The recent US/UK/France air-strikes on Syria have been met with underwhelming, tepid support, even among the neocon chorus who remain embedded in the mainstream media. The orgasmic outpouring of support that greeted Trump’s August 2017 missile strike was cheerleading the end of the Obama period — and the end of any illusion that Trump was a genuine non-interventionist.
The current strikes have occurred because the earlier missile strikes failed in their ostensible purpose: to bring Assad to heel. A repetition effect has set in. The strikes have simply affirmed US powerlessness to enforce the old-skool Pax Americana; total power through conventional means, in the eyes of the world. But beneath that, business continues. If one believes that the sole purpose of the recent strikes was in response to the chemical “event” in Douma — attack by Assad, a false-flag attack by Jaysh al-Islam, or chemical plant accident — then it looks purposeless. But that is only the topmost layer of the event.
Take the cooperation of the US, UK and France, which has been much ballyhooed by the last neocons — the ever-reliably wrong Greg Sheridan chief among them — as some sort of new era of cooperation, now that France, de Gaulle’s last mistress, etc, etc, has rejoined the Atlantic alliance. Well, it’s true that they have worked with common purpose, but only because all three leaders are in the same plight: bedevilled by terrible domestic politics, and seeking to export internal conflict.
None of these three leaders has a united party behind them. Trump and Macron are both products of the instant politics of the new era; Theresa May is an accident, leading a split party, steering a policy course she campaigned against. Trump’s personal lawyer is probably making a plea deal as we speak, after raids on his office, and coughing up stuff that might give Republicans little option but impeachment.
Trump aside, I do not believe that either May or Macron would order a strike if they believed that Douma was a false-flag operation. Trump had to do something, in image terms, and this is about the least he could do. For all its fire and fury, it is nothing like a categorical strike against the Assad regime. But is there any likelihood that the Atlantic alliance really wants Assad removed? It seems unlikely. What would replace him? Whatever possibility there was of putting together a rebel coalition — supposing that was ever the intention behind financial backing for the rebels — has long disappeared. Whatever arose out of Assad’s toppling, would start with al-Qaeda derivatives at the moderate end, and move in a more fundamentalist and violent direction.
The power such groups would have a relationship with would not be the US, but, increasingly, Turkey, whose relationship with Sunni jihadis has grown stronger by the year — resulting, most recently in the attacks on the Syrian-Kurdish Afrin commune, using jihadi proxies. From the other side, Iran would be pushing through to establish its power, now that Iraq is a Shia republic. Syria, this product of World War I and the early Cold War, a confected nation surrounded by states founded on ancient civilisations, would disappear.
So too would an opportunity for US influence. What the US wants above all is an independent Kurdistan in the north of Iraq — Israel Two, as Turks call the prospect of it — and the Syrian areas federated as cantons. For that, it would appear to need Russia in the game, as a Christian European power, to ensure that the two non-client Islamic states in the region — Turkey and Iran — do not simply occupy the whole area, and change US access to the heart of the “world island”. It needs Russia to be contained in its actions — leave Woolies alone, Vladimir! — but it needs it nonetheless.
We are now aligning on civilisational lines, as the Cold War recedes in the distance. You could say this is the last battle of World War I. You could say it’s the first battle of such, but that would be too irritatingly cute by half. As were the missile strikes. Boutique little blasts, not many killed. Sanctions, speeches, op-eds, the slow running-down of superpower projection. And still the war goes on. Quite possibly, because everyone needs it to.
It wouldn’t surprise me in the least if this was the case. Even American war hawks must realise by now that every single attempt at tipping over Middle-Eastern dictators has resulted in a much worse situation. Leave the despotic warlord in place for fear of a religious nutcase taking their place.
Oh, I don’t know, Guy. They’ve overthrown the governments of Iran (1953), Guatemala (1954), British Guiana (1953-64), Iraq (1963), Cambodia (1955-70 ), Laos (1958 , 1959 , 1960), Ecuador (1960-63), Congo (1960), Brazil (1962-64), Dominican Republic (1963), Bolivia (1964), Indonesia (1965), Ghana (1966), Chile (1964-73), Greece (1967), Bolivia (1971), Australia (1973-75), Portugal (1974-76), Jamaica (1976-80), Chad (1981-82), Grenada (1983), Fiji (1987), Nicaragua (1981-90), Panama (1989), Bulgaria (1990), Albania (1991), Afghanistan (1980s), Yugoslavia (1999-2000), Ecuador (2000), Afghanistan (2001), Venezuela (2002), Iraq (2003), Haiti (2004), Honduras (2009), Libya (2011) and Ukraine (2014) in the name of freedom and democracy. I think they think they’re pretty good at it. And they don’t seem to mind a little blood and chaos. I guess the more things you break, the more money to be made replacing them.
And there is no alternative. We MUST intervene. This is about R2P. Good and Evil. Isn’t it?
https://williamblum.org/essays/read/overthrowing-other-peoples-governments-the-master-list
Thanks for that tally, I shall print it small and keep it in my wallet for late night references for rants.
How cool that Australia made it onto that despicable list….makes you so happy to be besties with the good old US of A.
charlie
yes, and they’ve also propped up plenty of regimes like Assad’s, when it suits them – and stoked wars, when that was to their advantage. You’re missing the point: Assad’s regime is not like many of the popular regimes and democracies that were overthrown in your list above. The argument is that the US now has a real interest in Assad not being overthrown
I did get your point, Guy, I’m just not as confident they (we) learn from past mistakes like Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya et al. And they’ve (we’ve) been talking about overthrowing the Assad regime since at least 2011. How do they (we) walk that back? After all this “ruthless regime”/ “brutal dictator” talk? Claim Assad had a religious epiphany on the road to Damascus and he’s a changed man?
The Australian one is bogus for sure. Pops up every now and again thanks to the unreliable and self-justifying comments of a coke user who sold military secrets.
If you want the real culprits for the very Aussie coup look no further than the Liberal Party, and by extension, the Aussie voters who rewarded the deed by keeping them in.
Yep, I love Gough, and what he did withe medicare, tertiary education, quitting Vietnam etc etc, but putting it on as the overthrow of a govt by the US just puts everything else on the list in doubt.
If only MMT had been developed then and Gough had understood it, he wouldn’t have had to look for dodgy loans.
Bjelkie-Petersen of course was involved. He broke convention by replacing a dead Labor senator with a non-Labor senator which enabled the blocking of supply.
Unfortunately the public voted Fraser in in an election. That’s not a coup.
Eventually Israel is just going to nuke Iran and it’s new proxies Iraq and Syria. Then things will get really interesting