Today
I am unashamedly concentrating on 9/11 and the 'war on terror”
Al-Qaeda
now a US ally in Syria
While
we reflect on the 11th anniversary of the al Qaeda attacks on
American soil, there is a blinding light that may obscure our view:
this sworn enemy now fights hand in hand with the US against the
Syrian regime.
10
September, 2012
While
we reflect on the 11th anniversary of the al Qaeda attacks on
American soil, there is a blinding light that may obscure our view:
this sworn enemy now fights hand in hand with the US against the
Syrian regime.
The
historic State of the Union address by US president George W. Bush on
September 20, 2001 is loaded with morals and principles about good
and evil.
The
president's ultimatum was clear: either you are with us, or you are
with the terrorists.
In
Syria, there is mounting evidence that Al Qaeda and its allies are
actively deploying terror tactics and suicide bombers to overthrow
the Assad regime.
Syrian
citizens who prefer the secular and stable state to the prospect of
an Iraqi-style sectarian state may well be turning this same question
around to the US government: are you with us, or with the terrorists?
This
week, head of the Salafi jihad and close ally of al Qaeda, Abu
Sayyaf, pledged ''deadly attacks'' against Syria as ''our fighters
are coming to get you'' because ''crimes'' by the regime ''prompts us
to jihad''.
Bush
referred to al Qaeda as the enemies of freedom: ''the terrorists'
directive commands them to kill Christians and Jews''. But Sheikh
Muhammad al Zughbey proclaimed that ''your jihad against this infidel
criminal and his people is a religious duty … Alawites are more
infidel than the Jews and Christians''. Because the new jihad targets
Alawites rather than Jews and Christians, does this render them
better bed fellows?
By
his own admission, Bush stated that al Qaeda was ''linked to many
other organisations in different countries … They are recruited
from their own nations … where they are trained in the tactics of
terror … They are sent back to their homes or sent to hide in
countries around the world to plot evil and destruction''.
Yet
this is precisely how the foreign jihadists in Syria have been
described by reporters. They are funded and armed by Saudi Arabia and
Qatar. And they collaborate with the Free Syrian Army which is aided
and abetted by the US.
Bush
condemned the Taliban regime because they were ''sponsoring and
sheltering and supplying terrorists. By aiding and abetting murder,
the Taliban regime is committing murder''. Eleven years later, the
parallels produce an uncomfortable truth.
If
only the Syrian uprising was as simple as the Arab Spring narrative
where citizens seek democracy and freedom. But those unarmed protests
have long since been hijacked by a cocktail of agendas which have
little to do with Syrian democracy, and more to do with a proxy war
to create a sectarian Sunni state that weakens Shi'te Iran's main
partner in the region.
Bush
was correct in claiming that al Qaeda ''want to overthrow existing
governments in many Muslim countries such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and
Jordan'' - who were all US-Israel allies at that time.
But
his list stopped short of mentioning Syria or Iraq, the real targets
of al Qaeda. Why does overthrowing Syria, using the same terror
tactics, fail to attract the same degree of outrage?
Bush
continues: ''We will starve terrorists of funding, turn them one
against another, drive them from place to place, until there is no
refuge or no rest. And we will pursue nations that provide aid or
safe haven to terrorism.''
This
pledge appears to have fallen on its own sword, given the funding of
the jihadists in Syria. The terrorists have bred and spread across
borders, which is the opposite of Bush's prophecy.
The
US administration must come clean about its financial aid. It cannot
use one hand to sign a blank cheque to the rebels, and the other hand
to cover its eyes to their immoral and illegal tactics. It cannot
hide behind ''the end justifies the means'' as there are too many
innocent lives at stake.
Bush
rode off on his high horse: ''We are in a fight for our principles,
and our first responsibility is to live by them … may God grant us
wisdom''.
If
the principles and morality are to be taken seriously, then they need
to be applied consistently.
The
US regime should be actively and publicly distancing itself from the
foreign terrorists and Salafist jihadists that are proliferating
within sovereign Syria.
It
should be condemning al Qaeda for its militant intervention. It
should be condemning the Saudi sheikhs who issue fatwas for an
Alawite holocaust.
The
wisdom that we see is grief over the al Qaeda crime 11 years ago, yet
covert collaboration with this sworn enemy today.
Perhaps
the US is applying another principle that they may have learned from
their pragmatic Arab allies - the enemy of my enemy is my friend.
Joseph
Wakim is the founder of Australian Arabic Council.
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