Thursday, March 12, 2020

Trump continues US "Big Stupid Bully" role in Syria planned by bureaucrats in 1983. All aggression against Syria is US aggression. Turkey’s illegal invasions and atrocities in Idlib are joyfully backed by Trump regime-Cartalucci

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We were…the big stupid bully and we were systematically ripped off by everybody.“…3/26/2016, “Transcript: Donald Trump Expounds of His Foreign Policy Views,”  NY Times...Bringing Real Muscle to Bear Against Syria,” cia.gov., Sept. 14, 1983, Graham E. Fuller. (Approved for release, 5/27/2008): “The US should consider sharply escalating pressures against [Hafez] Assad [Syrian Pres. 1971-2000] through covertly orchestrating simultaneous military threats against Syria from three border states hostile to Syria: Iraq, Israel, and Turkey."Every single Syrian death in this conflict [that began in 2011] is, legally, the fault of the aggressors: the United States.”
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3/10/2020, “US-Israel Predictably Behind Turkish Aggression in Syria, New Eastern Outlook, Tony Cartalucci
 
Turkey’s ongoing fighting in northern Syria’s Idlib governorate was – from the beginning of recent escalations – clearly a continuation of Washington’s wider now 9 year-long proxy war against Damascus. 

Whatever gains Turkey had made in terms of reducing its role in Washington’s proxy war and repairing ties with Syria’s allies Russia and Iran – were clearly less important to Ankara amid these recent weeks of renewed aggression than whatever Washington has either promised Anakara or threatened it with. 

And precisely because Turkey’s aggression in Idlib is merely one part of the much wider proxy war Washington continues to wage against Damascus – it was predicted that others involved in the proxy war would coordinate with Turkey elsewhere in Syria. 

Israeli Airstrikes 

In recent weeks Israel has continued carrying out attacks in Syrian territory. 

Recent news has covered Israeli attacks on military targets in Homs – right at the edge of where Turkey’s aggression trails off.
 

Chinese news site Xinhua in its March 5, 2020 article, “Syrian air defenses intercept Israeli missiles in central, southern regions,” would report: 

“Syrian air defenses intercepted Israeli missiles in the central province of Homs and the southern Quneitra province after midnight Thursday, state news agency SANA reported. 

The missiles were fired from Israeli warplanes over the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights and from Lebanese airspace, said the report, without providing details on the targets. 

The attack is the latest in a string of missile strikes carried out by Israel.” 

Despite Israel and Turkey often posing as being at odds with one another over political, religious, or ideological issues – both nations have coordinated violence against Syria since 2011 as per US designs aimed at overthrowing the Syrian government – described in detail within US policy papers. 

US Designs to Use Turkey and Israel as Proxies Revealed as Early as 1983 

Ignoring the West’s ongoing propaganda surrounding the Syrian conflict and simply looking at US policy papers over the years – it is clear that not only has Washington sought to overthrow the Syrian government for decades – it has sought to do so using the same tricks. 

A 1983 document part of a deluge of declassified papers released to the public – signed by former CIA officer Graham Fuller titled, “Bringing Real Muscle to Bear Against Syria”, states (their emphasis):
 
“Syria at present has a hammerlock on US interests both in Lebanon and in the Gulf — through closure of Iraq’s pipeline thereby threatening Iraqi internationalization of the [Iran-Iraq] war. The US should consider sharply escalating the pressures against Assad [Sr.] through covertly orchestrating simultaneous military threats against Syria from three border states hostile to Syria: Iraq, Israel and Turkey.”  

The report also states: 

If Israel were to increase tensions against Syria simultaneously with an Iraqi initiative, the pressures on Assad would escalate rapidly. A Turkish move would psychologically press him further.”  

In 2012--illustrating how these plans were never taken off the table and merely updated amid the more recent 2011 US proxy war against Syriathe US corporate-funded policy think tank – the Brookings Institution – would publish a paper titled, “Saving Syria: Assessing Options for Regime Change” (PDF), stating explicitly: 

“Some voices in Washington and Jerusalem are exploring whether Israel could contribute to coercing Syrian elites to remove Asad.” 

The report continues by explaining (emphasis added): 

Israel could posture forces on or near the Golan Heights and, in so doing, might divert regime forces from suppressing the opposition. This posture may conjure fears in the Asad regime of a multi-front war, particularly if Turkey is willing to do the same on its border and if the Syrian opposition is being fed a steady diet of arms and training. Such a mobilization could perhaps persuade Syria’s military leadership to oust Assad in order to preserve itself.”  

This attempt to create a “multi-front war” amid the current Syrian conflict is a process that continues openly to this very day with news of Turkey and Israel engaged in now direct military aggression against the Syrian government aimed at dividing Syrian forces and reversing Syrian gains on the battlefield. 

Trouble had also briefly erupted along the Syrian-Jordanian border where for years the US had-just as it did along the Syrian-Turkish border-funded, armed, trained, and equipped terrorists before sending them into Syria to fight. 

The US Lurks Behind the Scenes  

Despite attempt by Washington to portray itself as withdrawing from multiple theaters of military aggression, occupation, and confrontation around the globe there is little actual evidence it is doing so. Instead it appears to merely be attempting to hide its hand by deferring increasingly to proxies. 

Its relative quietness regarding Syria was recently broken when US representatives were seen visiting the Turkish-Syrian border and even meeting with Al Qaeda-affiliates – the so-called “White Helmets.”"...

[3/3/20,US ambassador to UN makes visit to Syrian border, announces $108M of new aid [for terrorists only],” ABC News, McGarry, Finnegan

“A high-level Trump administration official traveled up to the border with Syria’s last [terrorist] rebel stronghold [in Idlib] in a show of support for Turkey and its armed Syrian [terrorist] opposition groups’ [illegal invasion of Syria] fight against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad”]

(continuing): “The Washington Post in its article, “US officials visit Turkey’s border with Syria, emphasize support for NATO ally,” would report: 

“Three top US officials toured Turkey’s border with Syria on Tuesday, even briefly crossing into Syrian territory, in a concerted effort to underscore one point: The United States is throwing its full support behind its NATO ally in its new fight against the Syrian government and its Russian backers.” 

As always – the Washington Post spins obvious facts – and in this case – attempts to portray the US as merely backing Turkey in its fighting in northern Syria rather than being the primary sponsor and impetus driving Turkey’s ongoing aggression and the Syrian conflict as a whole. 

In addition to this very public display of official support for Turkey and its terrorist proxies – the Western media has collectively renewed its familiar propaganda war against Syria and its allies through the use of its various “humanitarian” rackets including fronts like “Human Rights Watch” and even pushing bias reports through the UN. 

Coupled with Turkey’s own use of refugees as a political weapon – once again attempts are underway to cite “humanitarian concernsto fish for public support and legal justification for even further escalations against Syria. 

Washington’s Unwinnable Proxy War 

This most recent outburst of aggression from the US and its various proxies comes at a time where nearly all of Syria’s territory has been retaken by the Syrian government. Syria’s allies – Russia and Iran – have established deeply entrenched positions in Syria that all but total war will fail to dislodge.
 
[Image: Map of Golan Heights region from dw.com] 

Israeli airstrikes-however damaging they are on a temporary and tactical level-are futile on a strategic level.

Airstrikes alone will not win the proxy war against Syria without a significant ground force able to exploit them. That ground force in the form of terrorists armed and backed by the [US] West have been all but eliminated across Syrian territory.
Likewise – despite Turkey’s large military – it would need to confront and contain Russian airpower to gain the advantage needed to reverse its – and its proxies’ losses – in northern Syria. 

The conflict will continue to drag on and perhaps in the process Damascus and its allies may be willing to make concessions to accelerate the conclusion of hostilities – but whether make these concessions or not – hostilities will inevitably conclude – and do so to Damascus and its allies’ advantage. 

Israel’s political isolation within the region and around the globe is – at the moment – all but irreversible – thus its apathy toward the damage its ongoing aggression in Syria is having on its international standings leaves few surprised. 

Turkey – however – is giving up a potential opportunity to realign itself amid America’s decline and the emergence of multipolarism. While it still seems possible that Turkey can reverse the damage it is doing to its ties with the rest of the world – that window is undoubtedly closing. 

Turkey will have to decide if it wants to end the Syrian conflict side-by-side Israel and – in particular – the US – which is in irreversible decline globally – or end it aligned with the conflict’s victors – including Syria’s allies Russia and Iran.” 

“Tony Cartalucci, Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher and writer, especially for the online magazine New Eastern Outlook”.:
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Added:

Image: “Ancient ruin in Israel’s Golan Heights"] 

Added: 3/25/2019, “Trump formally recognises Israeli sovereignty over Golan Heights,” Al Jazeera…3/27/20, Trump regime officially recognizes annexation of Golan Heights by Israel....U.S. the only country in the world besides Israel to recognize the annexed territory, which comprises the western two-thirds of the Golan.”…11/8/2018, “The [US] Treasury Department on Thursday announced new sanctions on Russian and Ukrainian entities and several individuals, all connected to Russia’s continuing occupation of Crimea, which the United States considers to be illegal.” 

3/22/2019, “Golan Heights: Why it matters to US, Israel and Syria,” dw.com 

“President Donald Trump has pledged to recognize Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights. DW explains why the contested territory matters.”
 
[Image: Map showing Golan Heights from dw.com] 

“Who controls the Golan? 

The Golan was Syrian territory until 1967, when Israel occupied it in the Six-Day War and later annexed it. The 1981 annexation was not recognized internationally and UN Security Council Resolutions determined Israeli sovereignty over the area to be null and void pending negotiations with Syria.
Syria failed to regain control over the Golan in the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, which ended in a 1974 armistice and placement of a UN observer force along the ceasefire line. 

Syria demands the return of all or part of the territory in exchange for any future peace deal with Israel. Repeated indirect and direct peace talks between Israel and Syria have failed to reach an agreement. 

Who lives there? 

There are about 40,000 people living in the Golan. Around half of them are Jewish settlers. The rest are Druze and a small minority of Alawites. Druze are Arabs who practice an offshoot of Islam. Many of them consider themselves Syrian. Alawites are a branch of Shiite Islam. Syrian President Bashar Assad and key figures in his regime are Alawites. 

Read more: The Druze: The Middle East’s most persecuted people? 

Why Golan is strategically important 

The Golan is a hilly, 1,200-square-kilometer (460-square-mile) plateau overlooking Lebanon, Syria and the Jordan Valley.

[Image: Map of Golan Heights region from dw.com]

The Golan is only 60 km (40 miles) from Damascus and provides Israel with a strong defensive-offensive position and vantage point to observe military movements across the border. On the other hand, Syrian control over the Golan would provide it with strategic heights overlooking Israel. 

The security dimension has been heightened by the [US led so-called] civil war in Syria, which has seen Iran and its Lebanese Shiite ally Hezbollah entrench themselves on Israel’s doorstep through their support of the Assad regime. Israel says Iran and Hezbollah pose a threat and the Golan provides a security barrier. 

What resources does Golan have? 

Another key issue is water resources in an arid region. The Golan catchment area feeds into the Jordan River and Sea of Galilee, both major sources of water for Israel. 

[Although it’s nice to have water access, Israel solved that problem long ago with massive desalination operations]. 

The fertile land is used for agriculture, with growing areas for vineyards and orchards. 

It is also home to the only ski resort in Israel. 

What are the international repercussions of recognizing Israeli sovereignty? 

There is more than a security and water-resource dimension to President Donald Trump’s announcement that the US should recognize Israeli sovereignty over the Golan. 

It would also set a precedent that territory can be captured in war in violation of international law. Russia, for example, will take note of the inconsistency after five years of Western condemnation following its annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014. 

UN Security Council Resolutions 242 and 497, both supported by the United States, provide the legal basis stating that Israeli unilateral annexation of Syrian territory is in violation of international law. 

The [illegal US led] Syrian [so-called] civil war has severely weakened the authority of the state, giving Israel an opportunity to exert its claims over the Golan. It also comes as Israel’s right-wing government has a friend in the Trump administration, which already recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital in 2017 and moved the US Embassy there.”…
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Added: More on Trump regime approval of annexation of Golan Heights by Israel: 3/25/2019,Trump formally recognises Israeli sovereignty over Golan Heights, Al Jazeera. 

Israel seized much of the Golan Heights from Syria during the 1967 Six-Day War and then effectively annexed it in 1981, a move that was never recognised by the international community.

Syria’s foreign ministry called the US decision to recognise Israeli sovereignty over the Golan a blatant attack on the sovereignty and territorial integrity” of Syria, according to a statement carried by state news agency SANA…. 

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said it was impossible for Turkey to accept the US decision on the Golan Heights.

He added that action would be taken against the US over the move, including at the United Nations. [Not so. It’s a year later, March 2020, and the whole world-especially the UN-lets lawless, mass murdering US do whatever it wants]. 

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was “clear that the status of Golan has not changed,” UN spokesman Stephane Dujarric said on Monday. 

“The UN’s policy on Golan is reflected in the relevant resolutions of the Security Council and that policy has not changed,” Dujarric said. 

A UN Security Council resolution adopted unanimously by the 15-member body in 1981 declared that Israel’s “decision to impose its laws, jurisdiction and administration in the occupied Syrian Golan Heights is null and void and without international legal effect”. It also demanded Israel rescind its decision. 

Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs also issued a statement rejecting the US move and saying the Golan Heights are occupied Arab land. 

The Arab League condemned the move saying that “Trump’s recognition does not change the area’s status.” 

Earlier this month, a senior US administration official told reporters in Washington that there was “no change in [US] outlook or our policy vis-a-vis these territories and the need for a negotiated settlement there”. 

The official was responding to questions about why the US changed its description of the Golan Heights in its latest annual human rights report in which the area was referred to as “Israeli-controlled”, not “Israeli-occupied” as it was previously stated.” 

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