17
years after 9/11, Al-Qaeda rebranded by US government & media as
besieged rebels
RT,
11
September, 2018
Seventeen
years after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the US government and media
outlets have decided that Al-Qaeda is now a rebel group worthy of our
sympathy. The cynical narrative change is par for the course, experts
told RT.
As
somber newspaper headlines mark the anniversary of the devastating
attacks, some commentators have pointed out that the terrorist group
accused of murdering 3,000 Americans seventeen years ago is now
occupying northeastern Syria – with the US threatening to take
military action if the "rebels" are
evicted from the region by the Syrian army and its allies.
The
United States has spent an
estimated $1.5 trillion on its Global War Against Terrorism, launched
in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, but the United States
now seems to find itself providing diplomatic cover – not to
mention excellent press – to the terrorists that it once vowed to
eradicate.
The
majority of Syria's Idlib province is controlled by Hayat Tahrir
al-Sham (HTS), a State
Department-designated terrorist
group that is regarded as indistinguishable from Al-Qaeda. But the US
has signaled that it will respond militarily to any efforts by
Damascus to evict the internationally-recognized terrorist group from
its last stronghold in Syria, with the New York Times
even fawning over
the jihadists as "a
de facto governmental authority, facilitating trade across the long
border with Turkey and organizing aid deliveries." What
happened?
Never forget?
Even
as social media fills up with maudlin GIFs vowing to "Never
Forget" the
September 11 attacks, one of the reasons that Al-Qaeda has been able
to remain in Idlib is because Americans have
actually "forgotten," analysts
say.
"A
lot of time has passed since 9/11. They got Osama bin Laden and
people have moved on, and they have other issues that they're
focusing on," former
Pentagon official Michael Maloof told RT. According to Maloof, many
Americans are now preoccupied with domestic scandals like "Russian
collusion," and
they're "not
focused on the extent to which the Trump administration is providing
backing and support to Al-Qaeda today in Syria. And it's really
tragic."
However,
those who are paying attention are "tired
of the lies," Willy
Wimmer, a former state secretary to the German defense minister, told
RT.
"I
think the public in the West is tired of the lies of their own
government concerning Al-Qaeda, or other terrorists groups." He
noted that it's an open secret that the US, UK, France, Saudi Arabia
and Gulf states provide direct and indirect support to "rebel" groups
that under normal circumstances would be considered terrorists.
What's the endgame?
But
what does the United States hope to gain from deterring an attack on
Al-Qaeda's last enclave in Syria?
Washington's
threats of military action are a way of preserving a "modicum of
influence" in Syria, Maloof said. "The
US is looking at Idlib and support for Al-Qaeda to maintain influence
and try to deflect attention away from domestic problems."He
added that the US is using the excuses of "humanitarian
disaster and chemical weapons" to
justify its military activity in the country.
"They're
going to go kinetic if there's an attack in Idlib," Maloof
predicted.
Wimmer
warned against trying to overthink Washington's shocking change of
heart concerning Al-Qaeda. "You
can't look at US foreign policy under logical terms," he said.
"These
groups are used to topple whole regions, not only Syria but also
other countries, and at the end we fight against a threat that was
organized by our own governments. And I think people are tired of
this."
He
noted that the US has "danced
on its own argument" by
accusing Russia of using anti-terrorism operations as a false pretext
for getting militarily involved in Syria, adding that unlike Russia
and Iran's presence in the country, "under
all legal terms, there is no justification for a US presence in Syria
under international law."
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