US
says Assad is ‘root of all evil’ after first drone strikes launch
from Turkey
RT,
6
August, 2015
The
US has launched its first drone strikes on northern Syria from a
Turkish airbase, the Pentagon reports. Earlier this week, the White
House authorized airstrikes to protect “moderate” rebels in
Syria, and included strikes against government forces.
Meanwhile
on Thursday, the US State Department has pinned the blame for the
chaos and the rise of jihadists in Syria on President Bashar Assad.
“The
Assad regime frankly is the root of all evil here … and has been
instrumental in creating the kind of lawless area to the north where
ISIL has been able to get purchase and extend its roots.”
A
spokesman for the Pentagon said on Wednesday that an unmanned drone
was launched on Monday from Incirlik Air Base and that preparations
were underway for strikes inside Syria by manned US warplanes,
Reuters reported.
The
American armed drone hit a number of targets near Raqqa, Islamic
State’s (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) stronghold in Syria, the Hurriyet
Daily reported. Washington had previously only used the Incirlik
airbase, which is near the southern city of Adana, for reconnaissance
missions using drones.
"As
part of our agreement with the US, we have made progress regarding
the opening up of our bases, particularly Incirlik," Foreign
Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu earlier told state broadcaster TRT, as
cited by Reuters.
Turkey had been against the US and NATO using airbases in the country to conduct airstrikes against Islamic State. However, Ankara made a sudden U-turn. In return for Washington’s use of Incirlik, Ankara has asked the US to establish a no-fly zone over Syria and a “security zone” along the Turkish border, according to Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc who outlined the deal in July.
The
attack by an Islamic State suicide bomber in July, which killed 32
people and injured more than 100, was the main reason for Ankara’s
U-turn. It was the first time that IS had conducted an attack on
Turkish soil. The group struck a cultural center in the mainly
Kurdish border town of Suruc.
Turkish
military has begun to deploy armed vehicles and tanks on the high
hills in the southeastern province of Sirnak near the Syrian border,
the Hurriyet daily reported on Thursday.
Earlier,
it was revealed that the US would attack forces loyal to President
Bashar Assad, should they target the 'moderate' rebel groups, while
NATO and its allies would also provide more support for those
opposing the Syrian government.
“Now
we are training and equipping the moderate [Syrian] opposition
together with the United States, and we will also start our fight
against Daesh [Islamic State] very effectively soon,” Foreign
Minister Cavusoglu told reporters in Kulua Lumpur on Wednesday, at
the start of a meeting with John Kerry.
Syrian
political analyst, Taleb Ibrahim told RT that he has suspicions about
the decision by Ankara and Washington to support those fighting
against the Syrian government.
“The
United States is not serious in fighting ISIS. I am very suspicious
about American acts and American behavior in both Syria and Iraq. I
am also suspicious about the Turkish role, which is up until now, has
not been clear,” he
said.
Is
the US program legal?
Since
the US-backed rebel groups in Syria are operating in the “lawless
area” of
the country, they are under pressure from“a
lot of different forces,” US
State Department deputy spokesperson Mark Toner told RT’s Gayane
Chichakyan, while trying to explain the legal basis for the change in
US policy.
“I
frankly don’t know what the legal authority is,” Toner
said, adding that the situation in Syria remains “complex
and fluid.”
He
clarified that Washington did not authorize itself to “go
after Assad government forces,” insisting
that such bombings would take place only in the “hypothetical” case
that the US-backed militants came under fire from Syrian forces.
His
comments were condemned by Phyllis Bennis, from the Institute for
Policy Studies, who was deeply skeptical of the US motives for
widening their attack in Syria. She said Washington is heading
down “a
very slippery slope and they are halfway down that slope,” while
the US was using these so-called ‘lawless areas’ as a
smokescreen.
“There
is no real legal basis for this. You know the UN charter, which is
the document of international law that determines when is a law legal
or when it is illegal, has a very narrow definition of when a war is
legal. There are only two things that really make it legal. Either it
is authorized by the UN Security Council – or if a country has been
directly attacked, you have a qualified right to use self-defense,
only until, the Security Council can meet to decide what to do,” she
said.
Syria’s
Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem said the efforts to fight Islamic
State militants on Syrian territory should be coordinated with
Damascus.
The
Syrian government criticized Washington's distinction between
'moderate' and 'extremist' rebel forces in Syria. According to the
US, IS are extremists and need to be bombed, while moderate rebels
should be trained and supported to overthrow the Syrian government.
"For
us in Syria there is no moderate opposition and immoderate
opposition. Whoever carries weapons against the state is a
terrorist," the
Syrian minister said during a visit to Iran, which is Syria’s ally.
Drone civilian death toll
While the US hopes the air campaign will help to make the Turkish border harder to cross and stem the flow of militants wanting to join up with the terrorist organization, the new drone missions are an escalation in the US’s unmanned aircraft program.
However,
a report in 2014 by former US senior officials said the practice of
using drones to strike targets is not as effective as Washington
would hope.
The
study, issued in June 2014, called on the Obama administration to
come up with a cost-benefit analysis of drone strikes, while it also
urged more transparency on the targeted killings.
Britain’s
Reprieve human-rights group calculated that it takes about 28
innocent lives to take out a single terrorist leader, often with
multiple drone strikes.
The
statistics are striking. In the last 10 years, attempts to kill 41
terrorist leaders resulted in the deaths of an estimated 1,147
people, the vast majority of them civilians and families.
The
drone program began under President George W. Bush, but experienced
rapid growth under the Obama administration. In Pakistan alone, 396
strikes have been conducted since 2002. In Yemen, where counterterror
operations have also grown over the years, 126 have been conducted in
the same time period.
According
to the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, 423-962 civilians have
been killed in Pakistan as a result of drone strikes between 2004 and
2015. Last year, the outlet found that domestic buildings were the
most common target. In Yemen, some 65-96 civilians have been killed.
ISIS claims responsibility for Saudi suicide bombing
A
suicide bomber has blown himself up at a mosque in Saudi Arabia,
which was used by members of the security forces, killing at least 15
people. Islamic State has claimed responsibility for the attack in
the Asir region.
The
terror group circulated a statement on Twitter, saying a suicide
bomber had infiltrated a "military camp" for the Special
Emergency Force in southwestern Asir province, Reuters reported. But
it didn’t specify the attack was in a mosque.
The
attacker struck the mosque during the early afternoon in the city of
Abha, the provincial capital, which is southeast of Mecca and not far
from the Yemeni border.
The
Saudi interior ministry said the attack killed 15 people. However,
earlier state television El-Ikhbariya put the death toll at 17. Saudi
Arabia’s emergency forces used the mosque, the Al Arabiya
television channel has claimed
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