I first tried to access this article HERE but it seems to be blocked
The endgame in Aleppo involves a handful of foreign agents – US, Saudi, Israeli and others – said to remain with the last al Qaeda groups in a tiny part of what was once their stronghold. The US in particular is keen to secure their release, because their presence is further evidence of the foreign command of what was claimed to be a ‘civil war’.
The
Liberation of Aleppo: A Regional Turning Point. Setback for US-Led
Aggression
21
December, 2016
In
late 2016, at the cost of many young lives, Syrian forces took back
the eastern part of the city of Aleppo, occupied by NATO and Saudi
backed terrorists for more than four years.
The
liberation of Aleppo, Syria’s second city and an ancient marvel,
represents the most serious setback for the 15-year long
Washington-led aggression on the entire region. An effective
recolonisation of the region has stretched from Afghanistan to Libya,
under a range of false pretexts. Invasions and proxy wars have been
backed by economic sanctions and wild propaganda.
But
this great war of aggression – called the creation of ‘New Middle
East’ by former US President George W. Bush – has hit a rock in
Syria. The massive proxy armies bought and equipped by Washington and
its regional allies the Saudis, Turkey, Qatar and Israel, have been
beaten back by a powerful regional alliance which supports the Syrian
nation.
The endgame in Aleppo involves a handful of foreign agents – US, Saudi, Israeli and others – said to remain with the last al Qaeda groups in a tiny part of what was once their stronghold. The US in particular is keen to secure their release, because their presence is further evidence of the foreign command of what was claimed to be a ‘civil war’.
After
a storm of western government and media misinformation (claims of
massacres, mass executions and ‘civilians targeted’) over the
evacuation of around 100,000 civilians and many thousands of
terrorists, the UN Security Council authorised some ‘independent
observers’ to monitor the process.
However most of that evacuation
is now over. Resettlement and reconstruction is already underway, and
army reserves have been called up to defend the city.
Syrian,
Iranian, Russian and independent reporters (including Maytham al
Ashkar, Shadi Halwi, Asser Khatab, Khaled Alkhateb, Ali Musawi,
Lizzie Phelan, Murad Gazdiev, Vanessa Beeley, Eva Bartlett and the
late Mohsen Khazaei) have already told us quite a lot. What they said
bore little resemblance to the western apocalyptic stories. For
example, outgoing UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, a close ally of
Washington, claimed in his last press conference that ‘Aleppo is
now a synonym for hell’. Those claims were based on stories
from NATO’s desperate jihadists.
Reporters
on the ground told a different story. As Syrian forces smashed the al
Qaeda lines, the trapped civilians streamed out. They published video
of long lines of people leaving east Aleppo and finding relief, food
and shelter with the Syrian Arab Army. Tired and relieved, they told
their stories to anyone who cared to listen. Russia and Iran gave
many tonnes of food, clothing, blanket and shelter aid. By contrast,
western countries generally gave nothing and the terror groups
rejected all aid from the Syrian alliance.
Civilians
were prohibited from leaving the al Qaeda enclave, many were shot
dead when they tried to do so. The armed gangs had food reserves but
kept it for their fighters. Arms factories including toxic chemicals
were found and were being made safe. Some of the armed men were taken
into custody, but most were shipped out to Idlib, where Damascus has
been concentrating the foreign-backed fighters.
When
the hell canons fell silent, and no more home-made gas cylinder
mortars landed in the heart of the city, there was elation and
dancing in the streets, shown widely on social media. The US State
Department spokesman claimed he had not seen this.
Al
Qaeda in Aleppo was crushed. All the anti-Syrian government armed
groups in Aleppo were either the ‘official’ al Qaeda in Syria
(Jabhat al Nusra aka Jaysh Fateh al Sham) or deeply embedded
associates. When the US pretended to suppress Jabhat al Nusra in 2012
and 2016, all the ‘Free Syrian Army’ groups protested, saying ‘we
are all Jabhat al Nusra’. One might have thought that the US
Government – which once claimed to be engaged in a global war
against terrorism, in the name of 3,000 people murdered in New York
back in September 2001 – would be as elated as those on the streets
of Aleppo. They were not.
Much
of the western media, reflecting their governments, solemnly reported
on ‘the fall of Aleppo’. The Syrian victory over the al Qaeda
groups was a great tragedy, they said. On the other hand, the near
simultaneous recapture of Syria’s ancient city of Palmyra, by the
eastern al Qaeda group ISIS, was reported differently. That city was
said to have been ‘retaken’.
All
this underlines what should have been an obvious point, admitted by
many US officials, that every single armed group in Syria (whether
‘moderate’ or ‘extremist’) has been armed and financed by the
US and its allies, in an attempt to overthrow the Syrian Government.
All the talk about ‘moderate rebels’, a ‘brutal regime’ and a
‘civil war’ just tries to hide this.
The
final evacuations of Aleppo – which included an exchange of
civilians besieged for 20 months in the Idlib towns of Faoua and
Kafraya for remaining NATO-jihadists in eastern Aleppo – were
organised between Russia and Turkey. There was some serious sabotage
of these agreements, but the understandings have so far stayed on
track. Now Iran is engaged with Russia and Turkey, in three way
talks. Practical matters are being discussed.
It
is notable that the Obama administration is playing no direct
constructive role in the endgame over Aleppo. Its ‘regime change’
proxy war on Syria is failing and, in its place, the incoming
Washington regime promises a new approach. More importantly, a new
regional alliance has formed to reject any new aggression from the
colonial powers.
Many
things have changed during the war on Syria. The Syrian alliance has
beaten back powerful NATO-GCC forces. The Muslim Brotherhood and its
patrons in Egypt, Qatar and Turkey have received another beating.
Egypt and Iraq now support Syria. The Saudis have joined with Israel
against Iran and Syria. Russia has built stronger bonds with Syria
and Iran. The Arab League, having backed the destruction of two Arab
states, seems all but dead. Will the new, enhanced ‘Axis of
Resistance’ take its place?
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.