Risking Nuclear War for Al Qaeda?
The risk that the multi-sided Syrian war could spark World War III continues as Turkey, Saudi Arabia and U.S. neocons seek an invasion that could kill Russian troops — and possibly escalate the Syrian crisis into a nuclear showdown, amazingly to protect Al Qaeda terrorists, reports Robert Parry.
18
February, 2016
When
President Barack Obama took questions from reporters on Tuesday, the
one that needed to be asked – but wasn’t – was whether he had
forbidden Turkey and Saudi Arabia to invade Syria, because on that
question could hinge whether the ugly Syrian civil war could spin off
into World War III and possibly a nuclear showdown.
If
Turkey (with hundreds of thousands of troops massed near the Syrian
border) and Saudi Arabia (with its sophisticated air force) follow
through on threats and intervene militarily to save their rebel
clients, who include Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front, from a powerful
Russian-backed Syrian government offensive, then Russia will have to
decide what to do to protect its 20,000 or so military personnel
inside Syria.
President
Barack Obama meets with Vice President Joe Biden and other advisers
in the Oval Office on Feb. 2, 2016. [White House photo]
A
source close to Russian President Vladimir Putin told me that the
Russians have warned Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan that
Moscow is prepared to use tactical nuclear weapons if necessary to
save their troops in the face of a Turkish-Saudi onslaught. Since
Turkey is a member of NATO, any such conflict could quickly escalate
into a full-scale nuclear confrontation.
Given
Erdogan’s megalomania or mental instability and the aggressiveness
and inexperience of Saudi Prince Mohammad bin Salman (defense
minister and son of King Salman), the only person who probably can
stop a Turkish-Saudi invasion is President Obama. But I’m told that
he has been unwilling to flatly prohibit such an intervention, though
he has sought to calm Erdogan down and made clear that the U.S.
military would not join the invasion.
So
far, Erdogan has limited Turkey’s direct military attacks on Syria
to cross-border shelling against U.S.-backed Kurdish forces that have
seized territory from the Islamic State (also known as ISIS) in
northern Syria. Turkey considers the Kurdish fighters, known as YPG,
to be terrorists but the U.S. government sees them as valuable allies
in the fight against Islamic State terrorists, an Al Qaeda spinoff
that controls large swaths of Syria and Iraq.
But
Erdogan’s short fuse may have grown shorter on Wednesday when a
powerful car bomb killed at least 28 people in Turkey’s capital of
Ankara. The bomb apparently targeted a military convoy and Turkish
officials cast suspicion on Kurdish militants who also have been
under assault from Turkish forces inside Turkey.
Though
showing no evidence, Turkish officials suggested the attack may
have been sponsored by Iran or Russia, another sign of how
complicated the geopolitical morass in Syria has become. “Those who
think they can steer our country away from our goals by using
terrorist organizations will see that they have failed,” declared
Erdogan, according to The Wall Street Journal.
(On
Wednesday night, Turkey retaliated for the Ankara bombing by
launching airstrikes against Kurdish targets in northern Iraq.)
The
dilemma for Obama is that many traditional U.S. allies, such as
Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, have been the principal backers and
funders of Sunni terror groups inside Syria, including Al Qaeda’s
Nusra Front and – to a lesser degree – the Islamic State. Now,
the “allies” want the United States to risk a nuclear
confrontation with Russia to, in effect, protect Al Qaeda.
Biden
Blurts Out Truth
The
twisted reality was acknowledged by no less an authority than Vice
President Joe Biden during a talk at Harvard in 2014.
Biden answered a
student’s question by saying Turkey, Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates had “poured hundreds of millions of dollars and tens,
thousands of tons of weapons into anyone who would fight against
[Syrian President Bashar al-] Assad.” The result, Biden said, was
that “the people who were being supplied were Al Nusra and Al Qaeda
and the extremist elements of jihadis coming from other parts of the
world.”
The
risks from these tangled alliances were also highlighted by a Defense
Intelligence Agency report in
August 2012, warning the Obama administration that the growing
strength of Al Qaeda and other Sunni jihadists in Syria could lead to
the creation of “an Islamic state” whose militants could
move back into Iraq where the threat originated after the U.S.
invasion of Iraq.
The
DIA said Al Qaeda’s growing strength in Syria “creates the ideal
atmosphere for AQI [Al Qaeda in Iraq] to return to its old pockets in
Mosul and Ramadi and will provide a renewed momentum under the
presumption of unifying the jihad among Sunni Iraq and Syria and the
rest of the Sunnis in the Arab world against what it considers one
enemy, the dissenters [i.e. the Shiites].
“ISI
[Islamic State of Iraq, forerunner of ISIS, also known as the
Islamic State] could also declare an Islamic state through its union
with other terrorist organizations in Iraq and Syria, which will
create grave danger in regards to unifying Iraq and the protection of
its territory.”
Despite
the prescient DIA report and Biden’s blunt admission (for which he
quickly apologized), President Obama failed to put a stop to the
strategy of supporting Assad’s opponents. He let Saudi Arabia,
Qatar and Turkey continue funneling weapons to the most extreme
elements of the rebellion. Meanwhile, the U.S. government insisted
that it was only arming “moderate” rebels, but those groups
were largely subsumed or controlled by Al Qaeda’s Nusra
and/or ISIS, a hyper-violent spinoff from Al Qaeda.
In
Syria, rather than cooperate with Russia and Iran in helping Assad’s
military defeat the jihadists, the Obama administration has continued
playing it cute, insisting – as Secretary of State John Kerry has
said recently – that armed “legitimate opposition groups” exist
separately from Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front.
Secretary
of State John Kerry addresses reporters in Geneva on Nov. 8, 2013,
(Photo credit: State Department)
In
reality, however, the so-called “moderate” rebels around
Aleppo and Idlib are Al Qaeda’s junior partners whose value to the
cause is that they qualify for CIA weaponry that can then be passed
on to Nusra as well as Nusra’s key ally Ahrar al-Sham and
other jihadist fighters.
Nusra
and Ahrar al-Sham, the chief elements of the Saudi-created “Army of
Conquest,” deployed U.S. TOW missiles to devastating effect against
the Syrian army in the jihadists’ victory last year in Idlib
province, a success that finally prompted Putin to commit Russian air
power to defend the Syrian government last September.
Helping
the Islamic State
Meanwhile,
Turkey has left about 100 kilometers of its border open for various
jihadist groups to bring in reinforcements and weapons while letting
the Islamic State smuggle out oil for sale on the black market. Last
fall, after Russia (and a reluctant United States) began bombing
ISIS oil-truck convoys, Turkey shot down a Russian bomber near
Turkey’s border, leading to the deaths of the pilot and a rescuer.
Now,
as the Russian-backed Syrian army makes major gains against the
Nusra-dominated rebels around Aleppo and encroaches on Islamic
State territory near Raqqa – and as U.S.-backed Kurdish forces also
advance against ISIS – Turkey’s Erdogan has grown frantic over
the prospects that his five-year project of aiding Syrian jihadists
may be collapsing.
Amid
this desperation, Turkey has been urging President Obama to support a
limited invasion of Syria to create a “safe zone,” supposedly to
protect Syrian rebels and civilians in northern Syria. But that
humanitarian-sounding plan may well be a cover for a more ambitious
plan to march to Damascus and forcibly remove President Assad from
power.
That
is a goal shared by Turkey, Saudi Arabia and other Sunni states
along with Israel and America’s influential neoconservatives and
their “liberal interventionist” sidekicks. For his part, Obama
has called on Assad “to go” but has favored diplomatic
negotiations to achieve that end. Russia has advocated a political
settlement with free elections so the Syrian people can decide
Assad’s future themselves.
The
Russians also keenly remember the West’s subterfuge regarding Libya
in 2011 when the U.S. and its NATO allies pushed a “humanitarian”
resolution through the United Nations Security Council supposedly to
protect Libyan civilians but then used it to achieve violent “regime
change,” a classic case of the camel getting its nose into the
tent.
On
Syria, Russia watched for years as the United States, Turkey, Saudi
Arabia, Qatar and other Sunni states supported various Sunni rebel
groups seeking to overthrow Assad, an Alawite, representing a branch
of Shiite Islam. Though Assad has been widely criticized for the
harsh response to the uprising, he maintains a secular government
that has protected Christians, Alawites, Shiites and other
minorities.
Besides
being a target of Sunni regional powers, Assad has long been on the
Israeli-neocon hit list because he’s seen as the centerpiece of the
“Shiite crescent” stretching from Iran through Iraq and Syria to
Lebanon. Since Israeli leaders (and thus the American neocons) see
Iran as Israel’s greatest enemy, the goal of collapsing the
“Shiite crescent” has concentrated on bringing down Assad —
even if his ouster would create a political/military vacuum
that Al Qaeda and/or Islamic State might fill.
Making Syria the
site for this proxy war has inflicted particularly savage
results on the Syrians. For five years the violence by both the
rebels and the army has destroyed much of the country and killed more
than 250,000 people while also sending waves of desperate refugees
crashing into Europe, now destabilizing the European Union.
However,
as the U.S. and its Mideast allies – especially Saudi Arabia and
Turkey – escalated the conflict last year by supplying the rebels,
including Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front, with American TOW missiles and
other sophisticated weapons, Russian President Putin decided it
was time to help Syria’s government stop the spread of Sunni
terrorism, a threat that has also plagued Russia.
Mocking
Russia
Initially,
Official Washington mocked the
Russian effort as incapable of accomplishing much, but the
Syrian military’s recent victories have turned that derisive
laughter into shocked fury. For one, the neoconservative flagship
Washington Post has unleashed a stream of editorials and op-eds
decrying the Syrian-Russian victories.
“Russia,
Iran and the Syrian government are conducting a major offensive aimed
at recapturing the city of Aleppo and the rebel-held territory that
connects it to the border with Turkey,” the Postlamented.
“They have cut one supply route to the city and are close to
severing another, trapping rebel forces along with hundreds of
thousands of civilians.”
Though
one might think that driving Al Qaeda’s forces out of a major urban
center like Aleppo would be a good thing, the Post’s neocon editors
pretend that the rebels controlling that area are only noble
“moderates” who must be protected by the United States. No
mention is made of Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front, so as not to spoil the
desired propaganda theme.
The
Post then badgered Obama to do something: “In the face of this
onslaught, which promises to destroy any chance of an acceptable end
to the Syrian civil war, the Obama administration has been a study in
passivity and moral confusion. President Obama is silent.”
In
another hysterical editorial, the Post’s editors conjured
up what
they called “the real world” where “the best-case scenario
after five years of U.S. inaction is a partial peace that leaves
Syria partitioned into zones controlled by the [Assad] regime and the
Islamic State, with a few opposition and Kurdish enclaves squeezed
in. Even that would require the Obama administration to aggressively
step up its military support for rebel groups, and confront Russia
with more than rhetoric.”
However,
in the actual “real world,” the Obama administration has been
funneling military equipment to rebels seeking to overthrow an
internationally recognized government for years. That assistance has
included averting U.S. eyes from the fact that many of those rebel
groups were collaborating with Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front and/or the
Islamic State.
As
Mideast expert Gareth Porter reported,
“The Russian airstrikes in question are aimed at cutting off Aleppo
city, which is now the primary center of Nusra’s power in
Syria, from the Turkish border. To succeed in that aim, Russian,
Syrian and Iranian forces are attacking rebel troops deployed in
towns all along the routes from Aleppo to the border. Those
rebels include units belonging to Nusra, their close ally
Ahrar al-Sham, and other armed opposition groups – some of whom
have gotten weapons from the CIA in the past. …
“Information
from a wide range of sources, including some of those the United
States has been explicitly supporting, makes it clear that every
armed anti-Assad organization unit in those provinces is engaged in a
military structure controlled by Nusra militants. All of
these rebel groups fight alongside the Nusra Front and coordinate
their military activities with it.”
But
The Washington Post and its mainstream U.S. cohorts don’t want you
to know the real “real world” reality that Syria’s sainted
“moderate” rebels are fighting side by side with Al Qaeda, which
was responsible for killing nearly 3,000 Americans on 9/11 and for
drawing the U.S. military into a series of Mideast conflicts that
have claimed the lives of about 8,000 U.S. soldiers.
The
bizarre goal of saving Al Qaeda’s skin presumably would not
be a very good selling point to get Americans behind a new
war that could pit nuclear-armed Russia against nuclear-armed America
with all the horrors that such a conflict could entail.
Still,
the inconvenient truth about Al Qaeda’s role occasionally slips
into mainstream news accounts, albeit only in passing. For instance,
New York Times correspondent Anne Barnard reported last Saturday
about a proposed Syrian cease-fire, writing:
“With the proviso that the Nusra Front, Al Qaeda’s branch in
Syria, can still be bombed, Russia puts the United States in a
difficult position; the insurgent groups it supports cooperate in
some places with the well-armed, well-financed Nusra in what they say
is a tactical alliance of necessity against government forces.”
Obama’s
Quandary
So,
the quandary that Obama faces is whether the United States should
join with Turkey and Saudi Arabia in a blatant invasion of Syria to
salvage Al Qaeda’s cause. Of course, that’s not how it would be
sold to the American people. The project would be couched in pretty
words about “humanitarianism” and the need to maintain U.S.
“credibility.”
But
Obama seems to recognize enough of the actual reality that he has so
far resisted the frantic cries of Official Washington’s neocons and
liberal hawks. I’m told Obama also has discouraged Turkey and Saudi
Arabia from taking matters into their own hands.
After
all, a full-scale invasion by Turkey and Saudi Arabia in support of
Al Qaeda and other Sunni rebels would pit the invading force against
not only the Syrian army but its Iranian and Hezbollah (Shiite)
allies – and most dangerously Russia, which lacks the manpower
inside Syria to match up with the Turkish army but could deploy
tactical nuclear weapons if necessary to save the lives of Russian
soldiers.
So,
here is a significant difference between Obama and former Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton. She has publicly called for the U.S.
military to establish a “safe zone” inside Syria along with a
“no-fly zone.” While all that sounds very nice and peaceful, it
would actually require the same invasion that Turkey is now seeking
and it would require the U.S. air force to eliminate much of the
Syrian air force and air defenses. It would be a major act of war.
U.S.
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Russian Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov. (Photo credit: Department of State)
On
Tuesday, Obama was asked about the Syrian conflict at a news
conference but it was within the typical mainstream frame of
suggesting that Obama is too weak in dealing with Putin. For five
years, the mainstream U.S. media can’t get beyond goading Obama to
increase U.S. intervention in Syria and thus bring about another
“regime change.”
Despite
the contrary evidence, it has remained a beloved Washington delusion
that some “moderate” oppositionists would replace Assad and bring
a happy democracy to Syria. Similar delusions preceded the
catastrophes of “regime change” in Iraq and Libya – and one
could even go back to the Reagan administration’s “regime change”
goal in Afghanistan that led to the emergence of the Taliban, Al
Qaeda and modern jihadism in the first place.
But
today the stakes include a potential nuclear showdown with
Russia — with the United States being urged to take on
that existential risk for all humankind on behalf of preserving Al
Qaeda’s hopes for raising its black flag over Damascus. If there
has ever been a crazier demand by major foreign policy players in
Official Washington, it is hard to imagine what it might have been.
[For
more on this topic, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Tangled
Threads of US False Narratives,”
“Hidden
Origins of Syria’s Civil War,”
and
“Obama’s
Most Momentous Decision.”]
Investigative
reporter Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The
Associated Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest
book, America’s Stolen Narrative, either
in print
here or
as an e-book (from Amazon andbarnesandnoble.com).
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