Now
that terrorist groups (not only Daesh but the ‘moderate’
headchoppers and their al-Qaeda allies that yesterday were the
evildoers but are now defacto allies) are on the run and the Syrian
Arab Army is now successful (with the help of tactical Russian
airstrikes) we hardly hear ‘boo’ from the western media about
what is happening on the battlefield.
Here
are a few items giving an idea what MSM is up to.
France Channel 2 Uses Russian MoD Videos to Claim Own Successes (VIDEO)
The
TV channel France 2 has illustrated the "progress of French
aviation" in Syria using footage of air strikes inflicted by
the aircraft of the Russian air force. The recording of a program
was replicated on social networks.
The
presentation of France 2, which blogger Timofey
Vasiliev published on his Facebook, spoke about the
large number of dead Syrian civilians because of the
actions of the Russian airforce. No evidence for this was given,
but the journalist said that the French aviation works more
precisely.
Vasiliev
wrote that in the news story, Russia was accused of using
"unguided" bombs that lead to large civilian casualties,
but France, working in a coalition, "successfully"
destroyed terrorists of "Islamic State".
The
story of French high-precision air strikes was illustrated with
footage from the Russian Defense Ministry. The blogger stressed
that it cannot be called an ordinary mistake during production —
the Russian-language (Cyrillic) annotations on the video were
removed.
The Guardian: Scary Things to Happen to Europe If Putin Takes Aleppo
8
February, 2016
Of
all the reactions to the ongoing Syrian-Russian North
Aleppo offensive perhaps
none has been more entertaining, or more bizarre, than the one from
the pen of Natalie
Nougayrède writing for The Guardian. Do
yourself a favor and read the peace "What
happens next in Aleppo will shape Europe’s future" along
with comments from yours truly.
If Aleppo falls, Syria’s vicious war will take a whole new turn, one with far-reaching consequences not just for the region but for Europe too.
Hear
this. Europe's fate will be decided at Aleppo! As goes Aleppo so goes
Europe!
The latest government assault on the besieged northern Syrian city, which has caused tens of thousands more people to flee in recent days, is also a defining moment for relations between the west and Russia, whose airforce is playing a key role.
Government
"assault" on a "besieged city". Russian air force
"playing a key role". – Nougayrède letting
lose those Pavlov's dogs of war.
The defeat of anti-Assad rebels who have partially controlled the city since 2012 would leave nothing on the ground in Syria but Assad’s regime and Islamic State.
Oh
and what a shame that would be to see the eradication of Jabhat
al-Nusra and
its coalition
partners in
the (aptly named) Army of Conquest and their kindred spirits in
the Army
of Islam and Ansar
al-Sharia.
And all hope of a negotiated settlement involving the Syrian opposition will vanish. This has been a longstanding Russian objective – it was at the heart of Moscow’s decision to intervene militarily four months ago.
Yes
those evil Russkies, they intervened just as much to thwart the
Stalinist ISIS, as they did to rout the Trotskyist Al-Qaeda and the
Menshevik Ahrar ash-Sham.
It is hardly a coincidence that the bombardment of Aleppo, a symbol of the 2011 anti-Assad revolution, started just as peace talks were being attempted in Geneva. Predictably, the talks soon faltered.
Yupp,
the Russian-Syrian Aleppo offensive was started specifically to
sabotage Geneva peace talks. That's really fresh because Russian
intervention is the only reason Geneva peace talks were even
held. Prior to September 2015 real talks were impossible because
the US and its entourage backed the rebels in their demand that Assad
capitulates as a precondition to "talking" to him.
Also
never mind that nobody expected the talks to amount to anything
anyway – including
Britain's premier Middle East reporter.
Russian military escalation in support of the Syrian army was meant to sabotage any possibility that a genuine Syrian opposition might have its say on the future of the country.
And
who represents this "genuine Syrian opposition"? The
Salafist Ahrar ash-Sham which represented it at Geneva on the
insistence of Saudi Arabia? The Jabhat al-Nusra which is its ally in
the Army of Conquest and which started out as ISIS' (then
ISI)
Syrian branch before switching loyalties over to Ayman
al-Zawahiri – that beacon of enlightenment and liberalism
in Tora Bora?
Truth
is that the possibility that a non-crazy Syrian opposition might have
a say on the country's future was destroyed when White House allowed
Saudia Arabia and the CIA to funnel weapons into Syria that
consistently ended up with the most radical elements of the
rebellion.
Also
it did not help that US' "Assad must go" maximalism
precluded talks between Assad and the opposition early on, when
the non-insane rebels still held some sway and when Assad was
seemingly panicking and willing to try to appease them.
It was meant to thwart any plans the west and the UN had officially laid out. And it entirely contradicted Moscow’s stated commitment to a political process to end the war.
The aftershocks will be felt far and wide. If there is one thing Europeans have learned in 2015, it is that they cannot be shielded from the effects of conflict in the Middle East.
Be
afraid. Moscow will send aftershocks from the Middle East towards you
against which there is no shield.
And if there is one thing they learned from the Ukraine conflict in 2014, it is that Russia can hardly be considered Europe’s friend. It is a revisionist power capable of military aggression.
Whoah.
Of course it is West which intended to topple the sitting government
of Syria, and Moscow which has acted to prop it up – yet
it is Russia which is the revisionist power?
In fact, as the fate of Aleppo hangs in the balance, these events have – as no other perhaps since the beginning of the war – highlighted the connections between the Syrian tragedy and the strategic weakening of Europe and the west in general.
This spillover effect is something Moscow has not only paid close attention to, but also in effect fuelled.
The spread of instability fits perfectly with Russia’s goal of seeking dominance by exploiting the hesitations and contradictions of those it identifies as adversaries.
First
of all this is insane. Russia neither seeks nor is capable of any
sort of "dominance" whether in Syria or in Europe. At most
Moscow can soothe a mess created by the West here and there and pick
up a few prestige points along the way.
In
Syria itself Russian intervention was only made possible by US
declaring open season on ISIS first. After doing that but failing to
pursue the anti-ISIS fight wholeheartedly it could seethe with rage
but it could hardly physically prevent Russia from picking up what
Washington itself had proclaimed a worthy cause the year before.
Secondly,
why don't we talk about those "hesitations and contradictions"
of US and its western allies in Syria? What kind of an insane,
callous and irresponsible policy is it to simultaneously run two
parallel interventions in a foreign sovereign country pursuing two
mutually opposing goals?
How
can US simultaneously use jihadis to dislodge Syria's Baathist
government and simultaneously clean Syria of jihadi ISIS and
Al-Qaeda? What sane purpose can it possibly have to, at the same time
bomb ISIS, and funnel material into Syria which ends up with other
jihadis?
By
bombing some of Assad's enemies but equipping others (directly
or via Saudis), US acts like the owner who props up both football
teams on the field.
Clearly
the practical effects of such policies must cancel each other
out – except for the destruction and chaos arising from
them which ends up added on top of each other.
Either
of these policies would have been imperial, aggressive and
destructive. Both combined at the same time are insane and do nothing
but fan the flames and help keep Syria in a perpetual state of war.
Aleppo will define much of what happens next. A defeat for Syrian opposition forces would further empower Isis in the myth that it is the sole defender of Sunni Muslims – as it terrorises the population under its control.
There are many tragic ironies here, not least that western strategy against Isis has officially depended on building up local Syrian opposition ground forces so that they might one day push the jihadi insurgency out of its stronghold in Raqqa.
If the very people that were meant to be counted on to do that job as foot soldiers now end up surrounded and crushed in Aleppo, who will the west turn to?
Russia has all along claimed it was fighting Isis – but in Aleppo it is helping to destroy those Syrian groups that have in the past proved to be efficient against Isis.
If there were ever any doubts about Russia’s objectives in Syria, events around Aleppo will surely have cleared them.
And
who are these opposition ground forces that could be built up to
dislodge "the jihadi insurgency" from its "Raqqa
stronghold"? The reader is left to wonder again.
Would
these be the jihadi Al-Nusra and jihadi Ars-Sham? And would it be
such an improvement to have the jihadi Army of Conquest dislodge ISIS
and turn Raqqa into a jihadi stronghold of their own?
Perhaps
to Nougayrède it would be, seeing how she throughout the
article only singles out ISIS as worth opposing, but does not say a
word about any of the other groups which dominate the rest of the
rebellion and share ISIS' fundamentalist and ultra-sectarian vision
and ideology but squabble over tactics.
Vladimir Putin has duplicated in Syria the strategy he applied to Chechnya: full military onslaught on populated areas so rebels are destroyed or forced out. There is a long history of links – going back to the Soviet era – between the Syrian power structure and Russian intelligence.
Just as Putin’s regime physically eliminated those in Chechnya who might have been interlocutors for a negotiated peace settlement, Assad has conflated all political opposition with “terrorism”.
And as there was never any settlement in Chechnya (only full-on war and destruction until the Kremlin put its own Chechen leader in place), in Putin’s view there can be no settlement in Syria with the opposition.
Whatever
the Russian approach in Chechnya it is clear Russian approach in
Syria has been far more nuanced and less judgy – as it
befits a foreign player. Russians have no desire to talk to and
legitimize Al-Qaeda and groups
coalescing with it,
but they've never demonized anti-Assad opposition as a whole.
On
the contrary, they have actively
played up their
ties to and battlefield support for some parts of what they deem "the
democratic opposition". That
is to say Russians are the only foreign player in Syria which has
demonstrated a willingness to cooperate with all anti-jihadi forces,
whether they are affiliated with the government or the rebellion.
So
it is not Russia which picks and chooses between good and bad
anti-jihadis – but EU and the US (and laughably the likes
of Saudi Arabia and Turkey – the chief sponsors of the
other side).
Also,
as a side note, the Kurdish YPG, while not actively fighting
Damascus, is technically also a rebel formation and it is the
Russians who have the most straightforward relationship to the Kurds
on the account of not being beholden to Turkey.
Additionally,
Nougayrède isn't quite right about Russia's strategy in Chechnya
either. Had Russia truly pursued the approach described by her it
might still be fighting that war.
In
fact Russia refused to negotiate with either Chechen Islamists or
Nationalists but it did leave them with an open way to switch sides
and come back into the fold under conditions that were attractive
enough that many indeed took up the offer.
A
chunk of Chechen rebels was essentially bought off in a deal where
they were made the future leaders of autonomous Chechnya to be
rebuilt with Russian money in return for keeping the peace, rooting
out jihadis and demonstrating unquestionable loyalty to Moscow.
It
was a scheme very similar to the later US 'Sunni Awakening' ploy
in Iraq but pursued much more comprehensively. It resulted in
Chechnya in the hands of former anti-Moscow rebels like the Kadyrov
and the Yamadayev clan – to the seething rage of the few
Chechen commanders like Said-Magomed Kakiyev who had fought the
insurgency with the Russians all along.
Russia’s strategic objectives go much further, however. Putin wants to reassert Russian power in the Middle East, but it is Europe that he really has in mind. The defining moment came in 2013, when Barack Obama gave up on airstrikes against Assad’s military bases after chemical weapons were used.
Oh
wait, Barack Obama was going to launch airstrakes in 2013? Well that
doesn't sound very peaceable. So who was really interested in
asserting power?
It's
also cute how the article uses passive tense to avoid mentioning who
used those chemical weapons. It has since become
known it
was the anti-Assad rebels who used the Sarin gas in a false flag
attack meant to provide cover for US intervention in Syria against
the Damascus government.
This encouraged Putin to test western resolve further away, on the European continent. Putin was certainly caught off guard by the Ukrainian Maidan popular uprising but he swiftly moved to restore dominance through use of force, including the annexation of territory.
He calculated – rightly – that his hybrid war in Ukraine could not be prevented by the west. Russian policies in Ukraine have as a result shaken the pillars of Europe’s post-cold-war security order – which Putin would like to see rewritten to Russia’s advantage.
What
are these "pillars" of "Europe's security order"
if we may ask? We are not told. The article keeps using poetic
euphemisms ("aftershocks", "spillover effect",
"dominance", "far reaching consequences",
"genuine Syrian opposition") without explanation as to what
real world phenomena these may refer to so that it is more
difficult to pin down and call to account.
Also
how is "Europe's post-cold-war security order"
different from that during the Cold War? It is true that during the
Cold War the West had some respect for Moscow but has since decided
it can do just about anything, and anywhere and Russia simply has to
take it. Of course that isn't a "security order" of
any kind, it's dangerous triumphalism which Russia would indeed like
to see end.
Russian
takeover of Crimea may indeed be seen as a warning shot across the
bow of Western triumphalism – one that came 14 long years
after Putin took over in Moscow, but only a few days after EU had
played a pivotal role in underwriting a violent overthrow of the
legal president in Russia's neighbor and ethnic cousin Ukraine that
took that divided country to the brink of civil war.
Likewise, Russian military involvement in Syria has put Nato in a bind, with one of its key members right on the frontline. Turkey’s relations with Russia have been on the brink for months. Now Moscow has openly warned Turkey against sending forces into Syria to defend Aleppo. How the Turkish leader will choose to react is another western headache.
All this is happening at a time when European governments are desperate to win Ankara’s cooperation on the refugee problem. If Turkey now turns into a troublemaker for Nato on its Middle Eastern flank, that serves Russian interests.
So
in other words it is not really Russia which is the problem here but
Erdogan's unpredictability and intransigence, and the fact EU is so
closely allied to such a character. But hey, let's be mad at
Russia.
Similarly, if Europe sees a new exodus of refugees, Russia will stand to benefit. The refugee crisis has sowed deep divisions on the continent and it has helped populist rightwing parties flourish – many of which are Moscow’s political allies against the EU as a project.
The refugee crisis has put key EU institutions under strain; it has heightened the danger of Brexit (which Moscow would welcome); and it has severely weakened Angela Merkel, the architect of European sanctions against Russia.
Oh
wait, did you say that Western nation-breaking across Asia and Africa
has finally caught up with the EU which is now paying a small price
for it with the refugee influx? Well how is that Moscow's fault?
Of course, it would be an exaggeration to say that Putin had all this worked out from the start. He has been led by events as much as he has wanted to control them.
Russia is not responsible for the outbreak of the civil war in Syria, nor does it have its hand in everything that happens in Ukraine. But the way Russia has cynically played its pawns should send more alarm bells ringing in the west and in the UN than is the case now.
Translation:
We can't really pin this on Putin or 'cynical' Russia but be afraid
anyways – may your 'alarm bells' go off.
Putin likes to cast himself as a man of order, but his policies have brought more chaos, and Europe is set to pay an increasing price. Getting the Russian regime to act otherwise will require more than wishful thinking.
A
truly bizarre spin. EU Europe shot itself in the foot by helping US
explode Libya and Syria. If anything Libya where the West ignored
Moscow's warnings completely has been engulfed by even greater chaos.
By
staving off US intervention in Syria in 2013 and intervening to prop
up failing Assad in 2015 Moscow has in fact done a huge favor to the
EU. Doing so has prevented the Syrian state from spiraling into
complete non-existence and the likes of Al Qaeda and ISIS filling the
void over as had happened in NATO-'liberated' Libya. Certainly had
this taken place the number of refugees knocking on EU doors would
have been even higher.
Essentially
Putin had saved the West from its own stupidity, but it's safe to say
no thanks will be forthcoming.
Aleppo is an unfolding human tragedy. But it is necessary to connect the dots between the plight of this city, Europe’s future, and how Russia hovers over both.
The
takeaway: Russia "hovers over Europe's future". We're
never clearly told how that is so and what Russia may do to Europe
that's so bad, but we know it's "no friend to Europe" and
is "capable of military aggression" and there's eery music
playing in the background – so we better be afraid. You
know, "spillover" and "aftershocks". Whoah!
Scary!
So
there you have it. When the Baathist attempt on Aleppo comes The
Guardian wants you to root for Al
Qaeda to
rebuke it and keep Europe safe. Hail Bin Laden! Hail Sieg! As goes
Stalingrad...uhm Aleppo... so goes Europe!
As is was, proof that the rebels aren't serious about peace talks was just provided by the ABC's sister state TV channel, SBS in its evening news bulletin about the latest developments around Aleppo. Opinion was sought from the Syrian Opposition's 'Chief Negotiator', who turned out to be none other than Mohammed Alloush, the new leader of one of the Saudi's most favoured terrorist groups in Syria.
Russian-Syrian
Offensive Unmasks Western Media 'Journalism
Great
advances this week by the Syrian army and Russian air force have
broken the rebel siege of two towns, and broken their umbilical link
with Turkey. But they have also revealed the truth about Western
media 'journalism'...
7
February, 2016
Something
really significant happened this week. It wasn’t the last-ditch
attempts to find a peaceful solution to the Syrian conflict in
Geneva, or their failure. Neither was it the game-changing
developments on the ground in Syria and the tightening of the noose
around the foreign-backed terrorist armies – though this was
certainly ‘significant’.
What
happened was that the mask of ‘humanitarian relief’ fell off the
Western interventionists and their media cheer squads like so much
dirty linen, exposing the naked self-interest behind the whole rotten
Syrian conspiracy.
While
the ridiculous deliberations over what style of terrorist was an
acceptable participant in the Geneva talks may have been a vexing
spectacle for Syrians, and the attention paid by the Western media to
the ‘High Negotiations Committee’ an affront to their senses, it
didn’t really surprise anyone.
Perhaps
Syrians weren’t surprised either by the rapid gains of the
Russian-Syrian offensive and moves to cut the last convenient border
crossing west of Aleppo – something which so many had been hanging
out for for so long and specially in rebel-besieged Aleppo. Unlike
all those ignorant souls unable to see out of the Western media
bubble, they had been watching it all unfold for weeks, as well as
being conscious of the strategic significance and urgency of cutting
Turkey out of the Syrian war – thanks in no small part to the
Russian military’s free supply of information.
But
as a collective cheer echoed around Syria when it was announced that
the border had been cut, a collective spasm engulfed Western media
commentators and government spokesmen, rapidly spreading to UN
representatives and Aid agencies, Foreign Ministers and leaders.
“Rebel
supply lines have been cut!” they cried indignantly, as if Russia
had cut them by accident, not realising the rebels depended on these
‘supplies’ that came in from Turkey just to survive.
It
may be a struggle to understand how it can be that all these people
‘just don’t get it’- don’t understand that the Syrian army
and the Russian air force, Hezbollah and Iran are targeting their
‘rebels’ intentionally; that they are trying to kill them or
drive them out, or trap them so they are forced to surrender. This is
after all what military campaigns do, and it is abundantly clear that
only a military solution is now possible against these murderous
militants.
But
perhaps they do understand it, and this is just ‘wilful ignorance’
– an attempt to maintain the sham reality of the ‘revolution’
and the ‘Free Syrian Army’ so they can go on using it to conceal
their unrelenting campaign to seize power from Damascus.
What
the falling of the ‘humanitarian mask’ has revealed is that all
these drivers and accomplices to the armed insurgency have lied and
obfuscated and spun their dirty conspiracy from the start. But now
that Russia has ripped off their cover they are shameless about what
they’ve done.
What
is more, the admissions of complicity in this illegal armed
insurrection against Syria’s elected government have come first
from Western reporters and commentators, such as the Australian
Broadcasting Commission’s Matt Brown, who framed the news on the
breaking of ‘rebel supply lines’ like this:
MATT
BROWN: "It's substantial because of that supply line. It
demonstrates the power of Russian air strikes because the UN says
that they were unprecedented in this operation.
It's
also cut the rebels off from supplies of food, fuel, ammunition,
weapons and fighters that they were getting down that supply route
from Turkey."
That’s
right – the ‘rebels’, who we have been told for years need our
‘aid’ because they are being massacred and starved by the Syrian
government have not been doing so badly after all.
Every
time there was a new ‘massacre’ we have listened to earnest
discussions on supplying ‘non-lethal aid’, and humanitarian aid,
and demands that ‘humanitarian corridors’ must be opened.
And
when the Syrian government has opposed these plans on the grounds
that arms and ammunition might be smuggled in with the humanitarian
aid, it has then been blamed for the failure and the ongoing war.
How
astounding it is then to hear this admission from someone like Brown
– who despite his record of advocacy for the rebel cause, has never
revealed his knowledge of its umbilical connection to Turkey. In fact
his intent has been to conceal this reality from his Australian
audience at all costs, even though it’s been plain as daylight to
the rest of us.
Back
in 2013 Matt Brown made a documentary called ‘Ibrahim’s war’,
which told the story of a 11 year old boy living in the
rebel-occupied part of Aleppo, whose father had abandoned his job and
went out every day to fight ‘on the front’. That this was
actually with the Front – the Al Nusra Front – was never admitted
by Brown, even less what this terrorist group was actually doing –
targeting neighbouring residential areas with snipers and
indiscriminate rocket and mortar fire.
Brown
related his experience at the time he made his ‘UN award-winning’
documentary in the report above:
"In
2013, I drove down to Aleppo from the north, a little further to the
east than where this has happened in what is now territory controlled
by the Islamic State group; and earlier I had hiked in further to the
west across the border into the towns west of Aleppo.
We
slept in the same houses as foreign fighters actually, who were also
crossing in, and the government is now pushing in that direction.
So,
it just gives you some idea of how cut off the rebels in Aleppo are
becoming. That's underlined the power also of Iranian advisors, the
pro-government militias and those Russian air strikes and the rebels
say it proves that the government isn't serious about those peace
talks."
It
might sometimes be a narrow line between journalism and political
advocacy, but for Brown and his media colleagues this line has
evidently now become invisible. But whether they identify themselves
as political actors has almost ceased to matter, because as far as
their audience is concerned they are only journalists, award-winning
ones. When they report what 'the rebels say' - how would this
audience know they are hearing dangerous nonsense?
As is was, proof that the rebels aren't serious about peace talks was just provided by the ABC's sister state TV channel, SBS in its evening news bulletin about the latest developments around Aleppo. Opinion was sought from the Syrian Opposition's 'Chief Negotiator', who turned out to be none other than Mohammed Alloush, the new leader of one of the Saudi's most favoured terrorist groups in Syria.
Do
they really believe that the Syrian government could 'negotiate' with
this man?
The Guardian cannot bear to acknowledge the true situation on the ground so is resorting to 'humanitarianism" by regurgitating stories about Madaya
Aid
organisation says a million Syrian civilians are living in besieged
towns, with 300,000 more under threat in Aleppo
The
besieged Syrian town of Madaya is facing starvation again because
meagre supplies delivered last month are already running out,
residents have said, as the United Nations was accused of severely
underestimating the number of people suffering under blockades around
the country.
More
than a million Syrian civilians are living in besieged towns and
villages, according to the aid organisation Siege Watch, more than
double the number listed in UN data. That number could rise sharply
if the government troops advancing on Aleppo cut off the city’s
last supply line, with the UN warning on Tuesday that up to 300,000
civilians could be stranded in the city that was once Syria’s
biggest urban centre.
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