US effectively siding with Al-Qaeda in desire to get rid of Assad – former UK ambassador to Syria
RT,
7
June, 2016
The
US is “ready to de facto ally” with its archenemies from
Al-Qaeda’s branch in Syria as part of its “obsession” by using
“so-called moderate” moderate groups to overthrow the Syrian
government, former UK ambassador to Syria, Peter Ford, told RT in an
exclusive interview.
The
US “is
effectively siding with a branch of Al-Qaeda” in
Syria, Peter Ford told RT, speaking of Washington’s recent request
to Moscow not to target Al-Nusra positions with air strikes for the
sake of moderate opposition groups located in the same area.
“We
can only hope that it is a temporary aberration and they will soon
return to their senses,” Ford
told RT, urging the US government to abandon their policy of de facto
aiding Al-Qaeda’s affiliate. He also expressed his support for
Russia’s “very
reasonable demand that the forces of the so-called moderate
opposition disentangle themselves from the embraces of Al-Nusra and
allow Al-Nusra to be bombed.”
The
former ambassador also stressed that there is “virtually
no difference” between
Al-Nusra and such groups as Jaish al-Islam, Ahrar al-Sham and Jaish
al-Fatah as they are “indistinguishable” in
terms of ideology, sectarian bias and their practical methods
consisting of “massacres
and ruthlessness.”
He
also emphasized that the only difference between Al-Nusra and other
groups that western countries, including the US, portray as “moderate
opposition” lies
in the field of tactics.
“The
so-called moderate groups pay lip service to the idea that Syria
might end up with a secular system after negotiations provided only
that Assad will go. They pay lip service to this but anyone, who
believes it must be a fool but the Americans use this as a reason or
the pretext not to go after these groups,” Ford
said
“They
are keen, it seems, to repeat the same mistakes in Damascus,” Ford
said, commenting on the US continuous efforts to oust the Syrian
President Bashar Assad from power.
At
the same time, he warned that “it
is really dangerous to mainstream these jihadi groups with a handful
of genuinely democratic secular oppositionists, who are the tiny
minority of the opposition on the ground,” referring
to such groups as Jaish al-Islam and Ahrar al-Sham, which the US,
France, the UK, and Ukraine refused to designate as terrorist
organizations and add them to a UN Security Council (UNSC) blacklist.
On
June 5, the Syrian Foreign Ministry sent a letter to the UN, in which
it alleged that some of the so-called “moderate”opposition
groups had been shelling residential areas in Aleppo, Syria,
alongside Al-Nusra Front. The ministry also accused some regional
powers, including Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar, of
“sponsoring
terrorists” and
attempting to derail the peace negotiations in Geneva.
The
letter designated such groups as Jaish al-Islam, Ahrar al-Sham, and
Jaish al-Fatah as Al Nusra’s “affiliates” and
criticized some members of the UNSC for their refusal to add them to
the UN list of terrorist groups.
In
the meantime, terrorist
shellings of
Syrian cities have resulted in the deaths of more than 270 civilians
within the last 24 hours, Russia’s Defense Ministry said. Al-Nusra
and Ahrar al-Sham have also conducted joint attacks in the
Kurdish-controlled Sheikh Maqsood neighborhood in the northern part
of Aleppo that particularly left 40 people dead.
These
shelling and attacks, according to the Russian Ministry of Defense,
became possible due to the fact that the terrorists’ positions were
not targeted for some time by Russian air forces at the request of
the United States. According to Russian Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov, Washington asked Russia not to target Al-Nusra Front
precisely because the terrorist group is sharing territory with
some “moderate” opposition
groups that might also potentially be hit in airstrikes.
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