Yohannan Chemarapally
THE Syrian president, Bashar Assad, declared in late June
that Syria was
now in a “state of war.” He was speaking after the shooting down of a Turkish
military jet which had entered the Syrian air space. Syria
said that it had responded to a “gross violation of its territory.” Turkish
officials, including the prime minister, have admitted that the plane did stray
briefly into Syrian air space. The Turkish foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu,
has confirmed that the downed jet was on a radar testing mission. Such tests
help in providing information about the position of anti-aircraft guns and
ground to air defences. Relations between Turkey
and Syria have
been tense since the uprising began. The wreckage of the jet was found in
Syrian waters with telltale signs that it was shot down by an anti-aircraft gun.
Anti-aircraft guns have a range of around two kilometres.
INTERVENTION PLAN THROUGH TURKEY
A NATO attack on Syria
will not be like their military adventure in Libya .
That may be one of the reasons the West is trying a different model of
intervention in Syria .
This time, intervention could be through the auspices of Turkey ,
bolstered by the petrodollars from client monarchies like Qatar
and Saudi Arabia .
The al Sauds recently announced that they will be paying the salaries of the
rebel “Free Syrian Army” with the approval of the Obama administration. Most of
the casualties after the six point Annan peace plan was put in motion have been
Syrian army-men. In the last week of June, the Syrian government announced that
it had buried 112 of its army personnel.
The NATO secretary general, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, said that
the alliance strongly condemned the shooting down of the Turkish fighter jet
but said that Article 5 of the Treaty was not discussed. Article 5 calls for a united military
response if a NATO member country is attacked. The Obama administration had
announced that it would work with its NATO ally Turkey
to hold Syria
accountable for what US
officials claim was “a deliberate act” of shooting down the Turkish fighter jet.
But key NATO states like Germany
are reluctant to get sucked into a military conflict with Syria .
The Russian foreign ministry urged Turkey
not to view the incident as “a provocation or intentional action” and that the
shooting down of the F-4 fighter should not be used to further destabilize the
situation in the region. But Erdogan seems determined to fish in troubled
waters. In a speech to the country’s Parliament in the last week of June,
Erdogan said that Turkey
would provide “all possible support to liberate the Syrians from dictatorship.”
The Syrian rebel army is being trained by NATO in a command and control centre
in Iskenderum, near the border with Syria .
CIA TRAINING ANTI-SYRIA FORCES
The trouble in Syria
has already had its repercussions in neighbouring Lebanon
where fighting has broken out between pro- and anti-Syrian government
supporters. In Iraq ,
extremist groups have been mounting deadly terror attacks against Shia pilgrims
and places of worship. “Syria
is not Libya . It
will not implode. It will explode beyond its borders,” Kofi Annan has warned. Even
in Libya , the
US/NATO intervention has only wrought chaos and anarchy. The legacy of the US
invasion of Iraq
is still playing havoc in the region, stoking sectarian strife and regional
animosities. Nobel Peace Laureate Mairead Maguire issued a heart felt plea to
stop the rush towards war in Syria .
“We need to stop this mad rush towards a war the mothers and fathers and
children of Syria
do not want and do not deserve,” she wrote. But another more recent Nobel Peace
Prize winner, the current president of the United
States , seems to be all for a military
solution to the Syrian crisis.
The Syrian opposition, now in possession of lethal
sophisticated arms supplied by the West and its regional allies, has been
targeting the Syrian army and government buildings in Damascus
province and a few other cities. Stories in the American media have now
acknowledged a widely known fact ---- that the CIA is training the anti-government
forces based in Turkey
and other neighbouring countries. Gunmen backed by the West attacked a pro-government
television station --- Ikhbariya TV located in the southern suburbs of Damascus .
Three journalists and four security guards were killed in the attack. After
bombing the building to rubble, the militants took away another dozen employees.
Their fate is still unclear. There was hardly any criticism for these heinous
acts from those in the West posing as champions of democracy.
The UNHRC has said that Syrians are being increasingly
targeted because of their religious beliefs. It has now come to light that
those killed in the massacre at Houla were mostly Alawites. The western media's
pronounced bias was again on full display in the third week of July, when the
international media reported that Syrian government forces were responsible for
the massacre of more than 200 people near the city of Hama .
About 24 hours later, the truth came out that there were only 15 casualties,
all of them rebel fighters. The government troops were responding to an attack.
The truth did not stop Indian newspapers from repeating the lie in editorials
critical of the government in Syria .
The German newspaper, Frankfurter Algermeine Zeitung, has
reported that the real authors of the Houla massacres were members of the Free
Syrian Army, propped up by Turkey
and the West. Alawites, along with Christian and other minorities, are known to
support the government. Amnesty International has documented the killing of
captured soldiers and the kidnapping and killing of people suspected to be
close to the government. The UN’s Special Representative for Children and Armed
Conflict condemned the recruitment and use of children by the armed groups. The
German media has reported recently that their Intelligence Services have found
large numbers of Al Qaeda activists from other countries active inside Syria .
The increasing number of suicide bombings bear testimony to this.
WITH AN EYE ON IRAN
The US
secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, has been demanding the ouster of the
Syrian president on every available occasion. She repeated the demand again
when a special meeting was convened in Geneva
at the end of June in a seemingly last ditch attempt to save the “Kofi Annan
Peace Plan.” At the meeting the key international powers agreed to the idea of
a transitional government which would include members of the opposition, being
set up. Russia
remained opposed to the American demand that Assad should not have any role in
the proposed transitional government.
Before the Geneva
meet, the Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, had categorically stated
that Moscow “is not supporting and
will not support any external meddling and this also applies to the fate of
Bashar al Assad.” Russia as well as Kofi Annan wanted Iran and Saudi Arabia to
be invited to the Geneva meeting to brighten the prospects for a negotiated
peaceful settlement as both the countries are interested parties in the Syrian
conflict. But the US
secretary of state objected to Iran ’s
participation arguing that Iran
had no meaningful role to play. The main goal of US and Israeli strategists is
to instal a pro-American regime in Damascus ,
leaving Iran
without friends in the region. Iran
could then be the next candidate for regime change.
The final communiqué, issued after the meeting, said that
the proposed transitional government “could include members of the present
government and the opposition and other groups and shall be formed on the basis
of mutual consent.” Despite the demands of the US
and its allies, Russia
and China saw
to it that the final communiqué called for a “Syrian solution” to the ongoing
conflict. The UN peace envoy to Syria ,
Kofi Annan, warned that “time was running out” and said that peaceful dialogue
was the only way to avoid a full-fledged civil war. Annan also warned about the
dangers of underestimating the “extreme dangers posed by the conflict --- to Syria ,
to the region and to the world.” The Russian foreign minister said in Geneva
that he was delighted with the outcome of the meeting saying that no foreign
military intervention would be imposed on Syria .
Not surprisingly, the opposition was quick to reject the
proposal of a transitional government that was proposed in Geneva .
The Syrian National Council (SNC), the opposition umbrella group, staid that
the latest proposals “were a farce.” The official Syrian newspaper, Al Baath,
said that the agreement in Geneva
failed because it resembled another enlarged meeting of the UN Security Council.
Teheran said that the Geneva meet
would have had a greater chance of success if the Syrian and Iranian
representatives were present at the talks. “The meeting was not successful --- because
Syria was not
present and some influential nations were not present,” said the Iranian deputy
foreign minister, Hossein Amir Abdolohian.
President Assad meanwhile ordered his recently reshuffled
cabinet to single-mindedly focus on crushing the uprising which is now in its 16th
month. “When one is in a state of war, all our policies and capabilities must
be used to secure victory,” Assad told the new cabinet. The Syrian government
seems prepared for all eventualities. And it is far from isolated
internationally. Venezuela ,
like other Latin American and Caribbean countries, has
been with the Syrian government in its time of need. The Venezuelan government
recently dispatched 35,000 tonnes of diesel to Syria .
It is planning to send another ship full of diesel in the coming weeks. Due to
act of sabotage and terrorism targeting gas and oil pipelines, coupled with
sanctions imposed by the EU on the state oil company, Syrians have been facing
an acute energy crisis. Iran
has also been helping out.
Courtesy: People's Democracy
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