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A Mediterranean Battlefield - Syria - Printable Version +- Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora) +-- Forum: Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Geopolitical Hotspots (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-20.html) +--- Thread: A Mediterranean Battlefield - Syria (/thread-6670.html) |
A Mediterranean Battlefield - Syria - David Guyatt - 20-09-2014 From The Consortium: Quote:Blocking a Realist' Strategy on the Mideast. A Mediterranean Battlefield - Syria - Magda Hassan - 27-09-2014 [TABLE="width: 100%"] [TR] [TD][TABLE="width: 100%"] [TR] [TD="class: arttitle"] Street Scenes from a Damascus Neighborhood[/TD] [/TR] [/TABLE] [/TD] [/TR] [TR] [TD="class: artbody"]Franklin Lamb[/TD] [/TR] [TR] [TD="class: artbody"] Barzeh neighborhood, Damascus ![]() During meetings with young men from the Barzeh neighborhood, an area maybe five blocks by eight blocks, this observer learned of approximately 700 FSA fighters in the neighborhood, 110 from al Nursa, compared with only 7 or 8 Da'ish fighters. The latter do not appear very active in community matters, but reportedly keep their eyes peeled watching what the other militia are up to. Even so, Dai'sh still recruits and sends applicants to other locations for military training, this while promising that within two months the Islamic State will attack central Damascus. At the same time, desertions among the rebels are reportedly on the upswing in these areas, and some of the FSA and al-Nusra fighters are splitting off to join Da'ish. It seems that some of these young militia memberspretty much like youngsters everywheresimply want to play for a winning team' or in the big leagues,' and Da'ish is still a strong magnet for tryouts.' Al-Nusra and Da'ish fighters both claim they are eager to fight Hezbollahand Western forceswho they believe will show up sooner or later. And many of them exhibit an attitude similar to that of a European jihadist who recently remarked to this observer, "Let's get it on. And the world will itself judge who are the best fighters, we who believe in Allah or the kuffers (disbelievers)." Another disturbing attitude, all too frequently expressed in Damascene neighborhoods, is the desire of many of these young men, many of them from "good" families, to sacrifice themselves and become martyrs to their various causes. Residents report that some of the most promising studentsmajoring in subjects like medicine, law, engineering, computer science, business and other professionsare disaffected and see no future for themselves. And while many are deeply religious, a surprising number appear not to be. Overwhelmingly the rebels come from areas where outsiders are few. This observer's friend of more than three years, whose name I withhold for his security, has lived most of his life in Barzeh and knows many of the militia guys. He reports that currently there are only two foreign fighters in Barzeh, one from Algeria and the other from Saudi Arabia. And he expressed shock to me that a friend of his from childhoodwho joined al-Nusra 18 months ago and had since become one of its local leadershad suddenly disappeared. A few days later, my friend got a what's up' message from Turkey and learned that his friend had shaved his beard, changed his style of clothing, and left Barzeh without telling anyone. Now he reports that he wears shorts and swims during the day on the Turkish coast and no longer has any desire to fight anyone. Many among al Nusra and other rebel groups, it seems, are trying to leave Syria and go somewhere, anywhere, that might offer them a positive future of some sortbecause they see the war in Syria as being a long one. And in this respect they are no different from the war-weary, exhausted, traumatized Syrian population in general. With very few jobs and nearly ten million displaced from their homesand with some 3 million living as refugees in neighboring countrieswhat one finds here on the one hand is a growing desire to get out, to establish, sadly, a new life elsewhere, in a land other than the one they most love. Yet on the other, significant numbers of fairly hard-core al-Nusra fighters, as noted above, are quitting that militia in order to join the winning teamDa'ish. It is a combination of social factors pointing to what the Iranians have already made note of: that Obama's strategy of trying to fight Da'ish and the Syrian government at the same time is probably doomed to failure. Some Syrian analysts, whose views this observer credits, identify two trends that appear to be developing in Syrian neighborhoods controlled by violent militia. One is the growing resistance by the local population to being intimidated and abused by the occupying gunmenwhile another is the role the Syrian government is playing in engaging in dialog, usually privately, with the rebels, and offering what some locals here refer to as "contracts." These are proposals of ceasefires of varying scope in order to help give some hope and help to the increasingly besieged population. Also, neighborhood attitudes toward militia in areas around Damascus are dramatically changing. This observer is advised by fighters from Barzeh that as recently as 12-18 months ago, maybe 80% of the citizens supported the FSA, while some backed al Nusra or other groups. Today militia support is estimated at less than 40%and dwindling. Even those who still back the armed gangs are weaker in their support and no longer respect the militia or defer to them as before. Increasingly neighborhood residents are confronting the rebels on neighborhood streets via citizen committees.' They are showing up at rebel checkpoints or headquarters to complain or demand respect and an end to arbitrary street "justice." Reasons for this include abhorrence of brutality, exhaustion, disillusionment, as well as demonstrable efforts by the Syrian government to increase and maintain services while trying to make important and long overdue changes. Even many rebels are said to credit the government for its willingness to be flexible and to make "contracts" with them to improve the lives of the besieged population. For example, when families return to their homes after having fled, nearly all find that their flats have been broken into and personal property stolen, and they sometimes discover some of their stolen items being sold in neighborhood jihadist souks.' According to one resident of Barzeh, computers and plasma TV's are among the most commonly stolen property. By contrast, "neighborhood watch" citizen groups seek the return of stolen goods and demand that the militias stop the thievery. Also people are increasingly calling for a return to Syrian secularism, and they may actually be making some progress on this point. Unlike Da'ish, al Nursa does not insist that people attend a mosque for prayerswhile the FSA is relatively secular. Nursa does require that women wear hijabs in neighborhoods under its control, and the first two times a woman is caught without one she is issued a warning. The third time she risks a public whipping. This observer is advised that many younger women, despite the risks, will remove their head scarves the moment they cross out of rebel-held areas, sometimes in plain view of those manning the checkpoints, leaving the neighborhood at this point, traveling to downtown Damascus for work or other purposes. It's not dissimilar actually to what one finds among many Iranian women, particularly students at Tehran University, who openly admit, often with grins, to giving the local "morality police" a hard time when demandsfor instance to adjust their headscarves so as to reduce the amount of hair visibleare made by roving "purists." As for the Free Syrian Army, now dubbed by some in the Obama Administration as the "National Coalitionkind of like the National Guard"it is viewed by many here as corrupt, manned to a large extent by lowlifes and thieves. The "Free Syrian Army," as one pithy adage has it, is neither free, nor Syrian, nor an army. And at least in Barzeh, at any rate, it is also viewed as being for sale to the highest bidder. Moreover, the residents here, though increasingly vocal about jihadist militias, seem to hold actually more respect for al-Nusra, despite its Islamist extremism, than for the Western-backed FSA. Late word just received by this observer from his friend, the aforementioned son of Barzeh: yesterday he, too, snuck across the Syrian-Turkey border in search of a new life-somewhere until peace returns to his beloved Syria. [/TD] [/TR] [/TABLE] http://www.almanar.com.lb/english/adetails.php?eid=172918&cid=41&fromval=1&frid=41&seccatid=101&s1=0#.VCSvqp56EYQ.twitter A Mediterranean Battlefield - Syria - Magda Hassan - 29-09-2014 The Khorasan Group: Anatomy of a Fake Terror Threat to Justify Bombing Syria By Glenn Greenwald and Murtaza Hussain @ggreenwald@mazmhussain Today at 1:11 AM ![]() As the Obama administration prepared to bomb Syria without Congressional or U.N. authorization, it faced two problems. The first was the difficulty of sustaining public support for a new years-long war against ISIS, a group that clearly posed no imminent threat to the "homeland." A second was the lack of legal justification for launching a new bombing campaign with no viable claim of self-defense or U.N. approval. The solution to both problems was found in the wholesale concoction of a brand new terror threat that was branded "The Khorasan Group." After spending weeks depicting ISIS as an unprecedented threat too radical even for Al Qaeda! administration officials suddenly began spoon-feeding their favorite media organizations and national security journalists tales of a secret group that was even scarier and more threatening than ISIS, one that posed a direct and immediate threat to the American Homeland. Seemingly out of nowhere, a new terror group was created in media lore. The unveiling of this new group was performed in a September 13 article by Associated Press. who cited unnamed U.S. officials to warn of this new shadowy, worse-than-ISIS terror group: While the Islamic State group is getting the most attention now, another band of extremists in Syria a mix of hardened jihadis from Afghanistan, Yemen, Syria and Europe poses a more direct and imminent threat to the United States, working with Yemeni bomb-makers to target U.S. aviation, American officials say.
AP warned Americans that "the fear is that the Khorasan militants will provide these sophisticated explosives to their Western recruits who could sneak them onto U.S.-bound flights." It explained that although ISIS has received most of the attention, the Khorasan Group "is considered the more immediate threat."At the center is a cell known as the Khorasan group, a cadre of veteran al-Qaida fighters from Afghanistan and Pakistan who traveled to Syria to link up with the al-Qaida affiliate there, the Nusra Front. But the Khorasan militants did not go to Syria principally to fight the government of President Bashar Assad, U.S. officials say. Instead, they were sent by al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahiri to recruit Europeans and Americans whose passports allow them to board a U.S.-bound airliner with less scrutiny from security officials. The genesis of the name was itself scary: "Khorasan refers to a province under the Islamic caliphate, or religious empire, of old that included parts of Afghanistan." AP depicted the U.S. officials who were feeding them the narrative as engaging in some sort of act of brave, unauthorized truth-telling: "many U.S. officials interviewed for this story would not be quoted by name talking about what they said was highly classified intelligence." On the morning of September 18, CBS News broadcast a segment that is as pure war propaganda as it gets: directly linking the soon-to-arrive U.S. bombing campaign in Syria to the need to protect Americans from being exploded in civilian jets by Khorasan. With ominous voice tones, the host narrated: This morning we are learning of a new and growing terror threat coming out of Syria. It's an Al Qaeda cell you probably never heard of. Nearly everything about them is classified. Bob Orr is in Washington with new information on a group some consider more dangerous than ISIS.
Orr then announced that while ISIS is "dominating headlines and terrorist propaganda," Orr's "sources" warn of "a more immediate threat to the U.S. Homeland." As Orr spoke, CBS flashed alternating video showing scary Muslims in Syria and innocent westerners waiting in line at airports, as he intoned that U.S. officials have ordered "enhanced screening" for "hidden explosives." This is all coming, Orr explained, from "an emerging threat in Syria" where "hardened terrorists" are building "hard to detect bombs."[URL="https://prod01-cdn01.cdn.firstlook.org/wp-uploads/sites/1/2014/09/cbs3.png"] ![]() The U.S. government, Orr explained, is trying to keep this all a secret; they won't even mention the group's name in public out of security concerns! But, Orr was there to reveal the truth, as his "sources confirm the Al Qaeda cell goes by the name Khorasan." And they're "developing fresh plots to attack U.S. aviation." Later that day, Obama administration officials began publicly touting the group, when Director of National Intelligence James Clapper warned starkly: "in terms of threat to the homeland, Khorasan may pose as much of a danger as the Islamic State." Then followed an avalanche of uncritical media reports detailing this Supreme Threat, excitingly citing anonymous officials as though they had uncovered a big secret the government was trying to conceal. On September 20, the New York Times devoted a long article to strongly hyping the Khorasan Group. Headlined "U.S. Suspects More Direct Threats Beyond ISIS," the article began by announcing that U.S. officials believe a different group other than ISIS "posed a more direct threat to America and Europe." Specifically: American officials said that the group called Khorasan had emerged in the past year as the cell in Syria that may be the most intent on hitting the United States or its installations overseas with a terror attack. The officials said that the group is led by Muhsin al-Fadhli, a senior Qaeda operative who, according to the State Department, was so close to Bin Laden that he was among a small group of people who knew about the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks before they were launched.
Again, the threat they posed reached all the way to the U.S.: "Members of the cell are said to be particularly interested in devising terror plots using concealed explosives."This Khorasan-attacking-Americans alarmspread quickly and explosively in the landscape of U.S. national security reporting. The Daily Beasts Eli Lake warned on September 23 - the day after the first U.S. bombs fell in Syria - that "American analysts had pieced together detailed information on a pending attack from an outfit that informally called itself the Khorasan Group' to use hard-to-detect explosives on American and European airliners." He added even more ominously: "The planning from the Khorasan Group … suggests at least an aspiration to launch more-coordinated and larger attacks on the West in the style of the 9/11 attacks from 2001″ (days later, Lake, along with Josh Rogin, actually claimed that "Iran has long been harboring senior al Qaeda, al Nusra, and so-called Khorasan Group leaders as part of its complicated strategy to influence the region"). On the day of the bombing campaign, NBC News' Richard Engel tweeted this: ![]() That tweet linked to an NBC Nightly News report in which anchor Brian Williams introduced Khorasan with a graphic declaring it "The New Enemy," and Engel went on to explain that the group is "considered a threat to the U.S. because, U.S. intelligence officials say, it wants to bring down airplanes with explosives." ![]() Once the bombing campaign was underway, ISIS the original theme of the attack largely faded into the background, as Obama officials and media allies aggressively touted attacks on Khorasan leaders and the disruption of its American-targeting plots. On the first day of the bombing, the Washington Post announced that "the United States also pounded a little-known but well-resourced al-Qaeda cell that some American officials fear could pose a direct threat to the United States." It explained: The Pentagon said in a statement early Tuesday that the United States conducted eight strikes west of Aleppo against the cell, called the Khorasan Group, targeting its "training camps, an explosives and munitions production facility, a communications building and command and control facilities."
The same day, CNN claimed that "among the targets of U.S. strikes across Syria early Tuesday was the Khorasan Group." The bombing campaign in Syria was thus magically transformed into an act of pure self-defense, given that "the group was actively plotting against a U.S. homeland target and Western targets, a senior U.S. official told CNN on Tuesday." The bevvy of anonymous sources cited by CNN had a hard time keep their stories straight:The official said the group posed an "imminent" threat. Another U.S. official later said the threat was not imminent in the sense that there were no known targets or attacks expected in the next few weeks.
Nonetheless, what was clear was that this group had to be bombed in Syria to save American lives, as the terrorist group even planned to conceal explosive devices in toothpaste or flammable clothing as a means to target U.S. airliners. The day following the first bombings, Attorney General Eric Holder claimed: "We hit them last night out of a concern that they were getting close to an execution date of some of the plans that we have seen."The plots were believed to be in an advanced stage, the second U.S. official said. There were indications that the militants had obtained materials and were working on new improvised explosive devices that would be hard to detect, including common hand-held electronic devices and airplane carry-on items such as toiletries. CNN's supremely stenographic Pentagon reporter, Barbara Starr, went on air as videos of shiny new American fighter jets and the Syria bombing were shown and explained that this was all necessary to stop a Khorasan attack very close to being carried out against the west: What we are hearing from a senior US official is the reason they struck Khorasan right now is they had intelligence that the group of Al Qaeda veterans was in the stages of planning an attack against the US homeland and/or an attack against a target in Europe, and the information indicated Khorasan was well on its way perhaps in its final stages of planning that attack.
![]() All of that laid the fear-producing groundwork for President Obama to claim self-defense when he announced the bombing campaign on September 23 with this boast: "Once again, it must be clear to anyone who would plot against America and try to do Americans harm that we will not tolerate safe havens for terrorists who threaten our people." ![]() The very next day, a Pentagon official claimed a U.S. airstrike killed "the Khorasan leader," and just a few days after that, U.S. media outlets celebrated what they said was the admission by jihadi social media accounts that "the leader of the al Qaeda-linked Khorasan group was killed in a U.S. air strike in Syria." But once it served its purpose of justifying the start of the bombing campaign in Syria, the Khorasan narrative simply evaporated as quickly as it materialized. Foreign Policys Shane Harris, with two other writers, was one of the first to question whether the "threat" was anywhere near what it had been depicted to be: But according to the top U.S. counterterrorism official, as well as Obama himself, there is "no credible information" that the militants of the Islamic State were planning to attack inside the United States. Although the group could pose a domestic terrorism threat if left unchecked, any plot it tried launching today would be "limited in scope" and "nothing like a 9/11-scale attack," Matthew Olsen, the director of the National Counterterrorism Center, said in remarks at the Brookings Institution earlier this month. That would suggest that Khorasan doesn't have the capability either, even if it's working to develop it.
On September 25, the New York Times just days after hyping the Khorasan threat to the homeland wrote that "the group's evolution from obscurity to infamy has been sudden." And the Paper of Record began, for the first time, to note how little evidence actually existed for all those claims about the imminent threats posed to the homeland:"Khorasan has the desire to attack, though we're not sure their capabilities match their desire," a senior U.S. counterterrorism official told Foreign Policy. American officials have given differing accounts about just how close the group was to mounting an attack, and about what chance any plot had of success. One senior American official on Wednesday described the Khorasan plotting as "aspirational" and said that there did not yet seem to be a concrete plan in the works.
Literally within a matter of days, we went from "perhaps in its final stages of planning its attack" (CNN) to "plotting as aspirational'" and "there did not yet seem to be a concrete plan in the works" (NYT).Late last week, Associated Press' Ken Dilanian the first to unveil the new Khorasan Product in mid-September published a new story explaining that just days after bombing "Khorasan" targets in Syria, high-ranking U.S. officials seemingly backed off all their previous claims of an "imminent" threat from the group. Headlined "U.S. Officials Offer More Nuanced Take on Khorasan Threat," it noted that "several U.S. officials told reporters this week that the group was in the final stages of planning an attack on the West, leaving the impression that such an attack was about to happen." But now: Senior U.S. officials offered a more nuanced picture Thursday of the threat they believe is posed by an al-Qaida cell in Syria targeted in military strikes this week, even as they defended the decision to attack the militants.
Regarding claims that an attack was "imminent," Comey said: "I don't know exactly what that word means…'imminent'" a rather consequential admission given that said imminence was used as the justification for launching military action in the first place.James Comey, the FBI director, and Rear Adm. John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, each acknowledged that the U.S. did not have precise intelligence about where or when the cell, known as the Khorasan Group, would attempt to strike a Western target. . . . Kirby, briefing reporters at the Pentagon, said, "I don't know that we can pin that down to a day or month or week or six months….We can have this debate about whether it was valid to hit them or not, or whether it was too soon or too late…We hit them. And I don't think we need to throw up a dossier here to prove that these are bad dudes." Even more remarkable, it turns out the very existence of an actual "Khorasan Group" was to some degree an invention of the American government. NBC's Engel, the day after he reported on the U.S. Government's claims about the group for Nightly News, seemed to have serious second thoughts about the group's existence, tweeting: ![]() Indeed, a NEXIS search for the group found almost no mentions of its name prior to the September 13 AP article based on anonymous officials. There was one oblique reference to it in a July 31 CNN op-ed by Peter Bergen. The other mention was an article in the LA Times from two weeks earlier about Pakistan which mentioned the group's name as something quite different than how it's being used now: as "the intelligence wing of the powerful Pakistani Taliban faction led by Hafiz Gul Bahadur." Tim Shorrock noted that the name appears in a 2011 hacked Stratfor email published by WikiLeaks, referencing a Dawn article that depicts them as a Pakistan-based group which was fighting against and "expelled by" (not "led by") Bahadur. There are serious questions about whether the Khorasan Group even exists in any meaningful or identifiable manner. Aki Peritz, a CIA counterterrorism official until 2009, told Time: "I'd certainly never heard of this group while working at the agency," while Obama's former U.S. ambassador to Syria Robert Ford said: "We used the term [Khorasan] inside the government, we don't know where it came from….All I know is that they don't call themselves that." As the Intercept was finalizing this article, former terrorism federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy wrote in National Review that the group was a scam: "You haven't heard of the Khorosan Group because there isn't one. It is a name the administration came up with, calculating that Khorosan … had sufficient connection to jihadist lore that no one would call the president on it." What happened here is all-too-familiar. The Obama administration needed propagandistic and legal rationale for bombing yet another predominantly Muslim country. While emotions over the ISIS beheading videos were high, they were not enough to sustain a lengthy new war. So after spending weeks promoting ISIS as Worse Than Al Qaeda™, they unveiled a new, never-before-heard-of group that was Worse Than ISIS™. Overnight, as the first bombs on Syria fell, the endlessly helpful U.S. media mindlessly circulated the script they were given: this new group was composed of "hardened terrorists," posed an "imminent" threat to the U.S. homeland, was in the "final stages" of plots to take down U.S. civilian aircraft, and could "launch more-coordinated and larger attacks on the West in the style of the 9/11 attacks from 2001."" As usual, anonymity was granted to U.S. officials to make these claims. As usual, there was almost no evidence for any of this. Nonetheless, American media outlets eager, as always, to justify American wars - spewed all of this with very little skepticism. Worse, they did it by pretending that the U.S. Government was trying not to talk about all of this too secret! but they, as intrepid, digging journalists, managed to unearth it from their courageous "sources." Once the damage was done, the evidence quickly emerged about what a sham this all was. But, as always with these government/media propaganda campaigns, the truth emerged only when it's impotent. https://firstlook.org/theintercept/2014/09/28/u-s-officials-invented-terror-group-justify-bombing-syria/ A Mediterranean Battlefield - Syria - Magda Hassan - 05-10-2014 Eyes Finally Open to Syrian Realities October 3, 2014 Exclusive: For the past three years, Official Washington has viewed the Syrian civil war as "white-hatted" rebels against "black-hatted" President Assad, but finally some of the "gray-hatted" reality is breaking through, though perhaps too late, Robert Parry reports. By Robert Parry In late summer 2013, Official Washington was rushing to the judgment that the "evil" Syrian President Bashar al-Assad had launched a barrage of missiles tipped with Sarin gas to slaughter hundreds of civilians in rebel-held neighborhoods near Damascus. It was inconceivable to virtually every person who "mattered" in Washington that there was any other interpretation of the events on Aug. 21, 2013. Washington Post national security columnist David Ignatius even explained the "big picture" reason why President Barack Obama needed to launch punitive bomb strikes against Assad's government for crossing Obama's "red line" against using chemical weapons. ![]() "What does the world look like when people begin to doubt the credibility of U.S. power?" Ignatius wrote a week after the Sarin incident. "Unfortunately, we're finding that out in Syria and other nations where leaders have concluded they can defy a war-weary United States without paying a price. "Using military power to maintain a nation's credibility may sound like an antiquated idea, but it's all too relevant in the real world we inhabit. It has become obvious in recent weeks that President Obama … needs to demonstrate that there are consequences for crossing a U.S. red line.' Otherwise, the coherence of the global system begins to dissolve." At the time, there were only a few of us raising questions about Official Washington's Sarin-attack "group think," partly because it made no sense for Assad to have invited United Nations inspectors into Syria to examine chemical weapons attacks that he was blaming on the opposition and then to launch a major Sarin attack just miles from where the inspectors were unpacking at their hotel. I also was hearing from inside U.S. intelligence that some CIA analysts shared those doubts, suspecting that the supposedly high number of Sarin-laden rockets (which represented the strongest evidence against Assad's forces) was wildly overstated and that public panic might have exaggerated the scope of the attack. But perhaps the strongest reason to doubt Official Washington's hasty conclusion blaming Assad was what had been occurring inside the Syrian rebel movement over the prior two years, i.e., its radicalization into a hyper-violent Sunni jihadist force that was prepared to inflict any brutality on civilians to achieve its goal of ousting the secular Assad and establishing an Islamist state in Damascus. Blinded by Propaganda Most Washington's pols and pundits had not noticed this change because of a geopolitical blindness inflicted by neoconservative propaganda, which insisted that the only acceptable way to view the Syrian civil war was to see Assad as the "bad guy" and the rebels as the "good guys." After all, "regime change" in Syria had long been near the top of the neocon agenda as it was for Israel, which wanted Assad out because he was allied with Iran and Lebanon's Hezbollah. Early in the civil war, Assad's harsh response to what he termed rebel "terrorism" had also rallied the Obama administration's "liberal interventionists" to the side of "regime change." Thus, the notion that some vicious Syrian rebel group might willfully kill innocent civilians as a provocation to get the U.S. military to attack Assad's defenses and thus pave the way for a rebel victory was outside Official Washington's accepted frame of reference. In August 2013, the rebels were wearing the white hats, as far as U.S. mainstream opinion was concerned. Over the past year, however, reality has reasserted itself, at least somewhat. The Sarin case against Assad has largely crumbled with a UN report finding Sarin on only one rocket and independent scientists concluding that the one Sarin-laden rocket had a maximum range of only about two kilometers, meaning it could not have come from the suspected Syrian base about nine kilometers away. Investigative reporter Seymour Hersh also learned from his well-placed sources that inside the U.S. intelligence community suspicion had shifted toward rebel extremists working with hardliners in Turkish intelligence. [See Consortiumnews.com's "Was Turkey Behind Syria-Sarin Attack?"] But most "important people" in U.S. officialdom, including New York Times and Washington Post editors, still insisted that Assad must have done the Sarin attack. They even report it as flat fact. They are, after all, not the sort of folks who easily admit error. A Shift in the Paradigm However, over the past year, the paradigm for understanding the Syrian conflict has begun shifting. In September 2013, many Syrian rebel forces repudiated the political opposition that the Obama administration had organized and instead embraced al-Qaeda's al-Nusra Front, an aggressive jihadist force which had emerged as the most effective fighters against Assad. Then, in February 2014, al-Qaeda's leadership disavowed an even more brutal jihadist force known as the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS. The Islamic State promoted a strategy of unspeakable brutality as a way of intimidating its rivals and driving Westerners from the Middle East. ISIS got its start after the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 when Jordanian Abu Musab al-Zarqawi organized "al-Qaeda in Iraq," a hyper-violent Sunni militia that targeted Iraq's Shiites and destroyed their mosques, touching off a vicious sectarian war across Iraq. After Zarqawi's death in 2006 and the alienation of less-extreme Iraqi Sunnis al-Qaeda in Iraq faded from view before reemerging in Syria's civil war, refashioned as the Islamic State and crossing back into Iraq with a major offensive last summer. Amid reports of the Islamic State massacring captives and beheading American and British hostages, it no longer seemed so far-fetched that some Syrian rebel group would be ruthless enough to obtain Sarin and launch an attack near Damascus, killing innocents and hoping that the Assad regime would be blamed. Even the Post's Ignatius is looking more skeptically at the Syrian rebel movement and the various U.S.-allied intelligence agencies that have been supplying money, weapons and training even to fighters associated with the most extreme militias. Opening the Door In a column on Friday, Ignatius faulted not only Syria's squabbling "moderate opposition" but "the foreign nations such as the United States, Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Jordan that have been funding the chaotic melange of fighters inside Syria. These foreign machinations helped open the door for the terrorist Islamic State group to threaten the region." Ignatius acknowledged that the earlier depiction of the Syrian opposition as simply an indigenous movement of idealistic reformers was misleading. He wrote: "From the beginning of the revolt against President Bashar al-Assad in 2011, Syria has been the scene of a proxy war involving regional powers: Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar all wanted to topple Assad, but they competed with each other as regional rivals, too. "At various points, all three nations provided Sunni rebel groups with money and weapons that ended up in the hands of extremists. … The United States, Saudi Arabia and Jordan joined forces in 2013 to train and arm moderate rebels at a CIA-backed camp in Jordan. But this program was never strong enough to unify the nearly 1,000 brigades scattered across the country. The resulting disorganization helped discredit the rebel alliance known as the Free Syrian Army. "Syrian rebel commanders deserve some blame for this ragged structure. But the chaos was worsened by foreign powers that treated Syria as a playground for their intelligence services. This cynical intervention recalled similar meddling that helped ravage Lebanon, Afghanistan, Yemen, Iraq and Libya during their civil wars. … "The story of how Syria became a cockpit for rival intelligence services was explained to me by sources here [in Istanbul] and in Reyhanli, a rebel staging area on the Turkey-Syria border. Outside efforts to arm and train the Syrian rebels began more than two years ago in Istanbul, where a military operations center' was created, first in a hotel near the airport. "A leading figure was a Qatari operative who had helped arm the Libyan rebels who deposed Moammar Gaddafi. Working with the Qataris were senior figures representing Turkish and Saudi intelligence. But unity within the Istanbul operations room frayed when the Turks and Qataris began to support Islamist fighters they thought would be more aggressive. "These jihadists did emerge as braver, bolder fighters and their success was a magnet for more support. The Turks and Qataris insist they didn't intentionally support the extremist group Jabhat al-Nusra or the Islamic State. But weapons and money sent to more moderate Islamist brigades made their way to these terrorist groups, and the Turks and Qataris turned a blind eye." Regarding the rise of these radicals, Ignatius quoted one Arab intelligence source who claimed to have "warned a Qatari officer, who answered: I will send weapons to al-Qaeda if it will help' topple Assad. This determination to remove Assad by any means necessary proved dangerous. The Islamist groups got bigger and stronger, and the FSA day by day got weaker,' recalls the Arab intelligence source." Selling the Sarin Story Based on such information, the idea of anti-Assad extremists securing Sarin possibly with the help of Turkish intelligence, as Hersh reported and launching a provocative attack with the goal of getting the U.S. military to devastate Assad's army and clear a path for a rebel victory begins to make sense. After all, back in Washington, the propaganda strategy of blaming Assad could count on the ever-influential neocons who in August 2013 did start pushing the rush-to-war bandwagon and shoved aside any doubters of the Assad-did-it conventional wisdom. Israel took a similar position on Syria, favoring even the victory of al-Qaeda extremists if necessary to oust Assad and hurt his Iranian allies. In September 2013, then-Israeli Ambassador to the United States Michael Oren told the Jerusalem Post in an interview that "The greatest danger to Israel is by the strategic arc that extends from Tehran, to Damascus to Beirut. And we saw the Assad regime as the keystone in that arc. … We always wanted Bashar Assad to go, we always preferred the bad guys who weren't backed by Iran to the bad guys who were backed by Iran." He said this was the case even if the other "bad guys" were affiliated with al-Qaeda. So, the danger from the Sunni extremists was played down and the focus remained on ousting Assad. No wonder there was such "surprise" among Official Washington's "group thinkers" when the Islamic State opened a new front inside Iraq and routed the U.S.-trained Iraqi army. Once again, the neocons had made sure that American eyes stayed wide shut to an inconvenient truth. But the neocons are not through with the Syrian fiasco that they helped create. They are now busy reshaping the narrative accusing Obama of waiting too long to arm the Syrian rebels and insisting that he switch from bombing Islamic State targets inside Syria to destroying the Syrian air force and creating a no-fly zone so the rebels can march on Damascus. The recklessness of that strategy should now be obvious. Indeed, if Obama had succumbed to the interventionist demands in summer 2013 and devastated Assad's military, we could now be seeing either al-Qaeda or the Islamic State in control of Damascus. [See Consortiumnews.com's "Neocons' Noses into the Syrian Tent."] Obama might be wiser to take this opportunity to declassify the U.S. intelligence on the Sarin gas attack of Aug. 21, 2013, including the dissents from CIA analysts who doubted Assad's responsibility. That information might shed substantial new light on how Turkish and Arab intelligence services with the help of the neocons enabled the rise of the Islamic State. A Mediterranean Battlefield - Syria - Magda Hassan - 21-11-2014 Ex-Opposition Leader Admits Mistake about Syrian Gov't, Says Assad Fighting Terrorists ![]() TEHRAN (FNA)- Former President of the National Coalition for Syrian Opposition Forces Moaz Al-Khatib confessed that his opposition to the Damascus government has been a grave mistake, saying that President Bashar Al-Assad has been fighting against the terrorists. "I acknowledge that I have made a mistake in the past as I imagined that the western and Arab countries as well as Turkey wanted to help Syria and its people," Turkish news website Ulusal quoted Khatib as saying on his account on a social network. He wrote that the so-called Friends of Syria are actually the enemies of Syria and terrorists are cooperating with them to destroy Syria. "I have come to the conclusion that the Syrian government is fighting against the terrorists; it is paying salary to its employees in different parts, supplies electricity and do things that show it is thinking of the people," Khatib said. Moaz Al-Khatib is a former president of the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces. He is also a former prayers imam of the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus. Syria has been experiencing unrest since March 2011 with organized attacks by well-armed gangs and terrorists against both the army and civilians. The unrest, which took in terrorist groups from across Europe, the Middle-East and North Africa, has transpired as one of the bloodiest conflicts in recent history. As the foreign-backed insurgency in Syria continues without an end in sight, the US government has boosted its political and military support to Takfiri extremists. http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13930828001580&utm_content=buffere585d&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer A Mediterranean Battlefield - Syria - David Guyatt - 21-11-2014 Magda Hassan Wrote:"I acknowledge that I have made a mistake in the past as I imagined that the western and Arab countries as well as Turkey wanted to help Syria and its people," ::coffeesplutter::: ![]() ![]() ![]() Quote: As the foreign-backed insurgency in Syria continues without an end in sight, the US government has boosted its political and military support to T ::boom:: A Mediterranean Battlefield - Syria - Magda Hassan - 10-01-2015 UN reveals Israeli links with Syrian rebelsReports by UN observers in the Golan submitted to 15 members of Security Council detail regular contact between IDF officers and armed Syrian opposition figures at the border.![]() Published 06:00 07.12.14 Reports by UN observers in the Golan Heights over the past 18 months reveal the type and extent of cooperation between Israel and Syrian opposition figures. The reports, submitted to the 15 members of the UN Security Council and available on the UN's website, detail regular contacts held on the border between IDF officers and soldiers and Syrian rebels. The observer force, UNDOF, was established in 1974 as part of the separation of forces agreement between Israel and Syria. The agreement set up a buffer zone several kilometers wide. About 1,000 UN observers supervised the implementation of the agreement until 2013, when the Syrian civil war severely reduced the force's ability to function. ![]() The observers have continued to file reports to New York, which were relatively mundane; but their content changed in March 2013, when Israel started admitting injured Syrians for medical treatment in Safed and Nahariya hospitals. The Syrian ambassador to the UN complained of widespread cooperation between Israel and Syrian rebels, not only treatment of the wounded but also other aid. Israel at first asserted the injured were civilians reaching the border of their own initiative and without prior coordination because they could not obtain suitable treatment in Syria. Later, as the numbers increased, Israel said it was coordinating with civilians but not opposition groups. However, the reports reveal direct contact between the IDF and armed opposition members. According to a report from December 3, 2013, a person wounded on September 15 "was taken by armed members of the opposition across the ceasefire line, where he was transferred to a civilian ambulance escorted by an IDF vehicle." Moreover, from November 9 to 19 the "UNDOF observed at least 10 wounded persons being transferred by armed members of the opposition from the Bravo side across the ceasefire line to IDF." Further reports indicated similar incidents. However, cooperation between the IDF and Syrian rebels that was revealed in UN observer reports does not just include transferring the wounded. Observers remarked in the report distributed on June 10 that they identified IDF soldiers on the Israeli side handing over two boxes to armed Syrian opposition members on the Syrian side. The last report distributed to Security Council members, on December 1, described another meeting between IDF soldiers and Syrian opposition members that two UN representatives witnessed on October 27 some three kilometers east of Moshav Yonatan. The observers said they saw two IDF soldiers on the eastern side of the border fence opening the gate and letting two people enter Israel. The report, contrary to previous ones, did not note that the two exiting Syria were injured or why they entered Israel. This specific event is of particular interest in light of what happened on the Syrian side of the border in the exact same region. According to the report, UN observers stated that tents were set up about 300 meters from the Israeli position for some 70 families of Syrian deserters. The Syrian army sent a letter of complaint to UNDOF in September, claiming this tent camp was a base for "armed terrorists" crossing the border into Israel. The Syrians also warned that if the UN would not evacuate the tent camp, the Syrian army would view it as a legitimate target. http://www.haaretz.com/mobile/.premium-1.630359?v=4AC46632C7C0D296D80E936AFCEA3D59 A Mediterranean Battlefield - Syria - David Guyatt - 10-01-2015 Do you call that a smoking gun? A Mediterranean Battlefield - Syria - David Guyatt - 20-01-2015 . Quote:What is Hezbollah's game in Syria? The view from Jerusalem and Beirut A Mediterranean Battlefield - Syria - David Guyatt - 09-02-2015 A really interesting backgroung on Saudi politics and the ousting of Prince Bandar, plus the ever meandering path of US middle eastern politics -- friends become enemies and then become friends again, until "enemyhood" is reassigned again etc. Quote: From: VoltaireNet |