[image: The people of Syria ‘celebrate’ the fact that they will
not be killed with sarin gas anymore … ‘just’ by
conventional means.] <http://www.therevoltingsyrian.com/image/61417978561>

The people of Syria ‘celebrate’ the fact that they will not be killed with
sarin gas anymore … ‘just’ by conventional means.

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Syria: genocide by international consensus
Amr Salahi
Friday, 20 September 2013 10:53
  36  2

  12  49

[image: Bashar Assad]

Outside Syria, not many people remember the peaceful protests calling for
freedom and democracy that began the Syrian revolution in March 2011, and
how those protests were met by the Assad regime.
*Part 1: A green light to Assad*

*Ever since the Syrian regime gassed its own citizens in the Damascus
suburbs in a chemical attack on August 21, the issue has rarely been out of
the Western news media. However, the debate has been very simplistic. Any
observer would be forgiven for thinking that the only crime committed in
Syria was this chemical attack, and that the Syrian people had not been
subjected to a genocidal war at the hands of a ruthless sectarian
dictatorship for two and a half years.*

*
*

*Of course, the original cause of the conflict has been largely forgotten.
Outside Syria, not many people remember the peaceful protests calling for
freedom and democracy that began the Syrian revolution in March 2011, and
how those protests were met by the Assad regime, with unarmed protesters
being slaughtered in the streets and children who wrote slogans on walls or
took part in the protests tortured, on many occasions to death, in the
regime's jails. It was only after many long months of killing and
oppression that defecting soldiers from the regime's army formed the Free
Syrian Army, to defend peaceful protesters as well as ordinary citizens
from government attacks.*

*
*

*An observer of the debate would also be forgiven for thinking that the
countries of the world are divided on Syria. The received wisdom on the
Syrian conflict is that the United States, its allies in NATO and the Gulf
States are offering support to the rebels while Russia, China, Iran and the
Lebanese Hezbollah are supporting the regime.*

*
*

* Bashar Al-Assad's regime likes to paint itself as part of an "axis of
resistance" against US and Israeli imperialism which includes Iran and
Hezbollah and is supported by Russia; this is why it has gained support
from the anti-imperialist left in Western countries. A closer look at the
support the regime is receiving vis-a-vis the "support" the rebels are
receiving from their supposed allies shows that there is in fact little
difference between the major powers on the Syrian issue. Russian ships
carrying weapons, including aircraft, dock regularly in Latakia and Tartus,
ensuring that the regime remains armed to the teeth and able to fight on
despite the military setbacks inflicted on it by the rebels. Iran has not
only sent weapons to the regime but also troops and advisers. It is
believed widely in Syria that these advisers are the real rulers of the
country. Hezbollah was instrumental in the regime's ruthless bombardment
and capture of Qusair, and its fighters now line up alongside the regime in
Deraa and Aleppo.*

*
*

*On the other hand, the United States and the European countries have given
rhetorical support to the Syrian opposition while making sure that the Free
Syrian Army remains unable to defeat the government's forces by imposing a
strict arms embargo. For example, last year the Free Syrian Army managed to
acquire anti-aircraft weapons but the United States and NATO refused to
allow them to be transported to Syria and they remained in storage in
Turkey. *

*
*

*In June this year, following a regime chemical attack on the town of
Saraqeb, the Obama administration announced that it would arm the Syrian
rebels. To-date they have not received a single bullet from the United
States or from any of its European allies. The FSA's main source of weapons
remains those captured from the regime or those sold to it by corrupt
regime officers. It is thought that Gulf countries have supplied weapons
but not on a scale that would tip the balance of the conflict. The main
factor ensuring that the conflict and genocide continue, and the Assad
regime stays in power, is the continuing embargo on weapons to the Free
Syrian Army, which lacks the heavy weapons needed to defeat the state's
armed forces.*

*
*

*In order to understand the position of the United States and its European
allies, it is helpful to look at the statements of Israeli officials. While
the main pro-Israel lobby group in the United States, AIPAC, publicly
declared its support for strikes against the Syrian regime following the
most recent chemical weapons attack, it is much more evident that Israel
would in fact prefer Bashar Al-Assad to remain in power. The Wall Street
Journal reported recently that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
urged US Secretary of State Kerry to reach a deal with Russia that would
avoid a military strike on Syria, expressing fears that a US strike would
strengthen the Syrian opposition and allow it to gain control of Assad's
chemical weapons. Netanyahu's office later issued a denial that any such
exchange took place.*

*In November 2011, relatively early in the Syrian revolution when there was
no serious talk of an Islamic extremist presence in Syria, Amos Gilad, a
senior Israeli defence ministry official, said that Assad's removal from
power would be "devastating for Israel"; the Zionist state, he added, would
then face an "Islamic Empire" encompassing Syria, Jordan and Egypt run by
the Muslim Brotherhood and committed to its destruction. In May 2013,
shortly after an Israeli strike on Damascus, Ephraim Halevy, a former
director of Israel's Mossad spy agency, went much further in an article in
the American journal Foreign Affairs. Calling Assad "Israel's Man in
Damascus" he spelt out the reason why: for the past 40 years Assad has kept
Israel's "border" with Syria quiet and guaranteed its security. What Halevy
means is that Assad has allowed Israel to occupy the Golan Heights,
undisturbed by any resistance. Another Israeli intelligence official summed
up the Israeli position towards the conflict in Syria thus: "Our ‘best-case
scenario' is that they continue to busy themselves fighting each other and
don't turn their attention to us."*

*
*

*Israel's attitude to the Syrian conflict allows us to consider the
developments that have taken place since the chemical attack in a new
light. After President Obama announced that the US would strike Syria,
anti-war activists and left-wing "anti-imperialists" were up in arms, as
were right-wing pro-Israel Republicans in the United States. There was much
comment that the rebels fighting against Assad were sectarian extremists
with links to Al-Qaeda, who posed a threat to Syria's minorities,
especially its Christian community, and that they were just as brutal as
Assad. Conspiracy theories without any evidence which blamed the rebels for
the sarin attack received mainstream coverage and were used to argue that
the US and its allies were being dragged into an Iraq-style war.*

*
*

*Sadly for the conspiracy theorists, the evidence that the Syrian regime
carried out the attack is incontrovertible. The United Nations report on
the attack published on Tuesday, which does not assign blame, nevertheless
concludes that it was launched from Mount Qassioun, a major government
military base outside Damascus from which attacks against the Damascus
suburbs are launched regularly. The report also concluded that the attack
was launched using M14 rockets, which only the regime possesses, and that
the sarin used was of a quality that could only be produced on an
industrial scale using the resources of a government. *

*
*

*The Assad regime's own reaction to the attack points to its
responsibility, and to its sectarian character. First, it denied that any
such attack took place; then it conceded that the attack happened but
blamed the rebels; then a few days later the world was treated to the
bizarre spectacle of Syrian government spokeswoman Buthaina Shaaban
appearing on Sky News to claim that the child victims of the attack were in
fact brought to the Ghouta area from Latakia province (an Alawite-majority
area 300 miles away) by "terrorists" and then killed. The government did
not declare any period of mourning for the 1,429 victims of the attack and,
in fact, its supporters were seen celebrating and handing out sweets on the
streets of Damascus in its immediate aftermath.*

*
*

*The anti-war activists and their new-found allies the Assad supporters and
right-wing Republicans need not have worried. Despite a great deal of
emotional language from John Kerry about the use of chemical weapons and
the 426 children who died as a result, Obama's strike threat dwindled away
to nothing. From being a "limited" attack to punish Assad, but not tip the
balance in favour of the rebels, it became an "unbelievably small" one, as
Kerry called it on his visit to London, to a non-existent one, when Kerry
and Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov agreed to a deal which would allow
Assad to keep his conventional weapons and continue using them to kill his
own people, but oblige him to give up his chemical weapons. It is doubtful
whether the deal will be backed by a binding Security Council resolution,
and it is estimated that it will take until the middle of 2014 to destroy
the chemical weapons. This is probably the first time in history that a
criminal is to be punished simply by taking away one of his weapons.*

*
*

*The deal struck between Kerry and Lavrov makes almost everyone a winner.
The United States can continue posing as a supporter of the Syrian people;
Israel is satisfied that "their man in Damascus" is still in place; Russia
can continue arming Assad and today appears to have stood up to the United
States, when in reality there is little difference between the positions of
these two nations on the Syrian issue; and Iran can continue to participate
actively in Assad's sectarian war while pretending that it is standing up
to the United States and Israel. The anti-war campaigners are in ignorant
bliss because they believe that they have stopped a war on Syria, not
knowing or caring that Syrians are still enduring the most horrific war
since the genocide in Rwanda. The only losers are the Syrian people.*

*
*

*For two and a half years, they have been pleading with the world to stop
Assad's war against them but to no avail. The chemical attack is only the
latest chapter in this genocide. Constant efforts have been made in both
the mainstream and alternative media to belittle the suffering in Syria,
discredit the casualty figures and assign blame to the opposition for the
regime's crimes but what is happening is genocide by any standard. United
Nations figures reveal that 110,000 people have been killed since the
Syrian revolution broke out in March 2011. Seven million people have been
displaced and the death rate is approximately 5,000 people per month. Only
the regime has the capacity to kill and displace people on this scale and
it has now received a green light to continue killing its own citizens, as
long as it doesn't use chemical weapons.*

*
*

*The suffering and the genocide of the Syrian people will be detailed in
the part 2 of this article.*

- See more at:
http://www.middleeastmonitor.com/articles/middle-east/7448-syria-genocide-by-international-consensus#sthash.uralWKkL.dpuf

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