Obama: As warlike as Bush
The Herald.

September 10, 2013 Opinion &
Analysis<http://www.herald.co.zw/category/articles/opinion-a-analysis/>

*Glen Ford*

With obscene imperial arrogance, US president Barack Obama proclaimed that
the “world” — not he — has drawn a bloody “red line” in Syria. “I didn’t
set a red line,” said Obama, at a stop in Sweden on his way to a Group of
20 nations meeting in St Petersburg, Russia. “The world set a red line.”
That’s news to the rest of the planet, including most of the Group of 20
and the meeting’s host, Russian president Vladimir Putin, who described
Obama’s claims that Syria used sarin gas against civilians in rebel-held
areas as “completely ridiculous.” “It does not fit any logic,” said Putin,
since Syrian president Assad’s forces “have the so-called rebels surrounded
and are finishing them off.”

It’s news to China, which will surely join Russia in vetoing any Security
Council motion to provide legal cover for Obama’s aggression. And it’s news
to the usually compliant UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, who this week
reaffirmed that “the Security Council has primary responsibility for
international peace and security” and “the use of force is lawful only when
in exercise of self-defence in accordance with article 51 of the United
Nations Charter and or when the Security Council approves such action.”

It’s news to Great Britain, America’s temporarily wayward poodle, whose
parliament rejected any military entanglement in Obama’s red line. As
esteemed political analyst William Blum points out, 64 percent of the
people of France oppose their government’s planned participation in Obama’s
Battle of the Red Line.

Apparently, a young and impressionable Obama took the 1985 USA for Africa
song “We are the World” too literally, and believes that all one need do is
sing or shout the words to make it so. “64 percent of the people of France
oppose their government’s planned participation Obama’s Battle of the Red
Line.”

A new Reuters poll shows 56 percent of the American public oppose US
intervention in Syria, with only 19 percent backing Obama. The First Black
US president, who was hired (by corporate sponsors, and later elected) to
put a new face on US imperial policy after his predecessor’s defeat and
international isolation over Iraq, now finds himself more alone in the
world than George Bush, and with even less support at home.

Nevertheless, Obama will doubtless press forward with his aggression, for
the same reason that Bush defied world opinion and a vibrant domestic
anti-war movement, 10 years ago. US imperialism has no option but to bang
its military fist on the table to reset the global game board, just as it
attempted — and ultimately failed — to do in Iraq in 2003, and as a unified
NATO temporarily accomplished, after a seven-month bombing campaign, in
Libya in 2011.

Obama’s Syria crisis is another chapter in the Euro-American response to
the so-called “Arab Spring” that threatened to upset western dominance in
the centre of global energy extraction — the end game for global capitalism
as we know it.

Within a week of Mubarak’s fall from power in Egypt, the US State
Department informed the press corps that Washington prefers monarchs to
autocrats in the Middle East — a very loud signal that the US had suddenly
become far more dependent on the royal thieves of the Persian Gulf, the
only Arab forces in the region on which the UScould depend.

Peering into the abyss of sustained popular agitation in the Arab world,
the US and its European and royal Arabian allies attempted to leap ahead of
the curve of events with a massive display of NATO force against Libya and
a mobilization of jihadists in the region, mustered mainly by Saudi Arabia
and Qatar.

The goal was to transform the character of the Arab Spring into a battle
against secular socialist regimes in Tripoli and Damascus, along with a
general Sunni jihad against heretical Shiites of one sect or another.

The mission was to remove those states whose very existence threatened the
monarchies while at the same time diverting the masses’ energies into
sectarianism. (All of which is fine with Israel, whose strategy since its
founding has been to foster chaos and division in the Arab world.)
“Both sides in Egypt’s divided society now accuse the other of being allied
with Enemy Number One: the US.”

Libya fell with the assassination of Muammar Gaddafi (Hillary Clinton: “We
came, we saw, he died”), but the Assad government in Syria has held on for
almost three years, and was prevailing in its battle against the
US/Saudi/Qatari-backed jihadists. The 2011 game plan was coming undone.
This summer in Egypt, where the West’s nightmare of eviction from the
entire Mideast began two and a half years ago, the military seized total
power and went on a killing spree against the Muslim Brotherhood,
exponentially complicating the US regional jihadist strategy. General Abdel
Fattah el-Sisi’s government, which is carrying out a ghastly pogrom against
its own Islamists, opposes the US strike against Syria and tells its
followers that the US might turn against the Egyptian military regime, next.

(This, despite massive infusions of cash from the Arab monarchs to the
military government.) Both sides in Egypt’s divided society now accuse the
other of being allied with Enemy Number One: the US.

The crisis that Washington hoped to get ahead of, with the attack on Libya,
had metastasized. Egypt was wholly unmanageable, and Syria was defeating
Washington’s jihadists.

Thus, the transparent frame-up of Assad, with direct US participation. It
was a panicky move, with the fate of the Empire at stake. Mistakes in
execution were surely made, and will come to light — which is why US
intelligence agencies hedge their accusations against Assad, leaving room
to construct alternative scenarios as the original fable falls apart under
the weight of facts and logic.

*Glen Ford is BAR executive editor. This article is reproduced from:
http://blackagendareport.com*
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