BREAKING: US Occupation of Syria now official
August
21, 2016 - Fort Russ News -
-
FR Editorial Team -
"This
is a historic and dangerous development which only increases the
chances of total war."
21
August, 2017
Over
the last 24 hours, the United States has made clear its status as a
hostile occupational force in Syria. Yesterday, the US issued
a communique to the legitimate Syrian government and the
Russian anti-terrorist coalition assisting the Syrians. The
United States has indicated that it has carved out a swath of Syria
with boots on the ground fulfilling the roles of active duty
personnel, such as special ops forces, advisors, trainers,
mechanics, and supporting units. The US has declared a no fly zone
and threatened to target and shoot down Syrian and Russian planes
within Syrian airspace [over
the Kurdish autonomous region - ed].
As
RT reports, US Commander of American forces in Iraq and Syria Lt.
General Stephen Townshend stated:
"“We’ve informed the Russians where we’re at ... (they)
tell us they’ve informed the Syrians, and I’d just say that we
will defend ourselves if we feel threatened." Since, as
Reuters reports,
clashes between Kurdish and Syrian forces have intensified.
A
number of analysts previously forecasted that the US would take
this route given the success of the Syrian and allied Russian
campaign in general and in particular in light of souring
US-Turkish relations, the possibility of the US losing access to
the Turkish Incirlik base, and the dire situation of Takfiri forces
holed up in Aleppo. Different international news agencies have
already run a version of the story which presents the US forces'
communique as a "warning
for Russia and Syria"
(CNN) or a "defensive
threat" (IBT),
but they have failed to distinguish the de facto meaning of this
development. Nor have they included that the US military's official
statement is in stark violation of international law, constituting
an illegal occupation of a sovereign state.
It
has long been assessed that the reason that the US
had simultaneously backed ISIS and Kurdish forces was for
the purpose of using ISIS as a "place holder" to be
defeated, either virtually or in actuality, only to then carve out
a US occupation zone under the pretext of forming an independent
Kurdish state. Previously last year, representatives of the Kurdish
autonomous region made
an unconstitutional and unilateral announcement of federalization.
This turn was used to create a seemingly legal ambiguity, or 'gray
area', to confuse public discourse at the media level. However, the
anti-terrorist coalition's foreign ministers as well as
international legal experts are under no illusions that the
unilateral declaration of federalization is just as much a
violation of Syrian sovereignty as would be a breakaway republic
made possible only thanks to a war of US occupation. Under the
international legal norms of the Geneva convention as well as
subsequent parallel agreements, a foreign occupying country does
not have the right to divide, separate, occupy, or carve out a
section of a country regardless of what the occupying army terms
such as.
Moreover,
the most recent communique from the US Lt. General
Townshend in Northern Syria laid out plans to increase the area of
what the US considers "Kurdistan." Under the present
Syrian Constitution, Kurds are represented both in the government
in Damascus and have a semi-autonomous status within the central
Syrian state.
A
major collision course
The
brazen and illegal warnings issued by the US commander pose the
real possibility of creating a direct confrontation between Syrian,
Iranian, Russian, and other independent forces on the one hand, and
the US military and their Kurdish puppet outfits on the other. This
dramatic increase in hostilities would deal a major blow to hopes
for a diplomatic resolution to the crisis.
In
2011, the US, alongside its Israeli, Turkish, Qatari, and Saudi
allies and with assistance from Jordan, organized,
sponsored, and financed the
launch of an illegal invasion by non-uniformed regular soldiers,
mercenaries, child soldiers, and armed religious fanatics (many of
whom themselves were shipped into the region from Europe where they
have legal residence). A 2011 protest movement which had blossomed
out of the efforts of the US National Endowment for Democracy and
UN-sanctioned NGO's financed by the House of Saud and Qatari
monarchy took advantage of Syria's liberal and open society,
infiltrating civic organizations and manipulating Syria's secular
pluralism against itself. This created the possibility for a
media simulacrum in which international observers and media, both
intentionally and unintentionally, conflated a protest movement
comprised mainly of Syrians with a military operation which very
quickly became nothing more than a foreign invasion.
Russian
involvement upon the invitation of the legitimate government of
Syria was the source of a serious setback to US aims in the
region. Now what remains to be seen is what the US is actually
prepared to do. Syrian and Russian military planners no doubt long
ago gamed out multiple scenarios and developed some kind of
responsive contingency plans. It is only natural that, while such
responsive plans exist, they would not be a matter of public
disclosure. At issue is the capacity of the US, a once global
hegemon which geostrategic analysts around the world
have assessed to now be in a waning phase, to maintain an
occupational foothold in the Kurdish region of Syria. Both Syria
and Turkey may find that they have a common interest in opposing a
US puppet Kurdish state.
Prior
to the outbreak of the present conflict, Syria and Turkey
maintained a treaty which allowed Turkish security forces
to pursue Kurdish separatist terrorists who would at
times flee to Syria from operations in Turkey. After the conflict
began, both Syria, and Turkey and the United States (to the extent
to which the latter two can be considered to have divergent
interests) all engaged in the game of playing the Kurdish card.
Each side in the conflict hoped to be able to use the support of
armed Kurdish groups to their own ends. While there is much
information that suggests that Turkey is in the process
of reorienting itself away from Euro-Atlanticism and NATO,
especially in light of Turkey's moves during and after the failed
coup attempt, there is always the possibility that recent
Turkish moves are actually part of a long term plan to cast a
specter of uncertainty over Turkey's future plans in concert with
the US. Such would not at all be unprecedented in the history of
geopolitical alliances.
In
conclusion, the US' announcement marks a turning point in this
conflict. If before there had been any ambiguity about the US'
intentions in Syria - a plan to divide Syria which had been
publicly elaborated in numerous pro-Atlanticist think tank
publications such as those of the Brookings Institute or Council on
Foreign Relations - then now the US has revealed its hand. This is
a historic and dangerous development which only increases the
chances of total war.
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