Obama’s Big Lie on Syria

Exclusive: Despite the risk that Syria’s Christians, Alawites and Shiites will be slaughtered by Sunni extremists, the Obama administration is backing the Saudi-Israeli demand for “regime change” in Damascus, including tweeting bogus accusations linking Syria’s secular regime to ISIS, writes Daniel Lazare.

By Daniel Lazare

Although its doors have been closed since 2012, the U.S. embassy in Damascus has recently sent out a round of pugnacious tweets charging Syrian President Bashar al-Assad with giving Islamic State fighters a free pass while bombing U.S.-aligned Free Syrian Army (FSA) units holed up in the city of Aleppo.

By bombing one side in an intra-rebel war and not the other, the embassy says, Damascus is making its preference clear, i.e., in favor of the hyper-brutal Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL. “Reports indicate,” declared an embassy tweet on June 1, “that the regime is making air-strikes in support of ISIL’s advance on Aleppo, aiding extremists against Syrian population.”

Saudi King Salman bids farewell to President Barack Obama at Erga Palace after a state visit to Saudi Arabia on Jan. 27, 2015. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Saudi King Salman bids farewell to President Barack Obama at Erga Palace after a state visit to Saudi Arabia on Jan. 27, 2015. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

“We have long seen that the Assad regime avoids ISIL lines,” said another, “in complete contradiction to the regime’s claims to be fighting ISIL.” Added a third: “Assad is not only avoiding ISIL lines, but actively seeking to bolster their position.”

But this picture is complicated by the fact that the FSA also faults the U.S. for not bombing ISIS and that Shi‘ite forces across the border in Iraq actually accuse America of providing ISIS with military aid. The Islamic State is America’s “creation,” declared Akram al-Kabi, leader of the powerful Nujabaa Brigade, while Iraqi forces recently fired on a U.S. helicopter that they believed was ferrying aid to the other side.

“We have a continuous problem in effectively countering the narrative,” observes Brigadier General Kurt Crytzer, deputy commander for Special Operations Command Central. The story that the U.S. is secretly supporting ISIS is “easily believed by many not just the poor and uneducated.”

For The New York Times’ Anne Barnard, this swirl of charges and counter-charges demonstrates “the complexity of the battlefield in Syria’s multifaceted war and the challenges it poses for United States policy.” But Barnard is wrong in her analysis. It’s not the Syrian battlefield that’s complex, but the predicament that the U.S. finds itself in.

What has caused Saudi Arabia and other Sunni states to ratchet up their support for radical Islamists fighting in Syria and Iraq is the impending nuclear accord with Iran, which has infuriated Sunni states and Israel and is leading the U.S. to assure its allies that it will redouble its efforts to roll back Iranian influence in other countries.

This means a stepped-up effort to topple the Iranian-backed government in Syria and to oppose pro-Iranian forces in Iraq, Bahrain, Yemen and inside Saudi Arabia. The Obama administration wants to have a peaceful agreement with Iran over nuclear issues but the price is to double down on a proxy war against Iranian (and Shi’ite) interests across the Middle East.

The upshot is a policy that has everyone in the Middle East shaking their head in confusion, which is why charges of back-stabbing and double-dealing are proliferating. A vastly overextended U.S. has no alternative but to scale back. But the more it does, the more nervous its partners grow and the more promises it makes that it can’t possibly keep.

Speculative Accusations

The charge that the Assad regime is secretly aiding ISIS is hardly a new one (albeit one lacking any real evidence or logic). It is a tune that neocons and their accomplices have been singing for years. Abu Dhabi, for example, has accused Damascus of springing thousands of ISIS operatives from jail in 2011 in the hopes that they would join the opposition and thereby help discredit the anti-Assad movement.

Ezra Klein’s Vox Media has accused Assad of making use of “ISIS’s extremism [to] convince Alawites that defecting to the rebels means the destruction of their homes and communities.” Quoting an unnamed Syrian businessman, Time says that Assad sees ISIS jihadis as “frenemies” because “they make America nervous, and the Americans in turn see the regime as a kind of bulwark against ISIS.”

According to this speculation (or propaganda), Assad is thus nurturing ISIS on the sly in order to undermine the FSA, neutralize opposition among Christians and Alawites, and persuade naive Americans to do his bidding. But none of it is supported by evidence, nor does it makes any sense.

ISIS is the most formidable military force to emerge in the Middle East in decades. The idea that Assad would purposely nurture such a force while at the same time wrestling with an insurgency that was out of control to begin with is absurd. The same goes for releasing thousands of ISIS militants as part of some Machiavellian maneuver to discredit the anti-Assad forces.

By chanting “Christians to Beirut, Alawites to the coffin,” within weeks of taking to the streets in March 2011,” the anti-Assad forces were doing more than enough to discredit themselves. As for Christians and Alawites, the idea that the Damascus government needed the Islamic State to scare them into submission is ridiculous. In a nation torn by sectarian violence since the late 1970s, Syria’s minorities did not need the government to invent such fears. With Sunni mobs baying for blood, they were real enough on their own.

Christians understood that it was “going to be very dangerous for them, to put it very mildly,” if the anti-Assad forces were victorious, a Syrian church official said just a few months into the uprising.

“They wanted to kill us because we were Christians,” recounted an 18-year-old girl fleeing Homs a year later. “They were calling us kaffirs [infidels], even little children saying these things. Those who were our neighbors turned against us.”

The U.S. embassy’s latest claims are equally far-fetched. If the Syrian military is indeed not bombing ISIS, then the likeliest reason is that the FSA, holed up in Aleppo, is nearer at hand and hence the more immediate threat. It’s the problem that Syria’s overstretched military forces must deal with first. Yet the U.S. cheers on the FSA whenever it makes the slightest advance and then denounces the Syrian government when it tries to stop it. Assad is guilty of war crimes when he bombs, according to Washington, and guilty of fostering terrorism when he doesn’t.

Moreover, it’s particularly strange to see Anne Barnard trumpeting such charges on the front page of The New York Times when, two weeks earlier, she reported that U.S. policy was not to bomb Islamic State forces when they were in combat with Syrian government troops.

Explaining why the Islamic State was able to overwhelm government defenses in Palmyra, she wrote: “In Syria, a new awkwardness arises. Any airstrikes against Islamic State militants in and around Palmyra would probably benefit the forces of President Bashar al-Assad. So far, United States-led airstrikes in Syria have largely focused on areas far outside government control, to avoid the perception of aiding a leader whose ouster President Obama has called for.”

So the U.S. has decided to leave ISIS alone as long as it engages Syrian government forces in battle which, among other things, suggests that the fall of Palmyra was in accord with U.S. strategic goals. But while failing to bomb ISIS when it was overrunning Palmyra, the Obama administration assails Assad when he fails to bomb ISIS when it approaches FSA lines in Aleppo. It’s the kind of contorted logic that only America’s mainstream media would find acceptable.

Who’s to Blame?

In fact, what people like Anne Barnard cannot bring themselves to admit is that the real responsibility lies not with Assad, but with the U.S. and allies for fomenting Syria’s sectarian warfare in the first place. Assad’s Baathists are hardly blameless. To the contrary, the Assad dictatorship has been running on empty for years as the economy declined, drought ravished the countryside, and inequality zoomed.

But while the Assad family is guilty of many things, sectarianism is not one of them. As nationalists, the Baathists have sought to elevate a concept of Syrian or Arab identity above religion, which is why Christians and Alawites have given them their support and why certain die-hard Sunni elements, bitter over their loss of status, have vowed revenge.

A radical journalist who visited Damascus and Aleppo prior to the uprising found cities that were “bustling and beautiful” and historic neighborhoods and mosques that were “well-maintained and accessible to tourists.” But the few women in the streets were heavily covered, images of Bashar al-Assad were everywhere, while shopkeepers were too nervous to talk politics. It was a portrait of a society deeply split between a fervent Sunni majority and an increasingly isolated regime still committed so some semblance of supra-religious national unity.

It was a bad situation and one that the U.S. and its allies did everything in their power to make even worse. In mid-2012, The Times reported that CIA agents in southern Turkey were working with Syria’s ferociously anti-Alawite Muslim Brotherhood to funnel Turkish, Saudi and Qatari arms to rebels considered acceptable. Two months later, the Defense Intelligence Agency issued a report finding that:

— Al-Qaeda, the Muslim Brotherhood, and assorted Salafists were “the major forces driving the insurgency in Syria.”

–Despite Al-Qaeda’s growing role, the Western powers, Arab gulf states, and Turkey were solidly behind the uprising.

–The jihadis would likely establish “a declared or undeclared Salafist principality in eastern Syria” and that “this is exactly what the supporting powers want, in order to isolate the Syrian regime, which is considered the strategic depth of the Shia expansion (Iraq and Iran).”

–Al-Qaeda was seeking to unite all Sunnis in a general anti-Shi‘ite jihad.

“We are at war against Al-Qaeda,” Obama had declared in January 2010. Yet, two years later, the U.S. found itself drawn into an Al-Qaeda-driven religious crusade.

“The next genocide in the world will likely be against the Alawites in Syria,” former U.S. ambassador to Croatia Peter W. Galbraith warned in November 2012 at the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington. Yet he was ignored.

In October 2014, Vice President Joe Biden  told an audience at Harvard’s Kennedy School that “the Saudis, the emirates, etc. were so determined to take down Assad and essentially have a proxy Sunni-Shia war, what did they do? They poured hundreds of millions of dollars and tens of thousands of tons of military weapons into anyone who would fight against Assad, except the people who were being supplied were Al-Nusra and Al-Qaeda and the extremist elements of jihadis coming from other parts of the world.” [Quote starts at 53:20].

A proxy Sunni-Shia war is a recipe for turning Syria into a communal slaughterhouse, yet the U.S. went along. The following April, U.S.-made TOW missiles most likely supplied by the Saudis enabled a military coalition headed by Al-Nusra to conquer a slice of territory in Syria’s Idlib Province.

But while admitting that the White House is “not blind to the fact that it is to some extent inevitable” that U.S. weapons will wind up in terrorist hands, the most a “senior administration official” could tell The Washington Post is that “it’s not something we would refrain from raising with our partners.” The Obama administration might object to high-tech U.S. weaponry finding its way into Al-Qaeda hands. But then again, it might not.

Thus, the negotiations with Iran have resulted in a curious dynamic. Most Americans hope that the talks will help defuse conflict in the Middle East. But they are in fact doing the opposite. America’s allies in that region turn out to be some of the most sectarian nations on earth, not just Saudi Arabia and the Arab gulf states but Israel as well.

Spooked by the impending peace agreement, they are now demanding no-holds-barred religious warfare against a region-wide Shi‘ite “conspiracy” supposedly originating in Tehran and the U.S., struggling to hold the alliance together, is unable to say no.

As a consequence, Washington has agreed to a Saudi war against the Shi‘ite Houthis in Yemen, to a Saudi-led crackdown on Shi‘ite democratic protesters in Bahrain, and to a stepped-up Saudi-Turkish-Qatari effort to overthrow Assad in Syria, a campaign that has already claimed an estimated 220,000 lives and will undoubtedly claim many more.

To cap it off, the U.S. is now blaming Assad for stirring things up in the first place. It’s a big lie worthy of Goebbels, yet the only people falling for it are America’s lapdog press.

Daniel Lazare is the author of several books including The Frozen Republic: How the Constitution Is Paralyzing Democracy (Harcourt Brace).

13 comments for “Obama’s Big Lie on Syria

  1. Winston
    June 8, 2015 at 02:54

    This is Obama’s policy.. All about following proposal in Clean break and related documents.

    http://www.globalresearch.ca/u-s-efforts-to-arm-jihadis-in-syria-the-scandal-behind-the-benghazi-undercover-cia-facility/5377887
    U.S. Efforts to Arm Jihadis in Syria: The Scandal Behind the Benghazi Undercover CIA Facility
    http://counterjihadreport.com/2015/05/18/u-s-aided-arms-flow-from-benghazi-to-syria/
    U.S. aided arms flow from Benghazi to Syria

    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article42034.htm

    Turkey and Syria: The War of Two Men against One

    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jun/03/us-isis-syria-iraq

    Now the truth emerges: how the US fuelled the rise of Isis in Syria and Iraq

    Allies just following leader:

    “With some of these radical Islamic forces, Britain has been in a permanent, strategic alliance to secure fundamental, long-term foreign policy goals; with others, it has been a temporary marriage of convenience to achieve specific short-term outcomes.”
    https://markcurtis.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/secret-affairs-introduction.pdf

    “For years, violent Islamist groups were allowed to settle in Britain, using the country as a base to carry out attacks abroad. This was tolerated in the belief that they would not bomb the country where they lived and that, as long as they are here, the security service would be able to infiltrate them. At the same time mosque after mosque was taken over through intimidation by the fundamentalists. Police and others in authority refused pleas from moderate Muslims with the excuse that they did not want to interfere.
    There was even a name for this amoral accommodation: the “covenant of security”. ”
    http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/secret-affairs-by-mark-curtis-2038691.html
    Secret Affairs, By Mark Curtis

  2. Peter Loeb
    June 6, 2015 at 06:02

    LYING IS ALWAYS TWO-FACED

    In this excellent article one is aware that lying is always “two-faced”
    and invariably built on untruths.

    One would not think that only last year Washington joined a
    unanimous UN Security Council affirming the sovereignty of
    Syria (the Bashar Assad regime), analyzing the problem,
    and calling urgently for all to join Syria in fighting the
    “foreigners” and “terrorists” (S Res/2139(2014)).

    It has inevitably been the fig leaf so-called “moderates”
    that have joined the extremists and the Sunni-Israeli-Turkish-
    Quatar-US coalition (= “the foreigners”).

    The many contracts with the Assad regime by the American
    CIA “extraordinary renditions” torture program is never
    brought up. (Perhaps the CIA is as yet unaware of its
    extraordinary renditions program!) Other destinations
    have inclued Egypt, Jordan, Morroco, various US bases
    in foreign nations (such as Bagram in Afghanistan).
    (See Alfred McCoy, A QUESTION OF TORTURE,
    in index and throughout).

    —Peter Loeb, Boston, MA, USA

  3. Gregory Kruse
    June 5, 2015 at 19:15

    I think the solution is to direct a few of those 9/11 thingies into the palace in Riyadh, mosque in Medina, and the temple in “Israel”. Let’s see if they have the stuff to drill the Vatican in return.

  4. Brendan
    June 5, 2015 at 17:17

    As Daniel Lazare says, those unbelievable allegations of the Syrian government’s support for ISIL go back years. When Obama called off the military attack on Syria those stories went quiet for a couple of years, but they’ve reappeared lately.

    The ‘Time’ article from February this year (“Why Bashar Assad Won’t Fight ISIS”, linked to in the page above) contains a claim that the Syrian government was buying oil from ISIL. In March, the British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond went further:
    “We have also agreed to target individuals supplying oil to the regime, including George Haswani, a middleman buying oil from ISIL on behalf of the regime. This listing gives yet another indication that Assad’s “war” on ISIL is a sham and that he supports them financially.”
    https://www.gov.uk/government/news/uk-welcomes-new-eu-syria-sanctions-listings
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/islamic-state/11455602/Oil-middleman-between-Syria-and-Isil-is-new-target-for-EU-sanctions.html

    In the past few days, we’ve seen stories of an Assad-ISIL alliance in the New York Times and in tweets from the US Syrian Embassy.

    This is all happening at a time when IS/ISIL has had so much military success against the Syrian government that it seriously threatens to overthrow it. That makes the idea of an alliance between those two warring parties more unbelievable than ever. It also makes the whole story seem like part of an orchestrated campaign to prepare the public for yet another catastrophic “regime change”.

  5. Stefan
    June 5, 2015 at 16:02

    “America’s lapdog press” are not falling for it – they are PART OF IT.

    • Anonymous
      June 5, 2015 at 16:42

      Very true and who owns the Media

      • Anonymous
        June 5, 2015 at 17:20

        My own take is that this isn’t Obamas big lie; everything he says is a lie. It is obvious that the US is playing the ” frenemy” game with the Iraqi government in an effort to aid in the dismantling of Syria and Iraq so as to make Israel comfortable with a middle east of bite size chunks. Of course the Saudi gamble is that a newly formed emirate in eastern Syria and western Iraq contains some alleged Iran crescent. Not sure the temptation to exspand into Saudi may not be too tempting.

  6. MediaPropaganda
    June 5, 2015 at 13:44

    The media repeats ISIS Theater over and over 24/7.
    ISIS repetition count: FOX 5084, CNN 4144, MSNBC 3455, ABC 2861
    https://archive.org/details/tv?q=isis

    How is constant repetition manipulating Public Opinion??

  7. Mainstream Media Propaganda
    June 5, 2015 at 13:43

    The media repeats ISIS Theater over and over 24/7.
    ISIS repetition count: FOX 5084, CNN 4144, MSNBC 3455, ABC 2861
    https://archive.org/details/tv?q=isis

    How is constant repetition manipulating Public Opinion??

  8. June 5, 2015 at 13:07

    One thing is certain when the IS win the battle – the USA FSA or opposition will never be able vertereiben the IS from Syria. That goes without saying, the Syrian army is to defeat not do anything for whom, if President Assad is gone – The Syrian army is only for Assad battles that is as safe as the Amen in the church

    • Gregory Kruse
      June 5, 2015 at 19:09

      Would that be the Aymen, or the Ahmen?

  9. Abe
    June 5, 2015 at 12:52

    “This is rape.”

    A Forecast for Syria:
    An Eyewitness Account on Libya in 2011
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gc7qiC1snGs#t=739
    (especially minutes 7:45-12:20)

    An interview from 2011 with Mahdi Darius Nazemroaya by Progressive News Network about the war in Libya and his experience on the ground there. Nazemroaya had just returned to Canada from the war zone in Libya and forecasts that the fighting in Libya will continue, that Al-Qaeda-type groups being used by the US will ravage the North African country, and that the weapons in Libya will destabilize other places.

    • brandon sinks
      June 10, 2015 at 01:36

      The Bible is clear on everything that is going on. And you can.call me a crazy theorist or christan idiot. But regardless wait and watch Obama whether he knows it or not is part of God’s plan of how and when the return of Christ will happen. But I don’t trust Obama or anyone in his administration. And America is not the same cause use to we would not have put up with him or his lies or any of his bullshit answers. The America I remember would have already got rid of this stupid man

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