Syria’s
Deadly Bomb Attack on Assad Cabinet: Is This ‘The Price’ Clinton
Warned Of?
by
Finian Cunningham
19
July, 2012
The
deadly bomb attack on the top-level meeting of President Bashar
Al-Assad’s senior cabinet ministers leaves little doubt that
Western intelligence was involved.
Among
the victims were defence minister Daoud Rajiha and his deputy and
the president’s brother-in-law Assef Shaukat who were killed
when a suicide bomber reportedly set off a powerful explosive
device as the cabinet meeting got underway at the security
headquarters in Damascus, Wednesday, around mid-day local time.
A
third fatality was Hassan Turkomani, the country’s deputy vice
president and Assad’s chief of crisis management.
The
wounded included Hisham Ikhtiar, director of the National Security
Bureau, and interior minister Mohammad Ibrahim al-Shaar.
This
was the deadliest attack yet on the inner circle of President
Assad. It is not clear if he was due to attend the meeting.
While
two groups claimed responsibility – the Syrian Free Army and a
little-known jihadi organisation calling itself the Lord of the
Martyrs Brigade – the weight of evidence points to crucial
Western military support in executing the strike.
Over
the past 16 months, the armed opposition groups in Syria have been
transformed from disorganised gangs engaged in hit-and-run
skirmishes with the Syrian state forces to what is now a
formidable insurrection capable of mounting bomb and mortar in the
capital, Damascus.
During
March and early April, up until the Kofi Annan peace plan was
announced in mid-April, the Syrian government forces had made
significant gains in routing the armed groups from strongholds in
Homs and other northern towns. Since the Annan initiative was
attempted, however, there has been a sea-change in military
capability among the so-called rebels groups.
These
groups never even pretended to implement the Annan six-point plan
and were given strident support by American, British and French
leaders in their rejection of any political process to find a
peace settlement. Western governments have resolutely demanded
that Assad step down as a prerequisite for any political
transition, thus giving a green light to further violence.
The
surge in opposition violence – which does not have any internal
popular base among Syrians – can be traced to the Western-backed
so-called Friends of Syria meeting in Istanbul on 1 April, which
pledged $100 million in funding for the armed opposition groups.
The
latest deadly attack at the heart of the Syrian government points
to high-level intelligence and coordination. This dramatic rise in
military capability by the armed groups is a culmination of
steadily increasing involvement of Western and Turkish Special
Forces since conflict erupted on 15 March 2011, and the flow of
weapons into Syria from Turkey funded by the Western-allied
Persian Gulf Arab sheikhdoms.
Since
the beginning of this year, there have been a string of
sophisticated, lethal no-warning car bombs in Damascus and Syria’s
second city, Aleppo. On 10 May, twin bombs outside the Syrian
military intelligence headquarters claimed 55 lives. The
involvement of suicide bombers also points to the Saudi and
Qatari-backed Sunni extremists of Al Qaeda ilk, operating out of
Libya, Iraq and Lebanon. These groups have a long, murky history
of liaison with Western intelligence agencies going back to
Soviet-era Afghanistan and more recently in the NATO toppling of
Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.
In
the aftermath of the Cabinet meeting explosion, there are reports
of fierce gun battles across the capital between Syrian security
forces and opposition groups. The sound of grenades, mortars and
other explosions were also heard in different quarters of
Damascus. There were unconfirmed reports of an explosive attack
near parliament buildings and on elite army barracks responsible
for guarding the presidential palace.
Last
night, the Syrian authorities were claiming that many arrests of
armed groups had been made and that order had been restored. The
information ministry blamed Arab news channels, Al Jazeera and
Al-Arabiya, for exaggerating and distorting the violence.
Nevertheless,
it seems clear that the armed groups have gained substantially
greater military power and logistics to take their fight for the
past three days to the centre of the Syrian government’s
administration. The apparent confidence espoused by opposition
spokesmen, in what they are calling Operation Damascus Volcano,
suggests that these groups have received some kind of external
assurance as to their objective of bringing down the Assad
government.
The
assault on the capital comes as Washington and London step up
political pressure this week on Russia and China to back a UN
Security Council resolution that would pave the way for a
Libya-style NATO military intervention.
Speaking
on a visit to Israel only two days ago, US secretary of state
Hillary Clinton declared that the government of Bashar Assad
“cannot survive”. Clinton said: “We are going to continue to
press forward in the Security Council. We are going to continue to
press the Russians. I believe – I cannot give a timescale on it
– that this [Syrian] regime cannot survive.”
Earlier,
Clinton had provoked international consternation when she issued a
grim warning to Russia and China that they would be made to “pay
a price” for not backing Western efforts to put tougher
sanctions on Damascus – an ally of Moscow of Beijing.
Russia’s
foreign minister Sergei Lavrov decried the use of such threatening
language and said that the Western powers were trying to blackmail
Moscow into adopting their adversarial position towards Syria.
Following
the killing of Syria’s Cabinet members, Britain’s foreign
secretary William Hague reacted immediately to renew the pressure
on Russia and China to accept the Western sponsored resolution. He
said: “All such events increase the arguments for a strong and
decisive resolution from the United Nations. I think it is clear
that situation is deteriorating rapidly.” Somewhat knowingly,
Hague added that Syria was threatened with “chaos and collapse”.
Since
May 24, several massacres in villages across Syria by
Western-backed mercenaries have so far failed to dislodge Russia
and China’s support for Damascus. Is the latest atrocity against
Assad’s Cabinet and members of his own family “the price”
that Hillary Clinton warned of?
Finian
Cunningham is
Globalresearch’s Middle East and East Africa
Correspondent cunninghamfinian@gmail.com
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