Absolute classic!
Whoops,
US anti-ISIS envoy reveals truth about Idlib
On
Friday US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo issued a statement ahead of
the Syrian government's campaign to liberate Idlib from ISIS/Al Qaeda
jihadist control.
Pompeo
sent a warning to Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, followed
with a tweet pretending to care about the people in Idlib, captive
under the very jihadists the CIA and Obama White House helped train
and arm...
"The
3 million Syrians, who have already been forced out of their homes
and are now in Idlib, will suffer from this aggression. Not good. The
world is watching."
Disinformation
is rife about US plots and rebels’ supposed use of chemical weapons
as Putin prepares for final victory
The wish to "create quagmires" can easily get out of hand and the U.S. may very soon find itself in a pretty deep one.
Do Trump, Mattis or Pompeo really want to carry that burden?
Syria Sitrep - U.S. To Stay To "Create Quagmires"
2
September, 2018
Last
week we looked at the upcoming
campaign to liberate Idleb.
The attack will commence only after the September 7 summit of the
presidents of Russia, Turkey and Iran in Tehran. Meanwhile the U.S.
detailed its future role in the war on Syria.
The
new U.S. aim in Syria is to hinder all potential progress in the
reestablishing of government control as well as to obstruct any
repair of the damage its war on Syria caused.
The
semi-permanent U.S. occupation of north-east Syria will be used in a
new (and futile) attempt to achieve the long held U.S. aim of regime
change. Secretary of Defense Mattis declared as
much in a recent press conference. Asked about Iran in Syria he said:
What are they doing in Syria in the first place, other than propping up someone who has committed mayhem and murder on his own people?
They have no business there. And our goal is to move the Syria civil war into the Geneva process so the Syrian people can establish a new government that is not led by Assadand give them a chance for a future that Assad has denied them, with -- with overt Russian and Iranian support.
If
Iran, a treaty ally invited by the legitimate Syrian government, has
'no business' in Syria what business does the uninvited U.S. invasion
force have?
Asked
about the prospect of U.S. troops in Syria Mattis said:
[L]et me give three points here. One, we have to destroy ISIS. The president's been very clear that -- that ISIS is to be taken out, so that's got to happen. We also have to have trained local troops who can take over. We're doing that training as we speak. As we uncover ground, the chairman's got people assigned there specifically to train the locals. And third, we need the Geneva process, the U.N.-recognized process to start making traction towards solving this war.
Now, if the locals are able to keep the security, obviously during this time we might be reducing our troops commensurate with their ability to meet -- deny ISIS a return, but it really comes down to finding a way to solve this problem of Assad's making.
The
claim that the U.S. is there to fight ISIS is a lie. ISIS is still
active in two places in Syria. Both are under U.S. control.
On
the east side of the Euphrates, near Al-Bukamal, ISIS holds several
villages and the city of Hajin with originally some 40,000
inhabitants. The U.S. and its Kurdish controlled proxy force SDF
stopped attacking those ISIS position in November 2017.
On
June 6 Mattis announced that
the attack on ISIS in Hajin had re-commenced but there was zero news
of any fighting. Instead ISIS forces from Hajin crossed the
Euphrates and attacked Syrian government positions. Further imminent
attacks on ISIS in Hajin were
announced by
the U.S. proxy forces on July 13 and on August 14. None happened.
[H]undreds of displaced people in Bahra village, Gharanij town, and other areas east of Deir Ezzor went out in demonstrations demanding the SDF to start a military operation and control Hajin town and expel the “Islamic State” organization from it and the from entire east of Euphrates River, in order to return to their homes.
For
ten month now ISIS sits unmolested in Hajin and the nearby areas.
According to (pdf)
the UN Sanctions Monitoring Team it is again extracting and selling
oil and "earning millions of dollars per month". ISIS
attacks from Hajin on Syrian government forces west of the
Euphrates continue.
The
other ISIS concentration in Syria is around the al-Tanf border
crossing between Syria and Iraq which is also under illegal U.S.
control. The nearby Rukban refugee camp, with allegedly 50,000
inhabitants, is housing many ISIS families. Last week the Syrian
army prevented
an attack from
the U.S. controlled area towards Palmyra:
"The militants’ objective was to conduct a series of terrorist attacks in the vicinity of the city of Palmyra and to ensure the passage of the main forces of about 300 militants to capture the city within the next week," the [the Russian Reconciliation Center]’s report said.
According to the Russian Ministry of Defense, the militants, captured by Syrian government forces, claimed that they had been trained and armed by American instructors in a camp near the US military base in al-Tanf.
The
U.S. is not fighting ISIS in Syria. It is building semi-permanent
bases, trains a large proxy force, and controls Syria's
oilfields. Its aim is still regime change, the same aim it had when
it launched the war on Syria seven and a half years ago. To achieve
that it will continue to sow as much chaos as possible.
[T]he administration has stopped the dithering and indecision of the past 18 months and signaled that the United States has enduring interests in Syria, beyond killing Islamic State terrorists — and that it isn’t planning to withdraw its Special Operations forces from northeastern Syria anytime soon.
“Right now, our job is to help create quagmires [for Russia and the Syrian regime] until we get what we want,” says one administration official, explaining the effort to resist an Idlib onslaught. This approach involves reassuring the three key U.S. allies on Syria’s border — Israel, Turkey and Jordan — of continued American involvement. ...
It
is quote doubtful that Turkey or Jordan are happy to see continued
U.S. meddling in Syria.
... U.S. goals in Syria have been sketched publicly by Pompeo and Mattis: withdrawal of all Iranian-commanded forces from the country, rather than just from a 50-mile buffer zone along the Israel border, as in the deal Russia arranged; and a political transition that can prevent Syria from becoming a terrorist base again and stabilize it enough that refugees can return to their homes. Pompeo and Mattis want more U.S. involvement in the Geneva deliberations on a political transition, too.
The
U.S. is massively expanding its positions in north-east Syria. More
than 1,600
trucks with new equipment arrived
over the last month. The U.S. now has 18 bases in north-east Syria, 6
of which have their own landing strips. The media continue to claim
the the U.S. has 2,000 soldiers in the north-east. The real number is
more than double or triple of that. It is quite obvious that the U.S.
is settling in with the intent to split the north-east from the rest
of Syria, similar to what it did with the creation of a Kurdish
entity in northern Iraq.
Much
of the U.S. position in north-east Syria depends on the outcome of
the current government formation in Iraq. Pro- and anti-U.S. factions
are in
fierce competition.
Without a friendly Iraqi government the U.S. contingent in Syria is
isolated and cut off from land supplies.
The
U.S. is warning that
any attack on Idleb "will escalate the crisis in Syria and the
region". The former British ambassador to Syria Peter
Ford fears that
France, the UK and the U.S. (FUKUS) will repeat a Suez crisis. They
will use the pretext of a "chemical attack", staged by the
White Helmets propaganda group, to launch a large bombing attack
against Syria. But like the attack on the Suez Canal 62 years ago
such an operation would be in vane:
Suez was a fiasco. While militarily it was a mitigated success, politically it achieved the opposite of what was planned. Nasser emerged stronger than ever.
Will history repeat itself? Assad has only to survive physically a few days’ barrage (if he is wise, he will repair to the Russian base near Latakia for the duration) to emerge just as Nasser emerged from Suez, bloodied but unbowed. Eden’s career was over when he resigned two months after the armistice in Egypt.
A senior Kremlin official told Al-Monitor on condition of anonymity that American officials “want to play spoiler big time. They are disgusted that we’ve gotten an upper hand in dealing with this crisis and now they want to put spokes in every wheel we are trying to make roll.”
...
The Kremlin source added, “Conversations with Turks aren’t going easy but we are optimistic in that both parties are genuinely inclined to find a mutually acceptable solution. Another outside military escalation in Syria now will be seen as a clear intent to hamper this process. Frankly, it’s irritating and exhausting that every time there’s a need for a needle to fix certain fine things there comes a guy with an ax saying he’s going to fix it altogether.”
The
U.S. is not only spoiling the military operations against the
terrorists in Syria. It is trying to hamper any reconstruction and
the return of refugees. Reconstruction is made more difficult by
the devious
sanction regime of
the U.S. and EU. But like other problems these will be overcome. It
is the U.S. and the EU that will lose the business opportunities
while Russian, Chinese and other countries companies will thrive on
them.
'Western'
media continue to support their governments' line. AFP Beirut
office, notorious for pro-Jihadist reporting by its freelancers
within al-Qaeda territory, is providing another example. The UN's
Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) recently held
a conference about reconstruction in Syrian and provided an estimate
of the economic war a damage. The AFP headline
is: Cost
Of Syria War Destruction At $388 Billion, Says UN
ESCWA said the "volume of destruction in physical capital and its sectoral distribution" had been estimated at more than $388 billion.
It said the figure did not include "human losses resulting from deaths or the loss of human competences and skilled labour due to displacement, which were considered the most important enablers of the Syrian economy."
As
that figure seems way too high, a look at that passage in the
original ESCWA
press release is
advisable:
Discussions focused on estimations related to the volume of destruction in physical capital and its sectoral distribution, which according to ESCWA experts reached over $388 billion US dollars, while the actual physical cost of destruction was close to 120 billion dollars.
These figures do not include human losses resulting from deaths or the loss of human competences and skilled labor due to displacement, which were considered the most important enablers of the Syrian economy.
AFP left
out the half sentence which describes the actual physical damage,
$120 billion. The other $268 billion ESCWA cites are an estimate of
lost opportunities and not realized profits. They simply never
happened. When the AFP leaves out that half sentence it is
exaggerating the damage and advances the 'western' claim that Syria
needs 'western' money to rehabilitate itself.
One
news item on the upcoming Idleb campaign is encouraging.
Turkey
gave up on convincing Hayat
Tahrir al-Sham, which rules most of Idleb province, to dissolve. It
finally admitted so on Friday when it blacklisted
HTS as
an al-Qaeda affiliated terror group. With this move Turkey is giving
a green light for the Syrian/Russian operation in Idleb.
Like
the U.S. Turkey is eager to hold onto as much of Syria as it can. But
Syria does not welcome occupiers. In Azaz city, near the
Turkish-Syrian border, people held a sit-in against the Turkish
controlled local administration. The protests were
dissolved by
a bomb exploding next to them. In Afrin district, taken by the
Turkish forces a few month ago, daily guerrilla attacks against the
occupiers continue. In Qamishli city in the U.S./SDF held Hasakah
province Syrian
Arab Christians protested after
the Kurds shut down two Christian schools. Local IED attacks against
Kurdish SDF forces around Raqqa occur every other day.
The
U.S. wants to create a quagmire in Syria. By doing so it will likely
find itself in one. That is what happened to
Turkey:
Seven years into the war in Syria, as Turkey struggles to shield itself from the destabilizing spillover of regional turmoil, Erdoğan’s bet on the Arab world looks increasingly like a losing one. A Syria at war has become the graveyard for any dreams of the neo-Ottoman grandeur he may have nurtured.
The
U.S. is allegedly drawing
up a target list for
a large scale strike on Syria after a staged chemical incident. But
has anyone thought about the U.S. forces in al-Tanf or in
north-eastern Syria? If the U.S. strikes at the Syrian government in
Damascus and elsewhere, all gloves will come off. Can the relatively
few U.S. soldiers strewn over many small bases survive an all out
attack by the Syrian missile and air forces? How would the U.S. react
when a few hundred of its soldiers get killed? Could the then
following escalation be limited to Syria? Can Israel survive a
Hizbullah missile strike on its industrial centers?
The wish to "create quagmires" can easily get out of hand and the U.S. may very soon find itself in a pretty deep one.
Do Trump, Mattis or Pompeo really want to carry that burden?
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