The
war on Iran begins…in Syria
Eric
Draitser
RT,
28
August, 2013
As
the United States, along with its European and Israeli allies,
prepares to launch yet another illegal war of aggression in the
Middle East, the geopolitics of the US strategy could not be more
apparent.
Despite
the high-minded talk of humanitarianism, the US is advancing a
transparently neo-colonialist agenda aimed at securing hegemony in
the region by destroying what little opposition remains.
Lights…camera…war!
The
images and videos flooding the internet since last week purport to
show ‘evidence’ of a chemical weapons attack perpetrated by the
Assad regime. This development neatly and conveniently coincides with
the declaration by the Obama administration that the use of such
weapons constitutes a ‘red line’, merely a euphemism for the
point at which the US would feel emboldened to militarily intervene
on behalf of the rebels.
And
so, as news outlets report on the ‘likely use of chemical weapons’
by Damascus without anything other than unverifiable hearsay and
ambiguous video footage, the drumbeat of war gets louder and louder.
A
clear-thinking and rational political analyst would immediately be
suspicious about the attack considering the presence of international
chemical weapons investigators in Syria, as well as the fact that
Damascus was undeniably winning the war against the jihadi rebel
factions in cities like Qussair, Homs, Aleppo and elsewhere. That
Assad would sabotage his own military victories and provide the
perfect pretext for a foreign intervention is not only far-fetched,
it runs contrary to his own record throughout this conflict. Remember
that Damascus has shown restraint in the face of international war
crimes committed against it by Israel, Turkey and other regional
actors who have been fomenting the conflict in Syria for more than
two years.
And
so we see once again that we are living in what French philosopher
and cultural critic Guy Debord called ‘The Society of the
Spectacle’ – a world in which representation of truth is more
important than truth itself, where videos of unknown origin and
without verification take the place of authentic evidence and
investigation, where wars that will destroy millions of lives and
future generations are manufactured by paid actors on television who
merely masquerade as journalists.
All
this leads many to wonder whether the United States is really as
stupid as it seems. Could Washington actually believe that a war in
Syria will actually benefit the US and its interests? Could they
truly be so short-sighted and unwilling to learn from past mistakes?
Although these questions would seem entirely valid, they presuppose
that a war with Syria is actually the goal of a war with Syria. On
the contrary, this illegal aggression against the sovereign Syrian
Arab Republic is merely the opening phase of a greater regional war
with the ultimate target being the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Smashing
the Shiite crescent
In
the decades since the revolution of 1979 which created the modern
Islamic Republic of Iran, the US policy toward that country has been
antagonistic and belligerent to such a degree that Iran has been
forced, out of sheer necessity, to rely very heavily on its few
regional and international allies. And so, given the political
posture of Bashar Assad, like that of his father before him, Damascus
has been viewed as Iran’s key political partner, providing Iran
with a crucial ally along the border with Israel and a bridge to the
Hezbollah organization in Southern Lebanon. Additionally, a
multi-ethnic society like Syria with a dominant Shiite-Alawite
demographic presents itself as a natural friend to Shiite Iran.
However, the importance of this relationship does not stop at mere
similarities.
Since
the United States imposed draconian sanctions against Tehran,
ostensibly over Iran’s alleged nuclear program, the economics of
the Iran-Syria relationship have become even more significant. As
Tehran has been increasingly frozen out of world energy markets due
to US and European sanctions that make it difficult if not impossible
to settle international debts with the Islamic Republic, it has been
forced to find alternative methods and infrastructure to sell its oil
and gas and maintain its fragile economy.
A
centerpiece of this strategy is the Iran-Iraq-Syria gas pipeline deal
signed last month. Intended to provide Iran with a new delivery
route to the Mediterranean coast, giving it renewed access to the
Eurasian landmass and markets, the pipeline is obviously a blow to
US-Israeli attempts to strangle the regime in Iran economically.
Syria, being the critical linchpin in this deal, figures
significantly in the Iranian strategy to survive the sanctions,
thereby necessitating Iranian involvement in the conflict if only to
provide the critical support Assad needs to maintain control of the
security of the country.
Syrians
walk in a heavily damaged street in Syria's eastern town of Deir
Ezzor on August 26, 2013. (AFP Photo)
When
one looks at the players involved in the war in Syria, it becomes
clear that the Sunni monarchies – Saudi Arabia and Qatar primarily
– have committed to the war in order to ensure their own continued
hegemony, especially in terms of energy production. Qatar, being one
of the world’s wealthiest gas exporters, views the growing
relationship between Iran and Syria, especially the gas pipeline
deal, as an existential threat to their own standing. The Saudis,
long since mortal enemies and rivals of the Shia Iranians, also have
come to view Syria as merely a battleground in the larger proxy war
with Iran.
And
then of course, there’s Israel. Perched comfortably on Syria’s
border, Israel has played a key role in stoking tensions and
fomenting unrest on the other side of the Golan Heights. Not only did
Israel carry out a number of blatantly illegal bombings inside
Syria’s borders, there have been dozens of mainstream accounts,
including videos, of Israeli Special forces commandos inside of
Syria. Naturally, Israeli intentions are to further their own
interests which for decades have been centered on the destruction of
Iran, their main regional competitor and rival.
Furthermore,
as renowned author and geopolitical analyst F. William Engdahl has
noted, Israel’s new gas discoveries off the Mediterranean coast add
a new dimension to the struggle for dominance in the region. Engdahl
writes, “Now Israel faces a strategic and very dangerous dilemma.
Naturally, Israel is none too excited to see Assad’s Syria, linked
to Israel’s arch foe Iran, and Iraq and Lebanon out-compete an
Israeli gas export to the EU markets. This could explain why Israel’s
Netanyahu government has been messing inside Syria in the anti-Assad
forces.”
Of
course, Israel is not an entirely independent actor. As a principal
player in the US-dominated imperial system, Israel serves as the bad
cop to Washington’s good cop on Iran. While the warmongers in Tel
Aviv call for Iranian blood, the US is able to feign interest in
nuclear negotiations to resolve the conflict and lift the sanctions.
At the very same moment, the US, EU and Israel foment civil war in
Syria precisely to weaken the Iranians, already isolated politically
and economically, thereby showing that not only are they not
interested in peace with Iran, they are implementing a multi-phased
strategy to destroy that country.
Adding
insult to injury, the continued instability and violence in Iraq has
politically weakened Prime Minister Maliki, a key Iranian ally. With
Baghdad and Damascus in chaos, Tehran will find it very difficult to
continue to support Hezbollah, another important piece on the
chessboard. So one can see without great difficulty that the war in
Syria is, at a fundamental level, a means to an end – the end being
the total destruction of the Shiite Crescent insofar as it represents
resistance to the hegemonic designs of the US, Israel, and their
puppet Sunni monarchies.
What
has become ever more apparent in recent weeks and months is that the
conflict in Syria is much larger than Syria itself. Like the Balkans
almost exactly 100 years ago, Syria has become the proverbial powder
keg in which Western leaders play with matches. Tragically, the
diplomatic brinksmanship of the imperial powers in 1914 unleashed
upon the world one of the greatest tragedies in the history of
humanity: the First World War. As the United States prepares to
commence yet another war, let us hope that world war is not once
again the outcome.
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