The past week has seen a growing drumbeat of US threats against the
Syrian government of President Bashar al-Assad and its Russian and
Iranian allies that Washington and its NATO allies are preparing to
launch a major military assault in response to the offensive begun by
Damascus to reassert control over the northwestern province of Idlib.
The Trump administration, which has twice carried out missile strikes
on Syrian government targets on the pretext of responding to the
alleged use of chemical weapons by government forces, is threatening to
carry out significantly greater aggression this time around.
While Washington and its allies have all issued repeated warnings
about a supposedly imminent chemical weapons strike by Damascus, the
Russian defense ministry has reported that it has intelligence that
Western-backed “rebels” have brought quantities of chlorine into Idlib
and are preparing to stage and film a bogus attack in order to provoke a
US-led bombing campaign.
US ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley made it clear in an
interview with Fox News this week that Washington would not rely on a
fake chemical attack. “Any offensive on the civilian people in Idlib was
going to be dealt with,” she said, warning Damascus, Tehran and Moscow,
“Don’t test us again.”
Under these conditions, one of the most right-wing figures in the New York Times’
stable of opinion writers has issued an angry indictment of the Trump
administration for failing to prosecute a direct military confrontation
with Iran in Syria.
“The Trump administration has made clear that its top priority in the
Middle East is to thwart Iran’s nuclear and regional ambitions. So why
is it so reluctant to lift a finger against Tehran’s most audacious
gambit in Syria?” demands the columnist, Bret Stephens, referring to
Idlib.
Stephens is an old hand at supporting and justifying US wars of
aggression. In 2002-2003, his was one of the most vociferous voices in
favor of an unprovoked war against Iraq. Writing for the Jerusalem Post—where
he became editor—Stephens published a fearmongering article warning
that without a US invasion, “an astonished world” would wake up to “the
Arab world’s first nuclear bomb.” This was despite ample evidence that
Baghdad’s limited nuclear program had long since been dismantled and
that the entire campaign over Iraqi “weapons of mass destruction” was
phony propaganda used to drag the American people into a war based upon
lies.
While editor at the Jerusalem Post, Stephens led the
right-wing Israeli newspaper in naming Paul Wolfowitz, the assistant
defense secretary who was one of the main architects of the war, as its
“man of the year.” It hailed him as the author of the criminal US
preemptive war strategy that would “underpin U.S. action against other
rogue states,” i.e., Libya, Syria and Iran.
Despite the exposure of the Bush administration’s WMD fraud, Stephens
stuck to the propaganda narrative even a decade after the war, writing
in the Wall Street Journal in 2013 that the self-evident charge
that the Bush administration launched a war based upon lies was a
“libel” and “cheap slander.” He claimed that the White House had based
itself on “testimony of U.N. inspectors like Hans Blix,” itself a libel
in that Blix had insisted that the Bush administration ignored his
team’s warnings that there was no evidence to justify a war.
Stephens pulled up stakes at the Wall Street Journal, where he had become deputy editor, and moved to the Times
after the election of Trump. He had been part of an “anyone but Trump”
coterie of neocons and had announced that he would vote for Hillary
Clinton, opposing the Republican candidate because of his failure to
enunciate a sufficiently bellicose foreign policy, particularly toward
Russia.
He was brought onto the Times by the paper’s editorial page
editor James Bennet, a state-connected figure whose brother is a
right-wing Democratic senator from Colorado and whose father was a State
Department official who headed the Agency for International Development
(AID), an instrument for CIA provocations in countries around the
world.
Bennet wrote at the time that Stephens would “bring a new perspective
to bear on the news,” along with “a deep sense of moral purpose and
adventure about our work.” Such a glowing description for a right-wing
warmonger.
Stephens wants blood and he makes no bones about his main concern: US
strategic interests. He demands that Washington ditch the chemical
weapons pretext as its “red line” and instead answer any offensive in
Idlib with full-scale war.
If the Syrian government continues military operations to reestablish
its control over Idlib, the US must “destroy everything that remains of
the Syrian Air Force and crater the runways Iran uses to supply its own
forces in Syria. If Assad continues to move, his presidential palaces
should be next. After that, Assad himself. By then he will have been
fairly warned.”
This is by no means Stephens’ first time advocating assassination as
an instrument of statecraft. In 2013, he demanded in the pages of the Wall Street Journal
that, should the Obama administration “decide to order a military
strike against Syria, his main order of business must be to kill Bashar
Assad. Also, Bashar’s brother and principal henchman, Maher. Also,
everyone else in the Assad family with a claim on political power.”
That same year, he proposed a long list of attacks in a separate
column, including sending in US ground forces. The Pentagon, he wrote,
must “disable the runways of Syrian air bases, including the
international airport in Damascus…use naval assets to impose a no-fly
zone over western Syria…supply the Free Syrian Army with heavy military
equipment, including armored personnel carriers and light tanks; and be
prepared to seize and remove Syria’s chemical weapons stockpile, even if
it means putting boots (temporarily) on the ground.”
This time around, he writes: “What the objective is not is
to dictate Syria’s future or solve its problems, much less get into the
weeds of sorting out Idlib’s bad rebels from the more moderate ones.
Down that road lies Iraq II.”
The combination of hubris, ignorance and criminality here is
breathtaking. After all, Stephens himself was a prominent advocate of
going down the road of Iraq I that led to over a million deaths and
decimated an entire society, creating the conditions for the growth of
ISIS.
As for the “weeds” in Idlib, they consist principally of the fact
that the so-called “rebels” are dominated by an armed organization that
was the Syrian affiliate of Al Qaeda. Any US intervention will serve to
defend and strengthen these forces. It would appear that, instead of
Iraq II, Stephens prefers the road to Libya II, the systematic
destruction of what remains of Syrian society and government and the
unleashing of Al Qaeda and other Islamist militias to dominate the
country.
“American policymakers desperately need to learn how to find the
middle road between overreaction and inaction; between a missionary zeal
to solve other people’s agonies and the illusion that we can remain
aloof from them,” writes Stephens. Apparently, this middle road is to be
paved with unrelenting cruise missile strikes and aerial bombardments,
combined with wholesale assassinations and judicious ground occupations.
Such bloodthirsty proposals coexist on the Times editorial
pages with the newspaper’s own recent editorial warning of “the risk of a
humanitarian catastrophe” in Idlib. No such concerns were evinced in
the face of the US sieges of Mosul in Iraq and Raqqa in Syria, where the
dead number in the tens of thousands and the displaced well over a
million.
Published alongside these hypocritical attempts to swing public
opinion behind a US war in Syria has been a column written by Leila
Al-Shami, who is published by Haymarket, the outlet of the International
Socialist Organization (ISO), the State Department “socialists” who
have relentlessly campaigned for a US military intervention under the
guise of promoting the “Syrian democratic revolution.” Her September 2
column in the Times made the incomprehensible argument that a
Syrian government offensive against Al Qaeda in Idlib would “eradicate
the democratic alternative to tyranny, leaving the jihadists—who thrive
on violence, oppression and foreign occupation—as the last men
standing.”
All of these arguments, ranging from the neocon right, to the
erstwhile voice of Democratic establishment liberalism to the
pseudo-left “socialists,” are pursuing the same end, that of promoting a
military confrontation in Syria that can quickly spill over to a
regionwide war and even a clash between the world’s two largest nuclear
powers, the US and Russia.
The fight to stop such a catastrophe can be waged only in
irreconcilable hostility to all of these political forces and for the
independent political mobilization of the working class against the
capitalist system, the source of war, and the social system that all of
these tendencies defend.
See Also: Bret Stephens: ‘I’m at the New York Times’ to Oppose Trump https://www.newsbusters.org/blogs/nb/kyle-drennen/2018/07/27/bret-stephens-im-new-york-times-oppose-trump
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