Pages

Friday, 1 April 2016

Stephen Cohen on the liberation of Palmyra

Stephen F. Cohen: Palmyra -- Why Is Obama Silent on ISIS' Biggest Defeat to Date?
No congratualations were forthcoming from the White House

Stephen F. Cohen


31 March, 2016

Originally appeared at The John Batchelor Show

John Batchelor has an extremely popular political talk show on America’s largest radio network, WABC.

He has Stephen Cohen on live in the studio almost every week for a full 45 minute segment, the only guest he gives that much time to.

Why? Because Cohen’s appearances are killing the ratings. America seems to be thirsting for an alternative and critical view of Obama’s Russia policy.


Listen to the podcast HERE

See below for a summary of this program courtesy of The Nation.

.....

Nation contributing editor Stephen F. Cohen and John Batchelor continue their weekly discussions of the new US-Russian Cold War. (Previous installments are at TheNation.com.)

By regaining control of Palmyra, a major and ancient city, Cohen argues, the Syrian army and its ground allies, backed by Russian air power, have dealt ISIS its most important military defeat.

The victory belies the US political-media establishment’s allegations that Putin’s six-month military intervention was a sinister move designed to thwart the West’s fight against terrorism.

Instead, it has gravely wounded the Islamic State, whose agents were behind the terrorist assaults on Paris and Brussels.


Indeed, Cohen points out, US–Russian cooperation in Syria, which includes the Geneva peace negotiations, is the result of a kind of mini-détente brokered by Secretary of State Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov.

Not surprisingly, these positive developments are being assailed by the American-led war party, which has redoubled its vilification of Russian President Putin, preposterously accusing him, for example, of “weaponizing the migration crisis” in Europe, even though the crisis began long before Russia’s intervention in Syria.

Putin clearly backs Lavrov’s initiatives, even meeting with Kerry several times. Obama’s stance, it seems to Cohen, remains unclear.

Neither he nor the American commander of NATO congratulated or otherwise applauded the Syrian-Russian victory in Palmyra, and Obama again went out of his way to insult Putin (twice).

With US backing, the Kerry-Lavrov mini-détente might extend to the political epicenter of the new Cold War, Ukraine.

Instead, Cohen explains, Washington is seeking to make the US-born Natalie Jeresko prime minister of Ukraine, putting an American face on the ongoing Western colonization of the Kiev government.

Jaresko is also the candidate of the US-controlled IMF, on which Kiev is financially dependent but whose demands for economic austerity measures and “privatization” of state enterprises will almost certainly further diminish the government’s sharply declining popular support and further abet the rise of ultra-right-wing Ukrainian forces and Kiev’s conflict with Russia.

Meanwhile, in recent interviews, Donald Trump has emerged as the only US presidential candidate to challenge Washington’s bipartisan foreign policies that contributed greatly to the new Cold War.

As Cohen predicted last week, the American national security establishment has reacted to Trump as an “anti-Christ,” along with the equivalent of the preceding Cold War’s redbaiting.

Thus, Hillary Clinton charged that Trump’s less militarized proposals would be like “Christmas in the Kremlin.”

The mainstream media has taken the same approach to Trump, thereby continuing to deprive America of the foreign policy debate it urgently needs.

Listen to the Stephen Cohen podcast HERE

John Batchelor has also done the following interview in the last 24 hours which may be of interest




Syria/Russia Offensive Aims for the Euphrates River Valley -- Raqqa to Mosul. US Participation? ISIS Boasts of Recruiting Airport Staff for Operations
- Aaron Klein, Breitbart Jerusalem

Listen to the podcast HERE



No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.