http://darthnader.net/2013/08/27/on-interventions-and-the-syrian-revolution/



 SYRIA <http://darthnader.net/category/syria-2/>
On Interventions and the Syrian Revolution
POSTED BY DARTHNADER <http://darthnader.net/author/gonzopolitique/> ⋅ AUGUST
27, 2013 ⋅ 6 
COMMENTS<http://darthnader.net/2013/08/27/on-interventions-and-the-syrian-revolution/#comments>

The Syrian revolution is a revolution that began as a struggle for
self-determination. The Syrian people demanded to determine their own
destiny. And, for more than two years, against all odds, and in the face of
massive repression and destruction from the Assad regime, they persevered.

In the course of the revolutionary process, many other actors have also
appeared on the scene to work against the struggle for self-determination.
Iran and its militias, with the backing of Russia, came to the aid of the
regime, to ensure the Syrian people would not be given this right. The
jihadis of the Islamic State of Iraq and Sham and others, under the guise
of “fighting the Assad regime,” worked against this right as well. And I
feel the same way about any Western intervention.

Some would argue that we have come a long way from that, that it isn’t even
about self-determination anymore, but rather, simply stopping the killing.
This is a position I cannot support. If it was simply about stopping the
killing, then I would’ve supported the jihadis when they came in, because,
no one can deny, they were the best armed and the best equipped to
challenge the Assad regime. But I didn’t, and many others didn’t, because
we knew that despite their ability to challenge the regime, that they did
not share the goals of the Syrian people. They wanted to control the Syrian
people, and stifle their ability to determine their own destiny. Because of
this, they were counter-revolutionaries, even if they were fighting against
the regime.

And now in the face of a possible Western intervention in Syria, I hold the
same position. Many would say I’m being ideological, and that I should just
focus on stopping the killing; but those people are ignoring that, even on
pragmatic terms and within their own line of reasoning, their argument
holds no sway, after repeated US insistence that “these will only be
punitive strikes” and they “do not intend to topple the regime.” What
indication is there that these strikes will do anything to stop the
killing, or “solve” the Syrian crisis?

I don’t care about sovereignty. Syria has become a land for everyone but
Syrians nowadays. The myth of Syrian sovereignty is not why I oppose
Western intervention. Neither is the prospect of the destruction of Syria,
for it has already been destroyed by this criminal regime. I oppose Western
intervention because it will work against the struggle for
self-determination, that is, against the Syrian revolution.

Assad used chemical weapons against his own people. I have no doubt about
this. And this could have been prevented if the Syrian resistance was
actually given weapons that could have tilted the balance against the
regime. But foreign powers sat on their hands, not wanting Assad to win,
but not wanting the resistance to win either. They couldn’t give weapons to
the Syrian people to defend themselves, they said, who knows whose hands
they might end up in? They might accidentally end up in, say, the hands of
Syrians who wanted to determine their own destiny despite foreign interests!

So we’ve come full circle. No one armed the Syrian resistance, so they were
killed by the regime, or forced to put up with jihadi infiltration. So
Assad used chemical weapons against the Syrians, and the West wants to
respond to teach Assad a lesson, a response that still guarantees that
Syrians have no say in the matter of their future. And the regime will
probably live through any “punitive” Western intervention, and the killing
will probably not stop.

But despite all that, the Syrian revolution, and, at its heart, the Syrian
people’s struggle for liberation and to determine their own destiny, will
live on.


*While protecting Hussein and giving weapons to him, the US was also
selling weapons to Iran but few remember Iran Contra.*

*--------------------------------------------------------------------------*
US Protected Iraq at UN from Iranian Charges of Chemical Weapons
Use<http://www.juancole.com/2013/08/protected-charges-chemical.html>

Posted on 08/28/2013 by Juan Cole

*Reprint edn., from my article in
Truthdig<http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/hussein_trial/>,
where you can find the hyperlinks giving the documentation. I thought these
findings by Joyce Battle from the documents she FOIA’ed ad posted at the
National Security Archive worth revisiting given the current controversy
over Syrian use of chemical weapons:*

In the 1970s, Iraq under Baath Party dictator Brigadier General Ahmad
Hassan al-Bakr had grown close to the Soviet Union, with which it signed a
treaty of friendship in 1972 and from which it began importing arms. In
1973, al-Bakr supported the Syrians in their war with Israel.

The ensuing poor relations with Washington were not repaired until 1983.
Persistent allegations are made by some observers, including journalist
Christopher Hitchens, that then-President Jimmy Carter put Hussein up to
invading Iran in September of 1980. These allegations seem implausible on
their face, and there is no documentary proof for them. A former National
Security Council staffer for Gulf affairs, Gary Sick, has told this author
that Hussein’s invasion of Iran came as a shock to the NSC in 1980. Sick’s
impression of continued frost between Washington and Baghdad is borne out
by documents published by the National Security Archive, housed at George
Washington University.

The turning point came in 1983, as the Reagan administration reevaluated
its policy toward the Middle East. Note that it does not appear to have
been deterred by a small matter such as Hussein’s propensity to massacre
townspeople like those at Dujail. The threat that Khomeinism posed to U.S.
interests in the region had been underlined by the rise of Shiite
radicalism in Lebanon. The U.S. suspected extremist Shiites of blowing up
the U.S. embassy and killing 63 persons in Beirut on April 18, 1983.
Hussein’s invasion of Iran had been stopped dead in its tracks by Iranian
military and irregular forces, and by 1982 Iran was beginning an effective
counterattack. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini desperately wanted Baghdad.
Ronald Reagan’s special envoy to the Middle East, Donald Rumsfeld (then
also CEO of G.D. Searle & Co.), began worrying about the implications if
the Iranians succeeded in taking it, as did the director of the Central
Intelligence Agency, William Casey.

One possible impediment to better relations between the U.S. and Iraq was
the latter’s use of chemical weapons. The 1925 Geneva Protocol, which
forbade the use of chemical weapons, specified that it “shall be
universally accepted as a part of International Law, binding alike the
conscience and the practice of nations.” The Reagan State Department was
well aware that Hussein had begun using chemicals against Iranian troops at
the front, and by Nov. 1 was actively considering [PDF] what punitive
measures might be taken against Iraq.

Nevertheless, Reagan sent Rumsfeld to Baghdad in December 1983. The
National Security Archive has posted a brief video of his meeting with
Hussein and the latter’s vice president and foreign minister, Tariq Aziz.
Rumsfeld was to stress his close relationship with the U.S. president. The
State Department summary [PDF] of Rumsfeld’s meeting with Tariq Aziz stated
that “the two agreed the U.S. and Iraq shared many common interests: peace
in the Gulf, keeping Syria and Iran off balance and less influential, and
promoting Egypt’s reintegration into the Arab world.” Aziz asked Rumsfeld
to intervene with Washington’s friends to get them to stop selling arms to
Iran. Increasing Iraq’s oil exports and a possible pipeline through Saudi
Arabia occupied a portion of their conversation.

The U.S. and Iraq were well on the way toward a restoration of diplomatic
relations (broken off in 1967 by the colonels’ regime that preceded the
Baath) and a military alliance against Iran. The State Department, however,
issued a press statement on March 5, 1984, condemning Iraqi use of chemical
weapons. This statement appears to have been Washington’s way of doing
penance for its new alliance.
Unaware of the depths of Reagan administration hypocrisy on the issue,
Hussein took the March 5 State Department condemnation extremely seriously,
and appears to have suspected that the United States was planning to stab
him in the back. Secretary of State George Shultz notes in a briefing for
Rumsfeld in spring of 1984 [PDF] that the Iraqis were extremely confused by
concrete U.S. policies toward Lebanon, Syria, Egypt, Jordan, Israel and
combating Khomeini. “In each case,” Shultz observes, “Iraqi officials have
professed to be at a loss to explain our actions as measured against our
stated objectives. As with our CW statement, their temptation is to give up
rational analysis and retreat to the line that US policies are basically
anti-Arab and hostage to the desires of Israel.”

Rumsfeld had to be sent back to Baghdad for a second meeting, to smooth
ruffled Baath feathers. The above-mentioned State Department briefing notes
for this discussion remarked that the atmosphere in Baghdad (for Rumsfeld)
had worsened for two reasons. First, Iraq had failed to completely repulse
a major Iranian offensive and had lost the “strategically significant
Majnun Island oil fields and accepting heavy casualties.” Second, the March
5 scolding of Iraq for its use of poison gas had “sharply set back”
relations between the two countries.

The relationship was repaired, but on Hussein’s terms. He continued to use
chemical weapons and, indeed, vastly expanded their use as Washington
winked at Western pharmaceutical firms providing him materiel. The only
conclusion one can draw from available evidence is that Rumsfeld was more
or less dispatched to mollify Hussein and assure him that his use of
chemical weapons was no bar to developing the relationship with the U.S.,
whatever the State Department spokesman was sent out to say. As former
National Security Council staffer Howard Teicher affirmed, “Pursuant to the
secret NSDD [National Security Directive], the United States actively
supported the Iraqi war effort by supplying the Iraqis with billions of
dollars of credits, by providing US military intelligence and advice to the
Iraqis, and by closely monitoring third country arms sales to Iraq to make
sure that Iraq had the military weaponry required.” The requisite weaponry
included cluster bombs. Whether it also included, from Washington’s point
of view, chemical weapons and biological precursors for anthrax, Teicher
does not say.

Teicher adds that the CIA had knowledge of, and U.S. officials encouraged,
the provisioning of Iraq with high-powered weaponry by U.S. allies. He
adds: “For example, in 1984, the Israelis concluded that Iran was more
dangerous than Iraq to Israel’s existence due to the growing Iranian
influence and presence in Lebanon. The Israelis approached the United
States in a meeting in Jerusalem that I attended with Donald Rumsfeld.
Israeli Foreign Minister Ytizhak Shamir asked Rumsfeld if the United States
would deliver a secret offer of Israeli assistance to Iraq. The United
States agreed. I traveled with Rumsfeld to Baghdad and was present at the
meeting in which Rumsfeld told Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz about
Israel’s offer of assistance. Aziz refused even to accept the Israelis’
letter to Hussein.” It might have been hoped that a country that arose in
part in response to Nazi uses of poison gas would have been more sensitive
about attempting to ally with a regime then actively deploying such a
weapon, even against its own people (some gassing of Kurds had already
begun).

The new American alliance might have been a public relations debacle if
Iran succeeded in its 1984 attempt to have Iraq directly condemned at the
United Nations for use of chemical weapons. As far as possible, Shultz
wanted to weasel out of joining such a U.N. condemnation of Iraq. He wrote
in a cable that the U.S. delegation to the U.N. “should work to develop
general Western position in support of a motion to take ‘no decision’ on
Iranian draft resolution on use of chemical weapons by Iraq. If such a
motion gets reasonable and broad support and sponsorship, USDEL should vote
in favor. Failing Western support for ‘no decision,’ USDEL should abstain.”
Shultz in the first instance wanted to protect Hussein from condemnation by
a motion of “no decision,” and hoped to get U.S. allies aboard. If that
ploy failed and Iraq were to be castigated, he ordered that the U.S. just
abstain from the vote. Despite its treaty obligations in this regard, the
U.S. was not even to so much as vote for a U.N. resolution on the subject!

Shultz also wanted to throw up smokescreens to take the edge off the
Iranian motion, arguing that the U.N. Human Rights Commission was “an
inappropriate forum” for consideration of chemical weapons, and stressing
that loss of life owing to Iraq’s use of chemicals was “only a part” of the
carnage that ensued from a deplorable war. A more lukewarm approach to
chemical weapons use by a rogue regime (which referred to the weapons as an
“insecticide” for enemy “insects”) could not be imagined. In the end, the
U.N. resolution condemned the use of chemical weapons but did not name Iraq
directly as a perpetrator.

When the Dujail case [against Saddam Hussein] is resolved and the tribunal
trying Hussein goes on to other crimes, sooner or later the issue of
chemical weapons use must arise. Iran is already furious that the tribunal
seems unlikely to charge Hussein for his battlefield deployment of this
weapon. When the issue arises, it will be difficult for Donald Rumsfeld to
avoid sharing the docket, at least symbolically, with his old friend,
Hussein. Rumsfeld helped to forge the U.S. alliance with Iraq that lasted
from 1984 until Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait in August of 1991. He did so
in full knowledge that the Baath regime was using mustard gas—which
severely burns the lungs—against the Iranian children sent by Khomeini to
launch “human wave” attacks. One Iranian survivor commented that with each
flaming breath he takes, he wishes the gas had killed him. The pogrom
against the Shiites of Dujail was a horrible crime. Far more horrible ones,
in which the U.S. government was intimately complicit, were to follow.

(Further evidence for these findings in CIA documents has recently been
presented.<http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/08/25/secret_cia_files_prove_america_helped_saddam_as_he_gassed_iran>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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