The Syrian war stalemate appears to be over. The regional powers surrounding Syria ā especially Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Qatar, and Jordan ā have re-ignited their war against the Syrian government. After over 200,000 dead and millions of refugees, the U.S. allies in the region recently re-committed to deepening the war, with incalculable consequences.
The new war pact was made between Obamaās regional darlings, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, who agreed to step up deeper military cooperation and establish a joint command in the occupied Syrian region of Idlib.
Turkey and Saudi Arabia are now openly backing Islamic extremists under the newly rebranded āConquest Army.ā The on-the-ground leadership of this ānewā coalition consists of Jabhat al-Nusra ā the āofficialā al-Qaeda affiliate ā and Ahrar al-Sham, whose leader previously stated that his group was the āreal al-Qaeda.ā
The Huffington Post reports:
āThe Turkish-Saudi agreement has led to a new joint command center in the northeastern Syrian province of Idlib. There, a coalition of groups ā including Nusra and other Islamist brigades such as Ahrar al-Sham that Washington views as extremist ā are progressively eroding Assad’s front. The rebel coalition also includes more moderate elements of the Free Syrian Army that have received U.S. support in the past.ā
The article admits that the Free Syrian Army ā that Obama previously labeled as āmoderatesā and gave cash and guns to ā has been swallowed up by the extremist groups.
This dynamic has the potential to re-engulf the region in violence; deep Saudi pocketbooks combined with reports of looming Turkish ground forces are a catastrophe in the making.
Interestingly, the Saudi-Turkish alliance barely raised eyebrows in the U.S. media. President Obama didnāt think to comment on the subject, let alone condemn it.
The media was focused on an odd narrative of Obama reportedly being āconcernedā about the alliance, but ādisengagedā from what two of his close allies were doing in a region that the U.S. has micromanaged for decades.
It seems especially odd for the media to accept that Obama has a āhands offā approach in Syria when at the same time the media is reporting about a new U.S. program training Syrian rebels in Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey.
Itās inconceivable that Obama would coordinate deeply with Turkey to set up a Syrian rebel training camp on Turkish soil, while at the same time be ādisengagedā from the Turkish-Saudi war coalition in Syria.
One possible motive behind the fake narrative of ānon-cooperationā between Obama and his Turkish-Saudi allies is that the U.S. is supposed to be fighting a āwar on terrorism.ā
So when Turkey and Saudi Arabia announce that theyāre closely coordinating with terrorists in Syria ā like al-Nusra and Ahrar al-Sham ā Obama needs an alibi to avoid being caught at the crime scene. Heās not an accomplice, simply ādisengaged.ā
This is likely the reason why Obama has insisted that his new āmoderateā rebels being trained in Turkey will fight ISIS, not the Syrian government. But this claim too is ridiculous.
Is Obama really going to throw a couple hundred newly-trained āmoderateā Syrian rebels at ISIS while his Turkish-Saudi allies focus all their fire on the Syrian Government? The question answers itself.
The media has made mention of this obvious conundrum, but never bothers to follow up, leaving Obamaās lame narrative unchallenged. For example, the LA Times reports:
āThe White House wants the [U.S. trained rebel] proxy force to target Islamic State militants, while many of the Syrian rebels ā and the four host nations [where Syrian rebels are being trained] ā want to focus on ousting Syrian President Bashar Assad.ā
The article simply shrugs its shoulders at the irreconcilable. The article also fails to mention that Obamaās ānewā training camps arenāt new at all; heās been arming and training Syrian rebels since at least 2012, the only difference being that the ānewā training camps are supposedly meant to target ISIS, compared to the training camps that were openly used to target the Syrian government.
Hereās the LA Times in 2013:
āThe covert U.S. training [of Syrian rebels] at bases in Jordan and Turkey began months before President Obama approved plans to begin directly arming the opposition to Syrian President Bashar Assad, according to U.S. officials and rebel commanders.ā
This is media amnesia at its worse. Recent events canāt be understood if the media doesnāt place events in context. In practice this āforgetfulnessā provides political cover to the Obama administration, shielding his longstanding direct role in the Syrian war, allowing him to pretend to a āpassive,ā āhands offā approach.
When it was reported in 2012 that the Obama administration was funneling weapons to the Syrian rebels, the few media outlets that mentioned the story didnāt bother to do any follow up. It simply fell into the media memory hole. After the weapons funneling report came out, Obama incredulously stated that he was only supplying ānon lethalā support to the rebels, and the media printed his words unchallenged.
Consequently, there was no public discussion about the consequences of the U.S. partaking in a multi-nation proxy war against Syria, a country that borders war ravaged Iraq.
In 2013 when Obama announced that he would be bombing the Syrian government in response to a supposed gas attack, the U.S. media asked for no evidence of the allegation, and strove to buttress Obamaās argument for aggression.
And when Pulitzer Prize winner Seymour Hersh wrote an article exposing Obamaās lies over the aborted bombing mission, the article didnāt see the light of day in the U.S. media. Critically thoughtful voices were not welcome. They remain unwelcome.
In 2015 direct U.S. military intervention in Syria remains a real possibility. All the conditions that led to Obamaās decision to bomb Syria in 2013 remain in place.
In fact, a U.S. intervention is even more likely now that Turkey and Saudi Arabia are fighting openly against the Syrian government, since the Saudi-Turkish alliance might find itself in a key battle that demands the special assistance that only the U.S. air force can offer.
Unsurprisingly, there has been renewed discussion of a U.S. enforced āno fly zoneā in Syria. ISIS doesnāt have an air force, so a no fly zone would be undeniably aimed at the Syrian government to destroy its air force. The new debate over a āno fly zoneā is happening at the same time as a barrage of new allegations of āchemical weaponsā use are being made against the Syrian government.
If a no fly zone is eventually declared by the Obama Administration it will be promoted as a āhumanitarian intervention, that strives to create a āhumanitarian corridorā to āprotect civiliansā ā the same rhetoric that was used for a massive U.S.-led NATO bombing campaign in Libya that destroyed the country and continues to create a massive refugee crisis.
As the Syrian war creates fresh atrocities the Obama administration will be pressured to openly support his Saudi-Turkish allies, just as he came out into the open in 2013 when he nearly bombed the Syrian government.
History is repeating itself. But this time the stakes are higher: the region has already been destabilized with the wars in Iraq, Libya, and Syria, and the regional conflicts have sharpened between U.S. allies on one hand, and Iran, Syria, Hezbollah and Russia on the other.
Such a volatile dynamic demands a media willing to explain the significance of these events. The truth is that Obama has been a proxy war president that has torn apart the Middle East as badly as his predecessor did, and if the U.S. public remains uninformed about developing events, an even larger regional war is inevitable.
Shamus Cooke is a social service worker, trade unionist, and writer for Workers Action (www.workerscompass.org). He can be reached at shamuscooke@gmail
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