NATO is harbouring the Islamic State
Why France’s brave new war on ISIS is a sick joke, and an insult to the victims of the Paris attacks
17
November, 2015
“We
stand alongside Turkey in its efforts in protecting its national
security and fighting against terrorism. France and Turkey are on the
same side within the framework of the international coalition against
the terrorist group ISIS.”
The 13th November Paris
massacre will be remembered, like 9/11, as a defining moment in world
history.
The murder of 129 people,
the injury of 352 more, by ‘Islamic State’ (ISIS) acolytes
striking multiple targets simultaneously in the heart of Europe, mark
a major sea-change in the terror threat.
For the first time, a
Mumbai-style attack has occurred on Western soil — the worst
attack on Europe in decades. As such, it has triggered a seemingly
commensurate response from France: the declaration of a nationwide
state of emergency, the likes of which have not been seen since the
1961 Algerian war.
Meanwhile,
President Hollande wants European
Union leaders to suspend the Schengen Agreement on open borders to
allow dramatic restrictions on freedom of movement across Europe. He
also demands the EU-wide adoption of the Passenger Name Records (PNR)
system allowing intelligence services to meticulously track the
travel patterns of Europeans, along with an extension of the state of
emergency to at least three months.
Under
the extension,
French police can now block any website, put people under house
arrest without trial, search homes without a warrant, and prevent
suspects from meeting others deemed a threat.
“We
know that more attacks are being prepared, not just against France
but also against other European countries,” said the French Prime
Minister Manuel Valls. “We are going to live with this terrorist
threat for a long time.”
Hollande plans to
strengthen the powers of police and security services under new
anti-terror legislation, and to pursue amendments to the constitution
that would permanently enshrine the state of emergency into French
politics. “We need an appropriate tool we can use without having to
resort to the state of emergency,” he explained.
Parallel
with martial law at home, Hollande was quick to accelerate military
action abroad, launching 30 airstrikes on over a dozen Islamic State
targets in its de
facto capital,
Raqqa.
The ripple effect from
the attacks in terms of the impact on Western societies is likely to
be permanent. In much the same way that 9/11 saw the birth of a new
era of perpetual war in the Muslim world, the 13/11 Paris attacks are
already giving rise to a brave new phase in that perpetual war: a new
age of Constant Vigilance, in which citizens are vital accessories to
the police state, enacted in the name of defending a democracy eroded
by the very act of defending it through Constant Vigilance.
Mass surveillance at home
and endless military projection abroad are the twin sides of the same
coin of national security, which must simply be maximized as much as
possible.
“We’re not engaged in a war of civilizations, because these assassins do not represent any. We are in a war against jihadist terrorism which is threatening the whole world.”
The friend of our enemy is our friend
Conspicuously missing
from President Hollande’s decisive declaration of war however, was
any mention of the biggest elephant in the room: state-sponsorship.
Syrian
passports discovered near the bodies of two of the suspected Paris
attackers, according to police sources, were fake, and
likely forged in
Turkey.
Earlier
this year, the Turkish daily Today’s
Zaman reported that
“more than 100,000 fake Turkish passports” had been given to
ISIS. Erdogan’s government, the newspaper added, “has been
accused of supporting the terrorist organization by turning a blind
eye to its militants crossing the border and even buying its oil…
Based on a 2014 report, Sezgin Tanrıkulu, deputy chairman of the
main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) said that ISIL
terrorists fighting in Syria have also been claimed to have been
treated in hospitals in Turkey.”
This
barely scratches the surface. A senior Western
official familiar
with a large cache of intelligence obtained this summer told
the Guardian that
“direct dealings between Turkish officials and ranking ISIS members
was now ‘undeniable.’”
The same official
confirmed that Turkey, a longstanding member of NATO, is not just
supporting ISIS, but also other jihadist groups, including Ahrar
al-Sham and Jabhat al-Nusra, al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria. “The
distinctions they draw [with other opposition groups] are thin
indeed,” said the official. “There is no doubt at all that they
militarily cooperate with both.”
In
a rare insight into this brazen state-sponsorship of ISIS, a year
agoNewsweek reported the
testimony of a former ISIS communications technician, who had
travelled to Syria to fight the regime of Bashir al-Assad.
The
former ISIS fighter told Newsweek that
Turkey was allowing ISIS trucks from Raqqa to cross the “border,
through Turkey and then back across the border to attack Syrian Kurds
in the city of Serekaniye in northern Syria in February.” ISIS
militants would freely travel “through Turkey in a convoy of
trucks,” and stop “at safehouses along the way.”
The former ISIS
communication technician also admitted that he would routinely
“connect ISIS field captains and commanders from Syria with people
in Turkey on innumerable occasions,” adding that “the people they
talked to were Turkish officials… ISIS commanders told us to fear
nothing at all because there was full cooperation with the Turks.”
In
January, authenticated official documents of
the Turkish military were leaked online, showing that Turkey’s
intelligence services had been caught in Adana by military officers
transporting missiles, mortars and anti-aircraft ammunition via truck
“to the al-Qaeda terror organisation” in Syria.
According
to other ISIS suspects facing trial in
Turkey, the Turkish national military intelligence organization (MIT)
had begun smuggling arms, including NATO weapons to jihadist groups
in Syria as early as 2011.
The
allegations have been corroborated by
a prosecutor and court testimony of Turkish military police officers,
who confirmed that Turkish intelligence was delivering arms to Syrian
jihadists from 2013 to 2014.
A report by
the Turkish Statistics Institute confirmed that the government had
provided at least $1 million in arms to Syrian rebels within that
period, contradicting official denials. Weapons included grenades,
heavy artillery, anti-aircraft guns, firearms, ammunition, hunting
rifles and other weapons — but the Institute declined to
identify the specific groups receiving the shipments.
Information
of that nature emerged separately. Just two months ago, Turkish
police raided a
news outlet that published revelations on how the local customs
director had approved weapons shipments from Turkey to ISIS.
Turkey
has also played a key role in facilitating the life-blood of ISIS’
expansion: black market oil sales. Senior political and intelligence
sources in Turkey and Iraq confirm that
Turkish authorities have actively facilitated ISIS oil sales through
the country.
Last
summer, an opposition politician estimated the
quantity of ISIS oil sales in Turkey at about $800 million — that
was over a year ago.
By
now, this implies that Turkey has facilitated over $1 billion worth
of black market ISIS oil sales to date.
There
is no “self-sustaining economy” for ISIS, contrary to the
fantasies of the Washington
Post and Financial
Times in
their recent faux investigations,
according to Martin Chulov of the Guardian.
As a senior ISIS member recently revealed to
him: “They need the Turks. I know of a lot of cooperation and it
scares me. I don’t see how Turkey can attack the organization too
hard. There are shared interests.”
Meanwhile, NATO leaders
feign outrage and learned liberal pundits continue to scratch their
heads in bewilderment as to ISIS’ extraordinary resilience and
inexorable expansion.
Unsurprisingly, then,
Turkey’s anti-ISIS bombing raids have largely been token gestures.
Under cover of fighting ISIS, Turkey has largely used the opportunity
to bomb the Kurdish forces of the Democratic Union Party (YPG) in
Syria and Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in Turkey and Iraq. Yet those
forces are widely recognized to be the most effective fighting ISIS
on the ground.
Meanwhile, Turkey has
gone to pains to thwart almost every US effort to counter ISIS. When
this summer, 54 graduates of the Pentagon’s $500 million ‘moderate’
Syrian rebel train-and-equip program were kidnapped by Jabhat
al-Nusra — al-Qaeda’s arm in Syria — it was due to a
tip-off from Turkish intelligence.
The
Turkish double-game was confirmed by
multiple rebel sources to McClatchy, but denied by a Pentagon
spokesman who said, reassuringly:
“Turkey is a NATO ally, close friend of the United States and an important partner in the international coalition.”
According to a US-trained
Division 30 officer with access to information on the incident,
Turkey was trying “to leverage the incident into an expanded role
in the north for the Islamists in Nusra and Ahrar” and to persuade
the United States to “speed up the training of rebels.”
“Had Turkey placed the same kind of absolute blockade on Isis territories as they did on Kurdish-held parts of Syria… that blood-stained ‘caliphate’ would long since have collapsed — and arguably, the Paris attacks may never have happened. And if Turkey were to do the same today, Isis would probably collapse in a matter of months. Yet, has a single western leader called on Erdoğan to do this?”
Some
officials have spoken up about the paradox, but to no avail. Last
year,Claudia
Roth,
deputy speaker of the German parliament, expressed shock that NATO is
allowing Turkey to harbour an ISIS camp in Istanbul, facilitate
weapons transfers to Islamist militants through its borders, and
tacitly support IS oil sales.
Instead,
Turkey has been amply rewarded for its alliance with the very same
terror-state that wrought the Paris massacre on 13th November 2015.
Just a month earlier, German Chancellor Angela Merkel offered to
fast-track Turkey’s bid to join the EU, permitting visa-free travel
to Europe for Turks.
State-sponsorship
It
is not just Turkey. Senior political and intelligence sources in the
Kurdish Regional Government (KRG) have confirmed the complicity of
high-level KRG officials in facilitating ISIS oil sales, for personal
profit, and to sustain the government’s flagging revenues.
Despite a formal
parliamentary inquiry corroborating the allegations, there have been
no arrests, no charges, no prosecutions.
The KRG “middle-men”
and other government officials facilitating these sales continue
their activities unimpeded.
In
his testimony before
the Senate Armed Services Committee in September 2014, General Martin
Dempsey, then chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, was asked by
Senator Lindsay Graham whether he knew of “any major Arab ally that
embraces ISIL”?
“I know major Arab allies who fund them.”
In other words, the most
senior US military official at the time had confirmed that ISIS was
being funded by the very same “major Arab allies” that had just
joined the US-led anti-ISIS coalition.
These
allies include Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE, and Kuwait in
particular — which for the last four years at least have
funneled billions of dollars largely to extremist rebels in Syria. No
wonder that their anti-ISIS airstrikes, already miniscule, have now
reduced almost to zero as they focus instead on bombing Shi’a
Houthis in Yemen, which, incidentally, is paving
the way for
the rise of ISIS there.
Porous links between some
Free Syrian Army (FSA) rebels, Islamist militant groups like
al-Nusra, Ahrar al-Sham and ISIS, have enabled prolific weapons
transfers from ‘moderate’ to Islamist militants.
The
consistent transfers of CIA-Gulf-Turkish arms supplies to ISIS have
beendocumented through
analysis of weapons serial numbers by the UK-based Conflict Armament
Research (CAR), whose database on the illicit weapons trade is funded
by the EU and Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs.
“Islamic
State forces have captured significant quantities of US-manufactured
small arms and have employed them on the battlefield,” a CAR report
found in September 2014. “M79 90 mm anti-tank rockets captured from
IS forces in Syria are identical to M79 rockets transferred by Saudi
Arabia to forces operating under the ‘Free Syrian Army’ umbrella
in 2013.”
German
journalist Jurgen Todenhofer, who spent 10 days inside the Islamic
State, reported last
year that ISIS is being “indirectly” armed by the West:
“They buy the weapons that we give to the Free Syrian Army, so they get Western weapons — they get French weapons… I saw German weapons, I saw American weapons.”
ISIS, in other words, is
state-sponsored — indeed, sponsored by purportedly
Western-friendly regimes in the Muslim world, who are integral to the
anti-ISIS coalition.
Which then begs the
question as to why Hollande and other Western leaders expressing
their determination to “destroy” ISIS using all means necessary,
would prefer to avoid the most significant factor of all: the
material infrastructure of ISIS’ emergence in the context of
ongoing Gulf and Turkish state support for Islamist militancy in the
region.
There are many
explanations, but one perhaps stands out: the West’s abject
dependence on terror-toting Muslim regimes, largely to maintain
access to Middle East, Mediterranean and Central Asian oil and gas
resources.
Pipelines
Much
of the strategy currently at play was candidly described in a 2008 US
Army-funded RAND report, Unfolding
the Future of the Long War (pdf).
The report noted that “the economies of the industrialized states
will continue to rely heavily on oil, thus making it a strategically
important resource.” As most oil will be produced in the Middle
East, the US has “motive for maintaining stability in and good
relations with Middle Eastern states.” It just so happens that
those states support Islamist terrorism:
“The geographic area of proven oil reserves coincides with the power base of much of the Salafi-jihadist network. This creates a linkage between oil supplies and the long war that is not easily broken or simply characterized… For the foreseeable future, world oil production growth and total output will be dominated by Persian Gulf resources… The region will therefore remain a strategic priority, and this priority will interact strongly with that of prosecuting the long war.”
Declassified
government documents clarify beyond all doubt that a primary
motivation for the 2003 Iraq War, preparations for which had begun
straight after 9/11, was installing a permanent US military presence
in the Persian Gulf to secure access to
the region’s oil and gas.
“Most
of the foreign belligerents in the war in Syria are gas-exporting
countries with interests in one of the two competing pipeline
projects that seek to cross Syrian territory to deliver either Qatari
or Iranian gas to Europe,” wrote Professor
Mitchell Orenstein of the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian
Studies at Harvard University, in Foreign
Affairs,
the journal of Washington DC’s Council on Foreign Relations.
In 2009, Qatar had
proposed to build a pipeline to send its gas northwest via Saudi
Arabia, Jordan, and Syria to Turkey. But Assad “refused to sign the
plan,” reports Orenstein. “Russia, which did not want to see its
position in European gas markets undermined, put him under intense
pressure not to.”
Russia’s Gazprom sells
80% of its gas to Europe. So in 2010, Russia put its weight behind
“an alternative Iran-Iraq-Syria pipeline that would pump Iranian
gas from the same field out via Syrian ports such as Latakia and
under the Mediterranean.” The project would allow Moscow “to
control gas imports to Europe from Iran, the Caspian Sea region, and
Central Asia.”
Then
in July 2011, a $10 billion Iran-Iraq-Syria pipeline deal
was announced,
and a preliminary agreement duly signed by Assad.
Later that year, the US,
UK, France and Israel were ramping up covert assistance to rebel
factions in Syria to elicit the “collapse” of Assad’s regime
“from within.”
“The
United States… supports the Qatari pipeline as a way to balance
Iran and diversify Europe’s gas supplies away from Russia,”
explained Orenstein in Foreign
Affairs.
An
article in the Armed
Forces Journal published
last year by Major Rob Taylor, an instructor at the US Army’s
Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, thus offered
scathing criticism of conventional media accounts of the Syrian
conflict that ignore the pipeline question:
“Any review of the current conflict in Syria that neglects the geopolitical economics of the region is incomplete… Viewed through a geopolitical and economic lens, the conflict in Syria is not a civil war, but the result of larger international players positioning themselves on the geopolitical chessboard in preparation for the opening of the pipeline… Assad’s pipeline decision, which could seal the natural gas advantage for the three Shi’a states, also demonstrates Russia’s links to Syrian petroleum and the region through Assad. Saudi Arabia and Qatar, as well as al-Qaeda and other groups, are maneuvering to depose Assad and capitalize on their hoped-for Sunni conquest in Damascus. By doing this, they hope to gain a share of control over the ‘new’ Syrian government, and a share in the pipeline wealth.”
The pipelines would
access not just gas in the Iran-Qatari field, but also potentially
newly discovered offshore gas resources in the Eastern
Mediterranean — encompassing the offshore territories of
Israel, Palestine, Cyprus, Turkey, Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon. The
area has been estimated to hold as much as 1.7 billion barrels of oil
and up to 122 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, which geologists
believe could be just a third of the total quantities of undiscovered
fossil fuels in the Levant.
A
December 2014 report by
the US Army War College’s Strategic Studies Institute, authored by
a former UK Ministry of Defense research director, noted that Syria
specifically holds significant offshore oil and gas potential. It
noted:
“Once the Syria conflict is resolved, prospects for Syrian offshore production — provided commercial resources are found — are high.”
Assad’s
brutality and illegitimacy is beyond question — but until he
had demonstrated his unwillingness to break with Russia and Iran,
especially over their proposed pipeline project, US
policy toward Assad had
been ambivalent.
State Department cables
obtained by Wikileaks reveal that US policy had wavered between
financing Syrian opposition groups to facilitate “regime change,”
and using the threat of regime change to induce “behavior reform.”
President Obama’s
preference for the latter resulted in US officials, including John
Kerry, shamelessly courting Assad in the hopes of prying him away
from Iran, opening up the Syrian economy to US investors, and
aligning the regime with US-Israeli regional designs.
Even
when the 2011 Arab Spring protests resulted in Assad’s security
forces brutalizing peaceful civilian demonstrators, both Kerry and
then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton insisted that
he was a “reformer” — which he took as a green light to
respond to further protests with massacres.
Assad’s decision to
side with Russia and Iran, and his endorsement of their favoured
pipeline project, were key factors in the US decision to move against
him.
Europe’s dance with the devil
Turkey plays a key role
in the US-Qatar-Saudi backed route designed to circumvent Russia and
Iran, as an intended gas hub for exports to European markets.
“Turkey
is key to gas supply diversification of the entire European Union. It
would be a huge mistake to stall energy cooperation any
further,” urgedDavid
Koranyi, director of the Atlantic Council’s Eurasian Energy Futures
initiative and a former national security advisor to the Prime
Minister of Hungary.
Koranyi noted that both
recent “major gas discoveries in the Eastern Mediterranean” and
“gas supplies from Northern Iraq” could be “sourced to supply
the Turkish market and transported beyond to Europe.”
Given
Europe’s dependence on Russia for about a quarter of its gas, the
imperative to minimize this dependence and reduce the EU’s
vulnerability to supply outages has become an urgent strategic
priority. The priority fits into longstanding efforts by the US to
wean Central and Eastern Europe out of the orbit of Russian power.
“The EU would gain a reliable alternative supply route to further diversify its imports from Russia. Turkey, as a hub, would benefit from transit fees and other energy-generated revenues. As additional supplies of gas may become available for export over the next five to 10 years in the wider region, Turkey is the natural route via which these could be shipped to Europe.”
A report last year by
Anglia Ruskin University’s Global Sustainability Institute (GSI)
warned that Europe faced a looming energy crisis, particularly the
UK, France and Italy, due to “critical shortages of natural
resources.”
“Coal,
oil and gas resources in Europe are running down and we need
alternatives,” said GSI’s Professor Victoria Andersen.
She also recommended a
rapid shift to renewables, but most European leaders apparently have
other ideas — namely, shifting to a network of pipelines that
would transport oil and gas from the Middle East, Eastern
Mediterranean and Central Asia to Europe: via our loving friend,
Erdogan’s Turkey.
We must not wonder about
the pointless spectacle of airstrikes and Stazi-like police powers,
given our shameless affair with Erdogan’s terror-regime, which
funds and arms our very own enemy.
We must not question the
motives of our elected leaders, who despite sitting on this
information for years, still lie to us, flagrantly, even now, before
the blood of 129 French citizens has even dried, pretending that they
intend to “destroy” a band of psychopathic murdering scum, armed
and funded from within the heart of NATO.
No, no, no. Life goes on.
Business-as-usual must continue. Citizens must keep faith in the
wisdom of The Security State.
The US must insist on
relying on Turkish intelligence to vet and train ‘moderate’
rebels in Syria, and the EU must insist on extensive
counter-terrorism cooperation with Erdogan’s regime, while
fast-tracking the ISIS godfather’s accession into the union.
But fear not: Hollande is
still intent on “destroying” ISIS. Just like Obama and
Cameron — and Erdogan.
Dr Nafeez
Ahmed is
an investigative journalist, bestselling author and international
security scholar. A former Guardian writer, he writes the ‘System
Shift’ column for VICE’s Motherboard, and is a weekly columnist
for Middle East Eye.
He
is the winner of a 2015 Project Censored Award, known as the
‘Alternative Pulitzer Prize’, for Outstanding Investigative
Journalism for his Guardian work, and was twice selected in the
Evening Standard’s ‘Power 1,000’ most globally influential
Londoners, in 2014 and 2015.
Nafeez
has also written and reported for The Independent, Sydney Morning
Herald, The Age, The Scotsman, Foreign Policy, The Atlantic, Quartz,
Prospect, New Statesman, Le Monde diplomatique, New Internationalist,
Counterpunch, Truthout, among others.
He
is a Visiting Research Fellow at the Faculty of Science and
Technology at Anglia Ruskin University, where he is researching the
link between global systemic crises and civil unrest for Springer
Energy Briefs.
Nafeez
is the author of A
User’s Guide to the Crisis of Civilization: And How to Save
It (2010),
and the scifi thriller novel ZERO
POINT,
among other books. His work on the root causes and covert operations
linked to international terrorism officially contributed to the 9/11
Commission and the 7/7 Coroner’s Inquest.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.