By: Niall Green
Source: Global Research
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=32022
Following
its failure to ram through a resolution against Syria at the United Nations
Security Council last week, the administration of Barack Obama has intensified
its preparations to gather a “coalition of the willing” to oust the government
of Syria and install a US client regime.
The
resolution would have imposed new sanctions against Damascus under Chapter 7 of
the UN Charter, which authorizes the use of military force. The last such
resolution by the council was used by the US and NATO to justify their war for
regime-change in Libya.
The US
ambassador to the UN, Susan Rice, condemned Moscow and Beijing for vetoing the
anti-Syrian resolution and declared that Washington would “work with a diverse
range of partners outside the Security Council” to undermine the regime of
President Bashar al-Assad.
These
partners include Britain and France, the former colonial powers in the region,
and the Sunni monarchies of Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which have provided
hundreds of millions of dollars in arms and financial support to the
Islamist-dominated Syrian opposition militias.
The New
York Times reported Sunday that the White House is “now holding daily
high-level meetings” on Syria “to discuss a broad range of contingency plans.”
Senior
figures from the Obama administration and the Pentagon are also in discussions
with their Israeli counterparts to prepare for an attack on Syria. US National
Security Adviser Thomas Donilon was in Israel for talks last week and Defence
Secretary Leon Panetta is due to visit Jerusalem in the next few days to
discuss the situation in Syria.
Echoing
the bogus “weapons of mass destruction” campaign used in the run-up to the
invasion of Iraq in 2003, Washington and its allies are increasingly citing
Syria’s alleged chemical weapons arsenal as a potential casus belli
against the Assad government. “We are well aware that Syria has large
stockpiles of chemical weapons,” Ambassador Rice told National Public Radio
Friday, adding, “Syria has a legal and moral obligation to secure them… Should
anyone in the Syrian regime do otherwise they will be held accountable.”
Republican
Senator John McCain on Sunday made even more bellicose statements concerning
the alleged threat of Syrian weapons, telling CNN’s “State of the Union”
program that Assad could deploy chemical weapons against his own people and
declaring that the US had an obligation to militarily intervene in Syria.
The
Israeli government stated that it is prepared to launch a unilateral attack on
Syria in order to prevent Islamist militants gaining access to chemical
weapons. Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barack said he had “ordered the Israeli
military to prepare for a situation where we would have to weigh the
possibility of carrying out an attack” on Syrian military bases reported to house
chemical weapons stockpiles.
Speaking
on the “Fox News Sunday” program, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
reiterated that his government was prepared to take military action to prevent
“chemical weapons falling into the hands of Hezbollah or some other terror
groups.”
Such
expressions of concern from Israeli and US officials about Islamist militants
gaining access to chemical weapons reek of hypocrisy. If there is a threat of
terrorist groups seizing Syrian chemical weapons, it has come about as a direct
consequence of the year-old destabilization operation against the regime in
Damascus, in which the US, Israel, Britain, France and the pro-Western Persian
Gulf monarchies have supplied weaponry, money and intelligence to Syria’s
Sunni-extremist opposition militias.
Behind
the humbug over chemical weapons, the real US attitude toward Syria was bluntly
expressed last week by Andrew Tabler, a member of the influential Washington
Institute for Near East Policy, whom the New York Times quoted as
saying, “We’re looking at the controlled demolition of the Assad regime.”
US
officials have acknowledged that the support given to the Syrian opposition by
Washington and its allies lies behind the sharp intensification of the conflict
into a full-scale civil war over the summer. “You’ll notice in the last couple
of months, the opposition has been strengthened,” one senior White House
official told the Times Sunday edition. “Now we’re ready to accelerate
that,” the unnamed source added.
This
escalation has been coordinated by the US Central Intelligence Agency, which
operates near the Syrian border in Turkey to control the flood of weapons
supplied by Saudi Arabia and Qatar to Syrian “rebel” militias.
The
mounting violence has forced an estimated 125,000 Syrians to flee the country
into neighbouring Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey and Iraq. Many more have become
internal refugees, fleeing areas of heavy fighting for the two main cities of
Damascus and Aleppo, which have until recently seen relatively little violence.
However, the US-backed opposition has in the past few weeks been able to target
these cities with a number of armed assaults and terrorist bombings, such as
the blast that killed three top regime officials in the capital’s national
security headquarters last week.
There
were reports of heavy fighting in several suburbs of Aleppo over the weekend,
as well as battles between militants and the armed forces in the capital. On
Saturday, the Syrian Army’s elite Fourth Division, commanded by President
Assad’s brother, led a counterattack on the opposition fighters in the Damascus
suburbs of Barzeh and Mezzeh. Free Syrian Army and Islamist fighters have also
been able to take control of several border crossings from Syria into Turkey
and Iraq.
The New
York Times also reported Sunday that Obama administration officials were
working with the Syrian “rebels” to set up a provisional government that would
include elements from the current regime. Washington is particularly eager to
court top Syrian military personnel in the hope that such defections will serve
both to undermine Assad and provide a prop for a new US-sponsored regime in
Damascus.
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