The revelation about President Barack Obama’s decision to provide secret American aid to
Syria’s rebel forces is a game changer. The presidential order, known
as an “intelligence finding” in the world of espionage, authorizes the
CIA to support armed groups fighting to overthrow Bashar al-Assad’s
government. But it threatens far more than the regime in Damascus.
The disclosure took its first
casualty immediately. Kofi Annan, the special envoy to Syria, promptly
announced his resignation, bitterly protesting that the UN Security
Council had become a forum for “finger-pointing and name-calling.”
Annan blamed all sides directly involved in the Syrian conflict,
including local combatants and their foreign backers. But the timing of
his resignation was striking. For he knew that with the CIA helping
Syria’s armed groups, America’s Arab allies joining in and the Security
Council deadlocked, he was redundant.
President Obama’s order to
supply CIA aid to anti-government forces in Syria has echoes of an
earlier secret order signed by President Jimmy Carter, also a Democrat,
in July 1979. Carter’s fateful decision was the start of a CIA-led
operation to back Mujahideen groups then fighting the Communist
government in Afghanistan. As I discuss the episode in my book Breeding Ground: Afghanistan and the Origins of Islamist Terrorism (chapters
7 & 8), the
operation, launched with a modest aid package, became a
multi-billion dollar war project against the Communist regime in Kabul
and the Soviet Union, whose forces invaded Afghanistan in December 1979.
In the following year, Carter was defeated by Ronald Reagan, who went
for broke, pouring money and weapons into Afghanistan against the Soviet
occupation forces to the bitter end.
Carter’s national security
adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski later claimed that it was done on his
recommendation, and that the motive was to lure Soviet forces into
Afghanistan to give the Kremlin “its Vietnam.” The Soviets’ humiliating
retreat from Afghanistan in 1989, the collapse of Soviet and Afghan
communism and the rise of the Taliban triggered a chain reaction with
worldwide consequences. President Obama’s decision to intervene in
support of Syria’s rebels, who include fundamentalist Islamic fighters,
points to history repeating itself. Brzezinski, now in his 85th year,
still visits Washington’s corridors of power. And General David
Petraeus, a formidable warrior, is director of the CIA.
Three decades on, it seems
likely that President Carter’s motive behind signing the secret order to
provide aid to the Mujahideen was to entice the Soviets into
Afghanistan’s inhospitable terrain, thus keeping their military away
from Iran in the midst of the Islamic Revolution which overthrew
America’s proxy, Shah Reza Pahlavi, in February 1979. If that was indeed
the plan, then the Soviet leadership fell right into the Afghan trap.
China was then part of the
U.S.-led alliance against the Soviets. Now Beijing and Moscow stand
together against Washington as the conflict in Syria escalates.
Otherwise, the U.S.-led alliance has many of the old players––the much
enlarged European Union, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and others in the Sunni
bloc in the Arab world. And Turkey, which is now the base for the
anti-Assad forces, channeling help to them. Turkey’s Islamist government
plays a crucial role in Syria, like Pakistan in the 1980s during
America’s proxy war in Afghanistan.
In Washington, an American official told Reuters that
“the United States was collaborating with a secret command center
operated by Turkey and its allies.” And a few days before, the news
agency reported that Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey had established a
“nerve center” in Adana in southern Turkey, near the Syrian border, to
coordinate their activities. The place is home to America’s Incirlik air
base and military and intelligence services.
According to NBC News a few days ago, the rebel Free Syrian Army has acquired American Stinger missiles via
Turkey, clearly to target Syrian government aircraft. It reminds of
President Reagan’s decision in the mid-1980s to supply Stingers to
Mujahideen groups for use against Soviet aircraft. Their use was first
reported in 1987 and it soon emerged that the heat-seeking weapons were
so accurate that they were hitting three out of four aircraft in
Afghanistan. As I have discussed in my book Breeding Ground, some
of the hundreds of Stingers were likely to have been passed on to the
Taliban and their allies after the Soviet forces left Afghanistan and
the last Communist government in Kabul collapsed in 1992.
In recent months, American and
European officials have been busy feeding information to media outlets
that Saudi Arabia and Qatar are the main sources of weapons to rebels in
Syria through Turkey. The pattern is consistent with the long-standing
Saudi policy to keep Islamists out of Saudi Arabia itself, lest they
challenge the ruling family. Long-term lessons of proxy wars remain
unheeded for immediate perilous “gains.”
Reports of the Obama administration sending Stinger missiles to Syrian rebels carry the first indication that non-state
players now have advanced U.S. weaponry in the Middle East. That
Washington is in such a cozy alliance with forces including Islamists
soon after the killing of Osama bin Laden (on Obama’s personal order) is
as incredible as it is consistent with follies of the past. The present
will define the future again.
The situation in Egypt is becoming explosive. The killing of 16 Egyptian border guards in the Sinai Peninsula by “suspected Islamists,”
and violence thereafter, represent challenges on several fronts for the
new president Mohamed Morsi. Israel has been quick to blame Islamic
militants in Gaza, ruled by Hamas, which has close ties with the Muslim
Brotherhood, the party of the Egyptian president. For its part, the
Brotherhood has pointed the finger at Israel’s secret service Mossad,
claiming it is a plot to thwart Morsi’s presidency. These developments
cast a shadow over Morsi’s relations with Hamas and, at the same time,
increase his dependence on the Egyptian armed forces to quell the
unrest, thereby undermining his authority. Murderous optimism of
powerful and suicidal pessimism of victims in an oppressive environment
blight the lives of many.
Asian Defence News
You are confused They are NOT freedom fighter. Actually they are terrorist trained by CIA and Israel and funded by Saudi Arabia.They are trying to overthrow the legal government of Syria.
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