The US-Russia Proxy War in Syria

December 1, 2015

 

 

https://consortiumnews.com/2015/12/01/the-us-russia-proxy-war-in-syria/ 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=934682&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=https%3A%2F%2Fconsortiumnews.com%2F2015%2F12%2F01%2Fthe-us-russia-proxy-war-in-syria%2F>
 

 

Exclusive: The risk of Syria becoming a proxy war between the U.S. and Russia 
became real last week when Turkey and Syrian jihadists used U.S.-supplied 
weaponry to shoot down a Russian warplane and rescue helicopter, killing two 
Russians, a danger that ex-CIA analyst Ray McGovern explores.

 

 

By  Ray McGovern

 

Belatedly, at a sidebar meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the 
Paris climate summit on Monday, President Barack Obama reportedly expressed 
regret for last week’s killing of a Russian pilot who was shot down by a 
Turkish air-to-air missile fired by a U.S.-supplied F-16 and the subsequent 
death of a Russian marine on a search-and-rescue mission, apparently killed by 
a U.S.-made TOW missile.

 

But Obama administration officials continued to take the side of Turkey, a NATO 
“ally” which claims implausibly that it was simply defending its air space and 
that the Russian pilot of the SU-24 warplane had ignored repeated warnings. 
According to accounts based on Turkish data, the SU-24 may have strayed over a 
slice of Turkish territory for 17 seconds. 

 

[SeeConsortiumnews.com 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=934682&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fconsortiumnews.com%2F>
 ’s “Facts Back Russia on Turkish Attack 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=934682&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=https%3A%2F%2Fconsortiumnews.com%2F2015%2F11%2F30%2Ffacts-back-russia-on-turkish-attack%2F>
 .”]

President Barack Obama meets with President Vladimir Putin of Russia on the 
sidelines of the G20 Summit at Regnum Carya Resort in Antalya, Turkey, Sunday, 
Nov. 15, 2015. National Security Advisior Susan E. Rice listens at left. 
(Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

 

Immediately after the incident on Nov. 24, Obama offered a knee-jerk 
justification of Turkey’s provocative action 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=934682&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=https%3A%2F%2Fconsortiumnews.com%2F2015%2F11%2F24%2Fturkey-provokes-russia-with-shoot-down%2F>
  which appears to have been a deliberate attack on a Russian warplane to deter 
continued bombing of Syrian jihadists, including the Islamic State and Al 
Qaeda’s Nusra Front. Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, an Islamist, has 
supported various jihadists as his tip of the spear in his goal to overthrow 
the secular regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

 

In his first public comments about the Turkish attack, Obama gracelessly 
asserted Turkey’s right to defend its territory and air space although there 
was never any indication that the SU-24 – even if it had strayed momentarily 
into Turkish air space – had any hostile intentions against Turkey. Indeed, 
Turkey and the United States were well aware that the Russian planes were 
targeting the Islamic State, Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front and other jihadist rebels.

 

Putin even complained, “We told our U.S. partners in advance where, when at 
what altitudes our pilots were going to operate. The U.S.-led coalition, which 
includes Turkey, was aware of the time and place where our planes would 
operate. And this is exactly where and when we were attacked. Why did we share 
this information with the Americans? Either they don’t control their allies, or 
they just pass this information left and right without realizing what the 
consequences of such actions might be. We will have to have a serious talk with 
our U.S. partners.”

 

Putin also suggested that the Turkish attack was in retaliation for Russia’s 
bombing of a truck convoy caring Islamic State oil to Turkey. On Monday, on the 
sidelines of the Paris summit, Putin said Russia has “received additional 
information confirming that that oil from the deposits controlled by Islamic 
State militants enters Turkish territory on industrial scale.”

 

Turkey’s Erdogan — also in Paris — denied buying oil from terrorists and vowed 
to resign “if it is proven that we have, in fact, done so.”

 

Was Obama Angry?

 

In private, Obama may have been outraged by Erdogan’s reckless actions – as 
some reports suggest – but, if so, Obama seems publicly more afraid of 
offending the neocons who dominate Official Washington’s opinion circles and 
who hold key positions in his own administration, than of provoking a possible 
nuclear confrontation with Russia.

 

On Nov. 24, even as Russian emotions were running high – reacting to the 
killing of one Russian pilot and the death of a second Russian marine killed 
after his helicopter was shot down apparently by a U.S.-supplied TOW missile 
fired by Syrian jihadists – Obama chose to act “tough” against Putin, both 
during a White House press conference with French President Francois Holland 
and later with pro-Turkish remarks from U.S. officials.

 

During the press conference after the Turkish shoot-down and the deliberate 
fire from Turkish-backed Syrian jihadists aiming at two Russian airmen as they 
parachuted to the ground, Obama chose to make disparaging remarks about the 
Russian president.

 

Obama boasted about the 65 nations in the U.S.-led coalition against the 
Islamic State compared to Putin’s small coalition of Russia and Iran (although 
Putin’s tiny coalition appears to be much more serious and effective than 
Obama’s bloated one, which includes countries such as Turkey, Saudi Arabia and 
Qatar that have been implicated in supporting jihadist elements, including Al 
Qaeda and the Islamic State).

 

By delivering these anti-Russian insults at such a delicate time, Obama 
apparently was trusting that Putin would keep his cool and tamp down public 
emotions at home, even as Obama lacked the integrity and courage to stand up to 
neocon criticism from The Washington Post’s editorial page or from some of his 
hawkish subordinates.

 

The administration’s neocons who keep demanding an escalation of tensions with 
Russia include Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs 
Victoria Nuland. Then, there are the officials most identified with arms 
procurement, sales and use, such as Defense Secretary Ashton Carter.

 

Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Joseph Dunford recently volunteered to 
Congress that U.S. forces “can impose a no-fly zone” for Syria (a dangerous 
play advocated by presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and Sen. John McCain). 
Dunford is the same hawk who identified Russia as the “existential threat” to 
the U.S. and said it would be “reasonable” to send heavy weapons to Ukraine on 
Russia’s border.

 

Meanwhile, NATO commander Gen. Philip Breedlove keeps up his fly-by-the-pants 
information warfare campaign citing Russian “aggression,” “invasions” and plans 
to do still more evil things. One is tempted to dismiss him as a buffoon; but 
he is the NATO commander.

 

Lack of Control

 

It does not appear as though Obama has the same degree of control over foreign 
and defense policy that Putin enjoys in Moscow – or at least one hopes Putin 
can retain such control since some hard-line Russian nationalists are fuming 
that Putin has been too accommodating of his Western “partners.”

 

Perhaps the greatest danger from Obama’s acquiescence to the neocons’ new Cold 
War with Russia is that the neocon hopes for “regime change in Moscow” will be 
realized except that Putin will be replaced by some ultra-nationalist who would 
rather risk nuclear war than accept further humiliation of Mother Russia.

 

Meanwhile, back in Washington, the U.S. establishment is such that the 
generals, the arms manufacturers and weapons merchants, the Defense Department, 
and most of Congress have a very strong say in U.S. foreign policy – and Obama 
seems powerless to change it.

 

The model of governing in Washington is a far cry from Russia’s guiding 
principle ofedinonachaliye – by which one supreme authority is in clear control 
of decision-making on defense and foreign policy.

 

Even when Obama promises, he often fails to deliver. Think back to what Obama 
told then-President Dmitry Medvedev when they met in Seoul in March 2012, about 
addressing Russian concerns over European missile defense. In remarks picked up 
by camera crews, Obama asked for some “space” until after the U.S. election. 
Obama can be heard saying, “This is my last election. After my election, I have 
more flexibility.”

 

Yet, even after winning reelection, Obama has remained cowed by the influential 
neocons – even as he has bucked some of their more aggressive demands, such as 
a massive U.S. bombing campaign against Assad’s military in summer 2013 and 
bomb-bomb-bombing Iran; instead, in 2014-15, Obama pushed for a negotiated 
agreement to constrain Iran’s nuclear program.

 

Ideally, Obama should be able to show some flexibility on Syria during his last 
year in office, but no one should hold their breath. Obama appears to have deep 
fears about crossing the neocons or Israel regarding what they want for the 
Middle East and Eastern Europe.

 

Besides the neocons’ close ties to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, 
the neocons are intimately connected to the interests of the 
Military-Industrial Complex, which provides substantial funding for the major 
think tanks where many neocons hang their hats and churn out new arguments for 
more world conflict and thus more military spending.

 

Unlike Obama, Pope Francis addressed this fact-of-life head-on in his Sept. 24 
address to members of the U.S. Congress – many if not most of whom also are 
lavished with proceeds from the arms trade and then appropriate still more 
funding for arms production and sales.

“Why are deadly weapons being sold to those who plan to inflict untold 
suffering,” Francis asked them face-to-face. “Sadly, the answer, as we all 
know, is simply for money: money that is drenched in blood, often innocent 
blood.”

 

An Old Epithet

 

>From my days as a CIA analyst covering the Soviet Union, I’m reminded of the 
>epithet favored by the Soviet party daily Pravda a few decades ago 
>–“vallstreetskiye krovopitsiy” – or Wall St. bloodsuckers. Propaganda-ish as 
>that term seemed, it turns out that Soviet media were not far off on that 
>subject.

 

Indeed, the banks and corporations involved in arms manufacture and sales enjoy 
immense power – arguably, more than a president; unarguably more than Obama. 
The moneyed interests – including Congress – are calling the shots.

 

The old adage “money makes the world go round” is also apparent in Washington’s 
velvet-gloves treatment of the Saudis and is nowhere better illustrated than in 
the continued suppression of 28 pages of the 2002 Joint Congressional Inquiry 
on 9/11. Those pages deal with the Saudi role in financing and supporting some 
of the 9/11 hijackers, but both the Bush and Obama administrations have kept 
those pages hidden for 13 years.

 

One reason is that the Saudis are the primary recipients of the U.S. trade in 
weapons, for which they pay cash. American manufacturers are selling the Saudis 
arms worth $100 billion under the current five-year agreement. Oddly, acts of 
terrorism sweeten the pot. Three days after the attacks in Paris, Washington 
and Riyadh announced a deal for $1.3 billion more.

And yet, neither Obama, nor any of the candidates trying to replace him, nor 
Congress is willing to jeopardize the arms trade by insisting that Riyadh call 
an abrupt halt to its support for the jihadists fighting in Syria for fear this 
might incur the wrath of the deep-pocket Saudis.

 

Not even Germany – already inundated, so far this year, by a flood of 950,000 
refugees, mostly from Syria – is willing to risk Saudi displeasure. Berlin 
prefers to pay off the Turks with billions of euros to stanch the flow of those 
seeking refuge in Europe.

 

And so, an unholy alliance of Turkey, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states 
continues to fuel the war in Syria while Obama pretends that his giant 
coalition is really doing the job of taking on many of those same jihadists. 
But Obama’s coalition has been woefully incompetent and indeed compromised, 
bumbling along and letting the Islamic State seize more territory along with Al 
Qaeda and its affiliates and allies.

 

Russia’s entry into the war in September changed the equation because – unlike 
Obama’s grand coalition – Putin’s puny coalition with Iran actually was serious 
about beating back the jihadists and stabilizing Assad’s regime. Turkey’s 
shoot-down of the Russian warplane on Nov. 24 was a crude message from Erdogan 
that success in defeating the jihadists would not be tolerated.

 

As for the United States and Europe, myopia prevails. None seems concerned that 
the terrorists whom they support today will come back to bite them tomorrow. 
American officials, despite their rhetoric and despite 9/11, seem to consider 
the terrorist threat remote from U.S. shores – and, in any case, dwarfed in 
importance by the lucrative arm sales.

 

As for the Vienna talks on Syria, the speed with which they were arranged (with 
Iran taking part) raised expectations now dampened. Last week, for example, 
Secretary of State John Kerry bragged about how a meeting of “moderate” rebels 
is to convene “in the next few weeks” to come up with principles for 
negotiating with Syrian President Assad’s government. The convener? Saudi 
Arabia!

 

Obama knows what has to happen for this terrorist threat to be truly addressed. 
The Saudis and Turks have to be told, in no uncertain terms, to stop supporting 
the jihadists. But that would require extraordinary courage and huge political 
– perhaps even physical – risk. There is no sign that President Obama dares 
bite that bullet.

 

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