Hidden US-Israeli Military Agenda: “Break Syria into Pieces”
Michel
Chossudovsky
28
December, 2012
A
timely article in the Jerusalem Post in June brings to the forefront
the unspoken objective of US foreign policy, namely the breaking up
of Syria as a sovereign nation state –along ethnic and religious
lines– into several separate and “independent” political
entities. The article also confirms the role of Israel in the process
of political destabilization of Syria. The JP article is
titled:“Veteran
Kurdish politician calls on Israel to support the break-up of Syria‘
(by Jonathan Spyer) (The
Jerusalem Post (May 16, 2012)
The
objective of the US sponsored armed insurgency is –with the
help of Israel– to “Break Syria into Pieces”.
The
“balkanisation of the Syrian Arab Republic” is to be carried out
by fostering sectarian divisions, which will eventually lead to a
“civil war” modelled on the former Yugoslavia. Last month,
Syrian “opposition militants” were dispatched to Kosovo
to organize training sessions using the “terrorist expertise” of
the US sponsored Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) in fighting the
Yugoslav armed forces.
Sherkoh
Abbas, President of the US based Kurdistan National Assembly of Syria
(KNA) has “called on Israel to support the break-up of
Syria into a series of federal structures based on the country’s
various ethnicities.” (Ibid)
One
possible ”break-up scenario” pertaining to Syria, which
constitutes a secular multi-ethnic society, would be the formation of
separate and “independent” Sunni, Alawite-Shiite, Kurdish
and Druze states: “We
need to break Syria into pieces,”
Abbas said. (Quoted in JP, op.
cit.,
emphasis added).
“The Syrian Kurdish dissident argued that a federal Syria, separated into four or five regions on an ethnic basis, would also serve as a natural “buffer” for Israel against both Sunni and Shi’ite Islamist forces.” (Ibid.).
Ironically,
while Islamist forces are said to constitute the main threat to the
Jewish State, Tel Aviv is providing covert support to the Islamist
Free Syrian Army (FSA).
Map 1
Meeting
behind Closed Doors at the US State Department
A
top level US State Department meeting was held in May with members of
the Syrian Kurdish opposition. In attendance were representatives of
the Kurdish National Council (KNC), Robert Stephen Ford, the
outgoing US ambassador to Syria (who has played a key role in
channelling support to the rebels) as well as Frederic C. Hof, a
former business partner of Richard Armitage, who currently serves as
the administration’s “special coordinator on Syria”.
(Ibid). The delegation also met with Assistant Secretary of
State for Near Eastern Affairs Jeffrey Feltman.
Frederic
C. Hof, Robert Stephen Ford and Jeffrey Feltman are the State
Department’s key Syria policy-makers, with close links to the
Syrian Free Army (SFA) and the Syrian National Council (SNC).
Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Jeffrey Feltman
Frederic C. Hof, The Administration’s “special coordinator on Syria”
Robert S. Ford, outgoing US Ambassador to Syria
The
public statements of KNA leader Sherkoh Abbas in the wake of the
State Department meeting suggest that the political fracturing of the
Syrian Arab Republic along ethnic and religious lines as well as the
creation of an “independent Kurdistan” were discussed. “State
Department Deputy Spokesman Mark Toner described [the meeting's]
purpose as part of ‘ongoing efforts… to help the Syrian [Kurdish]
opposition build a more cohesive opposition to Assad.’”
(Ibid).
The
KNA leader called upon Washington to support the creation of a
separate Kurdish State consisting of “an autonomous region in
Syria; joining the Kurdistan Regional Government in Iraq – which
borders the Kurdish region in Syria; or perhaps an even larger
Kurdish state” [Greater Kurdistan].
“The
Kurdish people, in all parts of Kurdistan, seek the right to form an
independent Kurdish state. We can only achieve this cherished goal
with the help of the western democracies, and first and foremost the
U.S.” said Sherkoh Abbas. (Syria:
An Alternative, Choice,
Ekurd.net, May 22, 2012)
It
is worth noting, in this regard, that the creation of a “Greater
Kurdistan” has been envisaged for several years by the Pentagon as
part of a broader “Plan for Redrawing the Middle East”.(See map 2
below)
This
option, which appears unlikely in the near future, would go against
the interests of Turkey, a staunch ally of both the US and Israel.
Another scenario, which is contemplated by Ankara would consist in
the annexation to Turkey of parts of Syrian Kurdistan. (See map
above).
“Greater
Kurdistan” would include portions of Iran, Syria, Iraq and Turkey
as conveyed in Coronel Ralph Peters (ret) celebrated map of
“The New Middle East” (see below). (For Further details seeMahdi
Nazemroaya’s November 2006 Global Research article).
Colonel
Peters taught at the US Military Academy.
Detailed
analysis on Syria.
Over
30 chapters, available from Global Research at no charge
SYRIA:
NATO’s Next “Humanitarian” War?
ONLINE INTERACTIVE I-BOOK
- by Prof. Michel Chossudovsky – 2012-07-15
ONLINE INTERACTIVE I-BOOK
- by Prof. Michel Chossudovsky – 2012-07-15
Plans for Redrawing the Middle East: The Project for a “New Middle East”
- by Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya – 2006-11-18
Towards
the balkanization (division) and finlandization (pacification) of the
Middle East]
Map 2.
The New Middle East
The
following map was prepared by Lieutenant-Colonel Ralph Peters. It was
published in the Armed Forces Journal in June 2006,
Peters is a retired colonel of the U.S. National War Academy. (Map Copyright Lieutenant-Colonel Ralph Peters 2006).
Although
the map does not officially reflect Pentagon doctrine, it has been
used in a training program at NATO’s Defense College for senior
military officers.
This map, as well as other similar maps, has most probably been used at the National War Academy as well as in military planning circles.
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