Today I reposted an article by the most rabid of all the members of the New American Century who brought all the disasters that have befallen us from 2001 onwards, John Bolton who was for a time UN mabassador under George W Bush.
Now
to destroy th last remaning progressive, secular state in the region
he is advocating support for the ISIS project – a Sunni caliphate
in the region.
Imagine
my shock that I had been beaten by ex-Green Party MP Nandor Tanczos
who was not (as I was) posting it as a dire warning, but endorsing
the project saying essentially "the Iraq War was a bad idea
but...."
There
is hardly anyone who does not support the concept of a Kurdish state
which is already well on its way to being a reality if Turkey can be
neutralised.
But
to support a Sunni caliphate run by the headchpers of Daesh.
That is the illogical conclusion of the Guardian-reading liberals who come full circle to endorsing the views of one of the worst, rabid neo-Cons that ever walked this earth.
I will leave you with the reaction from Kevin Hester -
This is the equivalent of creating another neanderthal misogynist state in the M.E. like Saudia Arabia and we all know that the next move will be to destroy Iran where I have women friends who post pictures of themselves driving to Uni in jeans and t-shirts living much gthe same lives as we do.
More shit from the
monsters in The
USA is terrorist nation #1
Ex-Green Party MP Nandor Tanczos embraces neo-con/ISIS vision
Nandor writes:
"This
is a very interesting read, despite its hegemonic tone. I'm
personally as worried about Putin's interventions in the region as
the USA's and can't understand those of my friends who see him as
some kind of hero. He is a brutal tyrant whose only interest is
shoring up Russian influence by trying to force Assad back into
power.
"The
idea of redrawing the borders to allow an independent Kurdistan and a
Sunni state seems sensible to me at first glance. Colonially imposed
borders have been a disaster all over the world.".....
“Always,
I am interested in the quality of the ideas rather than the source”.
Has anyone told Mr Tanczos that although he may not be one of the region's great democrats as a result of the war he has the support of a majority of Syrians.
But of course in the midst of his rapid Russophobia and desire to redraw the borders of the region and create a Sunni caliphate that counts for nothing.
Has anyone told Mr Tanczos that although he may not be one of the region's great democrats as a result of the war he has the support of a majority of Syrians.
But of course in the midst of his rapid Russophobia and desire to redraw the borders of the region and create a Sunni caliphate that counts for nothing.
Here are some excerpts from Bolton's article -
If,
in this context, defeating the Islamic State means restoring to power
Mr. Assad in Syria and Iran’s puppets in Iraq, that outcome is
neither feasible nor desirable. Rather than striving to recreate the
post-World War I map, Washington should recognize the new
geopolitics. The best alternative to the Islamic State in
northeastern Syria and western Iraq is a new, independent Sunni
state.
This
“Sunni-stan” has economic potential as an oil producer (subject
to negotiation with the Kurds, to be sure), and could be a bulwark
against both Mr. Assad and Iran-allied Baghdad. The rulers of the
Arab Gulf states, who should by now have learned the risk to their
own security of funding Islamist extremism, could provide significant
financing. And Turkey — still a NATO ally, don’t forget — would
enjoy greater stability on its southern border, making the existence
of a new state at least tolerable.....
Make
no mistake, this new Sunni state’s government is unlikely to be a
Jeffersonian democracy for many years. But this is a region where
alternatives to secular military or semi-authoritarian governments
are scarce. Security and stability are sufficient ambitions.....
The
Arab monarchies like Saudi Arabia must not only fund much of the new
state’s early needs, but also ensure its stability and resistance
to radical forces. Once, we might have declared a Jordanian
“protectorate” in an American “sphere of influence”; for now,
a new state will do.....
The
military operation is not the hardest part of this post-Islamic State
vision. It will also require sustained American attention and
commitment. We cannot walk away from this situation as we did from
Iraq in 2011.....
The
new “Sunni-stan” may not be Switzerland. This is not a democracy
initiative, but cold power politics. It is consistent with the
strategic objective of obliterating the Islamic State that we share
with our allies, and it is achievable.
Here is an article by Robert Fisk who knows the imperialist past of the region. Perhaps Mr. Tanczos should ask him if he ensorses John Bolton's vision for a Sunni capliphate.
Isis: In a borderless world, the days when we could fight foreign wars and be safe at home may be long gone
Isis
was quick to understand a truth the West must now confront: that the
national borders imposed by colonial powers 100 years go are becoming
meaningless, says Robert Fisk
20
November, 2015
Early
in 2014, Isis released one of its first videos. Largely unseen in
Europe, it had neither the slick, cutting-edge professionalism of its
later execution tapes nor the haunting “nasheed” music that
accompanies most of its propaganda. Instead, a hand-held camera
showed a bulldozer pushing down a rampart of sand that had marked the
border between Iraq and Syria. As the machine destroyed the dirt
revetment, the camera panned down to a handwritten poster lying in
the sand. “End of Sykes-Picot”, it said.
Like
many hundreds of thousands of Arabs in the Middle East, for whom
Sykes-Picot was an almost cancerous expression, I watched this early
Isis video in Beirut. The bloody repercussions of the borders that
the British and French diplomats, Mark Sykes and François
Georges-Picot, drew in secret during the First World War –
originally giving Syria, Mount Lebanon and northern Iraq to the
French, and Palestine, Transjordan and the rest of Iraq to the
British – are known to every Arab, Christian and Muslim and,
indeed, every Jew in the region. They eviscerated the governorates of
the old dying Ottoman empire and created artificial nations in which
borders, watchtowers and hills of sand separated tribes, families and
peoples. They were an Anglo-French colonial production.
The
same night that I saw the early Isis video, I happened to be visiting
the Lebanese Druze leader, Walid Jumblatt. “The end of
Sykes-Picot!” he roared at me. “Rubbish,” I snorted. But of
course, I was wrong and Jumblatt was right. He had spotted at once
how Isis captured symbolically – but with almost breathtaking speed
– what so many Arabs had sought for almost exactly 100 years: the
unravelling of the fake borders with which the victors of the First
World War – largely the British and the French – had divided the
Arab people. It was our colonial construction – not just the
frontiers we imposed upon them, but the administrations and the false
democracies that we fraudulently thrust upon them, the mandates and
trusteeships which allowed us to rule them – that poisoned their
lives. Colin Powell claimed just such a trusteeship for Iraq's oil
prior to the illegal Anglo-American invasion of 2003.
We
foisted kings upon the Arabs – we engineered a 96 per cent
referendum in favour of the Hashemite King Faisal in Iraq in 1922 –
and then provided them with generals and dictators. The people of
Libya, Syria, Iraq, and Egypt – which had been invaded by the
British in the 19th century – were subsequently blessed with
mendacious governments, brutal policemen, lying newspapers and fake
elections. Mubarak even scored Faisal's epic 96 per cent election
victory all over again. For the Arabs, “democracy” did not mean
freedom of speech and freedom to elect their own leaders; it referred
to the “democratic” Western nations that continued to support the
cruel dictators who oppressed them.
Thus the Arab revolutions that consumed the Middle East in 2011 – forget the “Arab Spring”, a creature of Hollywood origin – did not demand democracy. The posters on the streets of Cairo and Tunis and Damascus and Yemen called for dignity and justice, two commodities that we had definitely not sought for the Arabs. Justice for the Palestinians – or for the Kurds, or for that matter for the destroyed Armenians of 1915, or for all the suffering Arab peoples – was not something that commended itself to us. But I think we should have gone much further in our investigation of the titanic changes of 2011.
.
But
I think now that I was wrong. In retrospect, I woefully misunderstood
what these revolutions represented. One clue, perhaps, lay in the
importance of trade union movements. Where trade unions, with their
transnational socialism and anti-colonial credentials, were strong –
in Egypt and Tunisia – the revolutionary bloodshed was far less
than in the nations that had either banned trade unionism altogether
– Libya, for example – or concretised the trade union movement
into the regime, which had long ago happened in Syria and Yemen.
Socialism crossed borders. Yet even this does not account for the
events of 2011.
What
really manifested itself that year, I now believe, was a much more
deeply held Arab conviction; that the very institutions that we in
the West had built for these people 100 years ago were worthless,
that the statehood which we had later awarded to artificial nations
within equally artificial borders was meaningless. They were
rejecting the whole construct that we had foisted upon them. That
Egypt regressed back into military patriarchy – and the subsequent
and utterly predictable Western acqiescence in this – after a brief
period of elected Muslim Brotherhood government, does not change this
equation. While the revolutions largely stayed within national
boundaries – at least at the start – the borders began to lose
their meaning.
Lines
in the sand: The Sykes-Picot Plan, 1916
Hamas
in Gaza and the Brotherhood became one, the Sinai-Gaza frontier began
to crumble. Then the collapse of Libya rendered Gaddafi's former
borders open – and thus non-existent. His weapons – including
chemical shells – were sold to rebels in Egypt and Syria. Tunisia,
which is now supposed to be the darling of our Western hearts for its
adhesion to “democracy”, is now in danger of implosion because
its own borders with Libya and Algeria are open to arms transhipments
to Islamist groups. Isis's grasp of these frontierless entities means
that its own transnational existence is assured, from Fallujah in
Iraq to the edge of Syrian Aleppo, from Nigeria to Niger and Chad.
It
can thus degrade the economy of each country it moves through,
blowing up a Russian airliner leaving Sharm el-Sheikh, attacking the
Bardo museum in Tunis or the beaches of Sousse. There was a time –
when Islamists attacked the Jewish synagogue on Djerba island in
Tunisia in 2002, for example, killing 19 people – when tourism
could continue. But that was when Libya still existed. In those days,
Ben Ali's security police were able to control the internal security
of Tunisia; the army was left weak so that it could not stage a coup.
So today, of course, the near-impotent army of Tunisia cannot defend
its frontiers.
Isis's
understanding of this new phenomenon preceded our own. But Isis's
realisation that frontiers were essentially defenceless in the modern
age coincided with the popular Arab disillusion with their own
invented nations. Most of the millions of Syrian and Afghan refugees
who have flooded into Lebanon, Turkey and Jordan and then north into
Europe do not intend to return – ever – to states that have
failed them as surely as they no longer – in the minds of the
refugees – exist. These are not “failed states” so much as
imaginary nations that no longer have any purpose.
I
only began to understand this when, back in July, covering the Greek
economic crisis, I travelled to the Greek-Macedonian border with
Médecins Sans Frontières. This was long before the story of Arab
refugees entering Europe had seized the attention of the EU or the
media, although the Mediterranean drownings had long been a regular
tragedy on television screens. Aylan Kurdi, the little boy who would
be washed up on a Turkish beach, still had another two months to
live. But in the fields along the Macedonian border were thousands of
Syrians and Afghans. They were coming in their hundreds through the
cornfields, an army of tramping paupers who might have been fleeing
the Hundred Years War, women with their feet burned by exploded gas
cookers, men with bruises over their bodies from the blows of
frontier guards. Two of them I even knew, brothers from Aleppo whom I
had met two years earlier in Syria. And when they spoke, I suddenly
realised they were talking of Syria in the past tense. They talked
about “back there” and “what was home”. They didn't believe
in Syria any more. They didn't believe in frontiers.
Hamas in Gaza and the Brotherhood became one, the Sinai-Gaza frontier began to crumble. Then the collapse of Libya rendered Gaddafi's former borders open – and thus non-existent. His weapons – including chemical shells – were sold to rebels in Egypt and Syria. Tunisia, which is now supposed to be the darling of our Western hearts for its adhesion to “democracy”, is now in danger of implosion because its own borders with Libya and Algeria are open to arms transhipments to Islamist groups. Isis's grasp of these frontierless entities means that its own transnational existence is assured, from Fallujah in Iraq to the edge of Syrian Aleppo, from Nigeria to Niger and Chad.
It can thus degrade the
economy of each country it moves through, blowing up a Russian
airliner leaving Sharm el-Sheikh, attacking the Bardo museum in Tunis
or the beaches of Sousse. There was a time – when Islamists
attacked the Jewish synagogue on Djerba island in Tunisia in 2002,
for example, killing 19 people – when tourism could continue. But
that was when Libya still existed. In those days, Ben Ali's security
police were able to control the internal security of Tunisia; the
army was left weak so that it could not stage a coup. So today, of
course, the near-impotent army of Tunisia cannot defend its
frontiers.
Isis's understanding of
this new phenomenon preceded our own. But Isis's realisation that
frontiers were essentially defenceless in the modern age coincided
with the popular Arab disillusion with their own invented nations.
Most of the millions of Syrian and Afghan refugees who have flooded
into Lebanon, Turkey and Jordan and then north into Europe do not
intend to return – ever – to states that have failed them as
surely as they no longer – in the minds of the refugees – exist.
These are not “failed states” so much as imaginary nations that
no longer have any purpose.
I only began to
understand this when, back in July, covering the Greek economic
crisis, I travelled to the Greek-Macedonian border with Médecins
Sans Frontières. This was long before the story of Arab refugees
entering Europe had seized the attention of the EU or the media,
although the Mediterranean drownings had long been a regular tragedy
on television screens. Aylan Kurdi, the little boy who would be
washed up on a Turkish beach, still had another two months to live.
But in the fields along the Macedonian border were thousands of
Syrians and Afghans. They were coming in their hundreds through the
cornfields, an army of tramping paupers who might have been fleeing
the Hundred Years War, women with their feet burned by exploded gas
cookers, men with bruises over their bodies from the blows of
frontier guards. Two of them I even knew, brothers from Aleppo whom I
had met two years earlier in Syria. And when they spoke, I suddenly
realised they were talking of Syria in the past tense. They talked
about “back there” and “what was home”. They didn't believe
in Syria any more. They didn't believe in frontiers.
Far more important for
the West, they clearly didn't believe in our frontiers either. They
just walked across European frontiers with the same indifference as
they crossed from Syria to Turkey or Lebanon. We, the creators of the
Middle East's borders, found that our own historically created
national borders also had no meaning to these people. They wanted to
go to Germany or Sweden and intended to walk there, however many
policemen were sent to beat them or smother them with tear gas in a
vain attempt to guard the national sovereignty of the frontiers of
the EU.
Our own shock – indeed,
our indignation – that our own precious borders were not respected
by these largely Muslim armies of the poor was in sharp contrast to
our own blithe non-observance of Arab frontiers. Saddam was among the
first to show his own detestation of such lines in the sand. He cared
nothing about international law when he invaded Iran in 1980 – with
intelligence help from the Americans – or Kuwait in 1990, when he
tore up the old frontier of the emirate and claimed it as an Iraqi
province. But the West has now launched so many air strikes across
the Middle East's borders since the 1991 liberation of Kuwait that we
scarcely need to search for precedents now that Arab air forces are
regularly criss-crossing the Middle East's national boundaries –
along with our own fighter-bombers.
Quite apart from our
mournful Afghan adventure and our utterly illegal 2003 invasion of
Iraq, our aircraft have been bombing Libya, Iraq and Syria along with
the aircraft of various local pseudo-democracies for so long that
this state of affairs has become routine, almost normal, scarcely
worthy of a front-page headline. The Saudis are bombing Iraq and
Syria and Yemen. The Jordanians are bombing Syria. The Emiratis are
bombing Yemen. And now the French are bombing the Syrian city of
Raqqa even more than they bombed the Syrian city of Raqqa two months
ago – when President François Hollande did not tell us that France
was “at war”. The point, of course, is that we had grown so used
to attacking Arab lands – France had become so inured to sending
its soldiers and air crews to Africa and the Middle East to shoot and
bomb those whom it regarded as its enemies – that only when Muslims
began attacking our capital cities did we suddenly announce that we
were “at war”.
There were no code reds or code oranges in Arab capitals. They existed in a permanent state of code red, their people cringing beneath “emergency laws” imposed by dictators supported by the West, legislation even more iniquitous than those our European political masters now wish to impose on us. Of course, since the Iraqi catastrophe, we like to use local militia forces to do the dying for us. So the Kurds become our foot soldiers against Isis, or the Iraqi Shia militias or the Iranians or – though we must not admit this – the Syrian army and the Lebanese Hezbollah.
Isis has weirdly
replicated this gruesome policy. However many atrocities in Europe
have been committed by men who have supposedly been “radicalised”
in Syria, the killers have usually been local proxies; British
Muslims in the UK, French Muslims who were citizens of France or
residents of Belgium. The significance of this – that Isis clearly
intends to provoke a civil war within Europe, especially between
France's huge Algerian-origin Muslims and the police and political
elite of France – has been spoken of in whispers. Indeed, much of
the media coverage of the Paris massacres has often avoided the very
word Muslim.
Just as any
incomprehension we express about the borderless world into which the
Arabs think they are moving carries no reference to that most
borderless of Middle East nations, Israel. Arthur Balfour's
declaration, which gave the UK's support to a Jewish homeland in
Palestine during the same war that Mr Sykes and M. Georges-Picot were
plotting to divide up the Arab world, anticipated new frontiers
within Palestine itself, borders which, to this day, are largely
undefined. Israel's internationally recognised frontiers are ignored
by the Israeli government itself because it will not even say where
its eastern border lies. Is it along the old Jerusalem frontline? Is
it along the grotesque Israeli wall that has effectively stolen West
Bank Palestinian land? Does the state of Israel include every Jewish
colony built on land thieved from the Palestinians of the West Bank?
Or does it run along the entire length of the Jordan river, thus
destroying any Palestinian state that might ever exist? When Israelis
ask their critics to acknowledge Israel's right to exist, they should
be requested to state which particular Israel they are talking about:
the legal one recognised by the UN – or “Israel proper” as we
call it – or an Israel that includes the entire West Bank, or
“Israel improper” as we assuredly do not call it?
Our support for an Israel
that has not told us the location of its eastern border runs
logically alongside our own refusal to recognise – unless it suits
us – the frontiers of the Arab world. It is, after all, we who are
allowed to draw “lines in the sand” or “red lines”. It is we
Europeans who decide where civilisations begin and end. It is the
Prime Minister of Hungary who decides exactly where he will draw up
his forces to defend “Christian civilisation”. It is we
Westerners who have the moral probity to decide whether national
sovereignty in the Middle East should be obeyed or abused.
But when the Arabs
themselves decide to dispense with the whole fandango and seek their
future in “our” lands rather than “their” lands, this policy
breaks down. Indeed, it is extraordinary how easily we forget that
the greatest frontier-breaker of modern times was himself a European,
who wanted to destroy the Jews of Europe but who might well – given
his racist remark about Muslims in Mein Kampf – have continued his
holocaust to include the Arabs. We even have the nerve to call the
murderers of Paris “fascislamists”, as the great French
pseudo-philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy has just written in the press.
Nazis Isis undoubtedly are – but the moment we utilise the word
“Islam” in this context, we are painting the swastika across the
Middle East. Levy demands more assistance to “our Kurdish allies”
because the alternative is that “no boots on their ground means
more blood on ours”.
But that's what George W
Bush and Tony Blair told us before marching into the graveyard of
Iraq in 2003. We are always declaring ourselves “at war”. We are
told to be merciless. We must invade “their” territory to stop
them invading ours. But the days are long gone when we can have
foreign adventures and expect to be safe at home. New York,
Washington, Madrid, London, Paris all tell us that. Perhaps if we
spoke more of “justice” – courts, legal process for killers,
however morally repugnant they may be, sentences, prisons, redemption
for those who may retrieve their lost souls from the Isis midden –
we would be a little safer in our sceptered continent. There should
be justice not just for ourselves or our enemies, but for the peoples
of the Middle East who have suffered this past century from the
theatre of dictatorships and cardboard institutions we created for
them – and which have helped Isis to thrive
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.