest to avoid an
intensification of the conflict as the Libyan scenario shows how
devastating the consequences can be. “We’ve
learned in Libya that the price of military intervention is very very
high,”
he said.
Barber
pointed out that even if NATO’s intervention had started with good
intentions to prevent civilians from being massacred, it had resulted
in killing more civilians than Gaddafi had, and led to a virtual
tribal war and the break-up of Libya.
“Replicate
this situation in a post-interventionist stage in Syria, where the
chaos that we are seeing now is multiplied by a hundred times,”
he concluded.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.