donderdag 16 februari 2012

NATO vs. Syria

by Philip Giraldi

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Russian Federation Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov at the 47th Munich Security Conference 2011
Photo: Sebastian Zwez - Wikimedia Commons

Americans should be concerned about what is happening in Syria, if only because it threatens to become another undeclared war like Libya but much, much worse. Calls for regime change have come from Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who several weeks ago predicted a civil war. That is indeed likely if the largely secular and nationalist regime of Bashar al-Assad falls, pitting Sunni against Shia against Alawite. Indigenous Christians will be caught in the meat grinder. Ironically, many of the Christians in Damascus are Iraqis who experienced the last round of liberation in their own country and had to flee for their lives.

NATO is already clandestinely engaged in the Syrian conflict, with Turkey taking the lead as U.S. proxy. Ankara’s foreign minister, Ahmet Davitoglu, has openly admitted that his country is prepared to invade as soon as there is agreement among the Western allies to do so. The intervention would be based on humanitarian principles, to defend the civilian population based on the “responsibility to protect” doctrine that was invoked to justify Libya. Turkish sources suggest that intervention would start with creation of a buffer zone along the Turkish-Syrian border and then be expanded. Aleppo, Syria’s largest and most cosmopolitan city, would be the crown jewel targeted by liberation forces.

Unmarked NATO warplanes are arriving at Turkish military bases close to Iskenderum on the Syrian border, delivering weapons from the late Muammar Gaddafi’s arsenals as well as volunteers from the Libyan Transitional National Council who are experienced in pitting local volunteers against trained soldiers, a skill they acquired confronting Gaddafi’s army. Iskenderum is also the seat of the Free Syrian Army, the armed wing of the Syrian National Council. French and British special forces trainers are on the ground, assisting the Syrian rebels while the CIA and U.S. Spec Ops are providing communications equipment and intelligence to assist the rebel cause, enabling the fighters to avoid concentrations of Syrian soldiers.

CIA analysts are skeptical regarding the march to war. The frequently cited United Nations report that more than 3,500 civilians have been killed by Assad’s soldiers is based largely on rebel sources and is uncorroborated. The Agency has refused to sign off on the claims. Likewise, accounts of mass defections from the Syrian Army and pitched battles between deserters and loyal soldiers appear to be a fabrication, with few defections being confirmed independently. Syrian government claims that it is being assaulted by rebels who are armed, trained, and financed by foreign governments are more true than false.

In the United States, many friends of Israel are on the Assad regime-change bandwagon, believing that a weakened Syria, divided by civil war, will present no threat to Tel Aviv. But they should think again, as these developments have a way of turning on their head. The best organized and funded opposition political movement in Syria is the Muslim Brotherhood.

Philip Giraldi, a former CIA officer, is executive director of the Council for the National Interest.

This article first appeared in The American Conservative on December 19, 2011

donderdag 9 februari 2012

Open brief aan mevrouw Peetoom, voorzitter CDA,

over de blinde Nederlandse steun voor het lang niet zo heilige land Israel.
       
A Palestinian boy and Israeli soldier in front of the Israeli West Bank Barrier.
Picture taken by
Justin McIntosh, August 2004.
Wikimedia Commons

Geachte mevrouw Peetoom,

Proficiat met “Agenda 2025,”
[1] de nieuwe politieke koers van de Nederlandse Christendemocraten, waaruit ik onder andere leer dat in de visie van het CDA Nederland moet bijdragen aan internationaal recht en vrede, en uw partij het motto “van vrijblijvend naar betrokken” gaat hanteren. Met deze open brief nodig ik u uit om dit principe hard te maken in het Nederlandse buitenlands beleid, specifiek in het Israel-Palestina conflict en rond de houding van Israel in het Midden-Oosten. Nederland is het enige land in Europa dat Israel door dik en dun steunt. Sterker nog, “Nederland wil verder investeren in de band met de staat Israël,” zo staat in het regeerakkoord. Na zijn recente bezoek aan Nederland vertrok de Israëlische premier Netanyahu dan ook met de toezegging van uw partijgenoot Maxime Verhagen dat er dit jaar een Nederlandse economische missie naar Israel vertrekt. Israel biedt het Nederlandse bedrijfsleven tal van kansen, met name op het gebied van energie, water en voedsel, zo klonk het uit zijn ministerie. Het is schrijnend om vast te stellen dat dit nu juist sectoren zijn waarin Israel via zijn nederzettingenbeleid de Palestijnen de nek omdraait.

Al tientallen jaren zijn nederzettingen op de Westelijke Jordaanoever en Oost-Jeruzalem een van de belangrijkste Israëlische wapenfeiten. Per mei 2010 spreken we volgens een recent rapport
[2] van de mensenrechtenorganisatie B’Tselem over meer dan een half miljoen Israëlische kolonisten in ruim 200 nederzettingen op de Westelijke Jordaanoever, die 42,8% van dat bezet gebied beslaan. Het nederzettingenbeleid komt neer op sluipende annexatie van Palestijns gebied. De bouw is strijdig met het internationaal (humanitair) recht en leidt voortdurend tot schendingen van de mensenrechten van de Palestijnen, waaronder het recht op eigendom, op gelijkheid, op een adequate levensstandaard, op vrijheid van beweging, en op zelfbeschikking. Bovendien leggen de facts on the ground, de omvangrijke wijzigingen in de ruimtelijke ordening op de Westelijke Jordaanoever, een bom onder elke onderhandeling tussen Israëli’s en Palestijnen.

Mevrouw Peetoom, uw partij kan alsnog voorwaarden stellen aan de door uw partijgenoot toegezegde missie. Zoals uw “Agenda 2025” zegt: “De grote maatschappelijke vraagstukken vragen om een sterk en moedig leiderschap binnen een andere bestuurscultuur.” Uw partij kan bovendien tal van andere initiatieven nemen om de rechten van de Palestijnen te ondersteunen. “Agenda 2025” zegt: “Een herkenbare politieke partij heeft het vermogen zich kwaad te maken, verontwaardigd te zijn over maatschappelijke misstanden.” Het Israel-Palestina conflict is een onderwerp dat toch bij uitstek valt onder die definitie. “Agenda 2025” wijst op het bestaan van “intergouvernementele organisaties”, maar ook u weet dat Israel - dat als land kon ontstaan dankzij zo’n “intergouvernementele organisatie” - elke voor haar negatieve (bindende) resolutie van de Veiligheidsraad naast zich neerlegt, nog afgezien van de talloze resoluties die door bondgenoot de Verenigde Staten door een veto worden getroffen.

Mevrouw Peetoom, vanuit “het radicale midden” kan uw partij aandringen op een drastische beleidsombuiging van de regering van een land dat voortdurend voor Israel op de bres staat. Hoezeer Nederland in de ban is van Israel komt wel heel sterk naar voren in het interview
op 19 januari van Mariëlle Tweebeeke op Nieuwsuur met premier Netanyahu. Toen die ijskoud beweerde dat de Joodse nederzettingen op de Westelijke Jordaanoever maar 1½ % van dat gebied vertegenwoordigen was mevrouw Tweebeeke niet in staat met “hebben de Palestijnen dan vrijheid van handelen op 98½ % van de Westoever?” te repliceren. Mevrouw Tweebeeke slikte ook probleemloos Netanhayu’s opmerking dat de Palestijnen met hun eis van een bouwstop voorwaarden vooraf stellen voor vredesonderhandelingen. Zij had natuurlijk de vraag moeten stellen: “Maar uw regering stelt toch evenzeer eisen vooraf door te eisen door te mogen gaan met de onder internationaal recht illegale bouw van nederzettingen in bezet gebied?”

Datzelfde Israel dreigt ook - in strijd met het internationaal recht - op korte termijn Iran aan te vallen, wat rampzalige gevolgen zal hebben voor de bevolking van Iran en het Midden-Oosten, en uiteindelijk ook voor de gehele wereld. Israel probeert zo’n aanval te billijken vanuit de valse voorstelling dat Iran kernwapens zou ontwikkelen. Stelt u zich eens voor: Israel, dat geen ondertekenaar is van het nucleair non-proliferatieverdrag en illegaal beschikt over een voorraad van honderden kernwapens, verklaart dat het gerechtigd is het kernprogramma te vernietigen van Iran, een land dat het verdrag heeft ondertekend, volhoudt dat het programma bestemd is voor vreedzame doeleinden en daarom gerechtvaardigd onder het internationaal recht. Voor alle duidelijkheid, het Internationaal Atoomagentschap heeft geen enkel bewijs gevonden voor een militaire component van het Iraanse kernprogramma. Een casus belli wegens Iraanse kernwapens is even ongeloofwaardig als de Iraakse massavernietigingswapens of de kruistocht tegen Al Qaeda die de VS en zijn bondgenoten aanvoerden om Irak en Afghanistan aan te vallen, of het voorwendsel “burgers te beschermen” rond de koloniale oorlog om regimewissel in Libië.
[3]

Mevrouw Peetoom, met de oorlogsdreiging probeert Israël zijn militaire dominantie in het Midden-Oosten te vrijwaren en de VS om een monopolie op de olievoorraden in de wereld uit te bouwen. Dat monopolie moet de economische en geopolitieke positie van haar belangrijkste rivalen verzwakken. China staat daarbij centraal en lijkt steeds meer het doelwit van toekomstige militaire agressie te worden. De berichtgeving in de (internationale) media probeert in alle toonaarden de publieke opinie voor te bereiden op een oorlog met Iran die honderdduizenden levens kan kosten in een land van 74 miljoen mensen. Iran zal zo’n aanval zeker vergelden met aanvallen op Israel en Amerikaanse doelen in binnen- en buitenland. Bovendien kan het conflict uitwaaieren naar Syrië, Libanon, Egypte en de Golfstaten, en mogelijk Rusland en China. Een horrorscenario.

Mevrouw Peetoom, veel mensen denken dat het Westen moet kiezen tussen Iran kernwapens laten ontwikkelen of het land aanvallen voor het beschikt over atoombommen. Maar er is een derde optie: een kernwapenvrije zone in het Midden-Oosten. Onderzoek leert dat
64% van de Israëlische Joden daar voorstander van is, zelfs als de Israëlische kernwapens dan moeten verdwijnen. Zo’n kernwapenvrije zone kan Iran moeilijk weigeren. Tijdens de Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) toetsingsconferentie van mei 2010 nam Egypte al een initiatief in die richting. [4] Intussen heeft de VS schoorvoetend het groene licht gegeven voor een NPT-conferentie over dit onderwerp, die later dit jaar in Finland wordt georganiseerd. Ook Nederland had aangegeven zo’n conferentie te willen beleggen, maar VN secretaris-generaal Ban Ki-moon lijkt zich te hebben laten leiden door de goede staat van dienst van Finland als bemiddelaar en vredestichter, en koos voor Finland [5] in plaats van Nederland, dat in de wereld toch als vurig pleitbezorger van Israel bekend staat en dus niet onpartijdig.

Mevrouw Peetoom, mag ik u uitnodigen beide zaken hoog op de politieke agenda te plaatsen: het lot van de Palestijnen, en steun voor een kernwapenvrije zone in het Midden-Oosten?

Paul Lookman
Geopolitiek in perspectief

[1] “Het CDA Strategisch Beraad 2012 presenteert: Kiezen en Verbinden; politieke visie vanuit het radicale midden
[2] B’Tselem: “By Hook and by Crook” - July 2010
[3] Barry Grey: “The New York Times and the drive to war against Iran
[4] Geopolitiek in perspectief: “De hypocrisie van het enige land dat ooit kernwapens heeft gebruikt
[5] HELSINGIN SANOMAT: “Finland designated to host international conference in 2012 on nuclear weapons-free Middle East

zondag 5 februari 2012

League of Arab States Observer Mission to Syria

Report of the Head of the League of Arab States Observer Mission to Syria for the period from 24 December 2011 to 18 January 2012
 
Chapter X: Evaluation

70. The purpose of the Protocol is to protect Syrian citizens through the commitment of the Syrian Government to stop acts of violence, release detainees and withdraw all military presence from cities and residential neighbourhoods. This phase must lead to dialogue among the Syrian sides and the launching of a parallel political process. Otherwise, the duration of this Mission will be extended without achieving the desired results on the ground.

71. The Mission determined that there is an armed entity that is not mentioned in the protocol. This
development on the ground can undoubtedly be attributed to the excessive use of force by Syrian Government forces in response to protests that occurred before the deployment of the Mission demanding the fall of the regime. In some zones, this armed entity reacted by attacking Syrian security forces and citizens, causing the Government to respond with further violence. In the end, innocent citizens pay the price for those actions with
life and limb.


72. The Mission noted that the opposition had welcomed it and its members since their deployment to
Syria. The citizens were reassured by the Mission’s presence and came forward to present their demands, although the opposition had previously been afraid to do so publicly owing to their fear of being arrested once again, as they had been prior to the Mission’s arrival in Syria. However, this was not case in the period that
followed the last Ministerial Committee statement, although the situation is gradually improving.

73. The Mission noted that the Government strived to help it succeed in its task and remove any barriers
that might stand in its way. The Government also facilitated meetings with all parties. No restrictions were placed on the movement of the Mission and its ability to interview Syrian citizens, both those who opposed the
Government and those loyal to it.

74. In some cities, the Mission sensed the extreme tension, oppression and injustice from which the Syrian
people are suffering. However, the citizens believe the crisis should be resolved peacefully through Arab mediation alone, without international intervention. Doing so would allow them to live in peace and complete the reform process and bring about the change they desire. The Mission was informed by the opposition, particularly in Dar‘a, Homs, Hama and Idlib, that some of its members had taken up arms in response to the suffering of the Syrian people as a result of the regime’s oppression and tyranny; corruption, which affects all
sectors of society; the use of torture by the security agencies; and human rights violations.

75. Recently, there have been incidents that could widen the gap and increase bitterness between the
parties. These incidents can have grave consequences and lead to the loss of life and property. Such incidents include the bombing of buildings, trains carrying fuel, vehicles carrying diesel oil and explosions targeting the police, members of the media and fuel pipelines. Some of those attacks have been carried out by the Free
Syrian Army and some by other armed opposition groups.

76. The Mission has adhered scrupulously to its mandate, as set out in the Protocol. It has observed daily realities on the ground with complete neutrality and independence, thereby ensuring transparency and integrity in its monitoring of the situation, despite the difficulties the Mission encountered and the inappropriate actions of some individuals.

77. Under the Protocol, the Mission’s mandate is one month. This does not allow adequate time for
administrative preparations, let alone for the Mission to carry out its task. To date, the Mission has actually operated for 23 days. This amount of time is definitely not sufficient, particularly in view of the number of items the Mission must investigate. The Mission needs to remain on the ground for a longer period of time, which would allow it to experience citizens’ daily living conditions and monitor all events. It should be noted
that similar previous operations lasted for several months or, in some cases, several years.

78. Arab and foreign audiences of certain media organizations have questioned the Mission’s credibility
because those organizations use the media to distort the facts. It will be difficult to overcome this problem unless there is political and media support for the Mission and its mandate. It is only natural that some negative incidents should occur as it conducts its activities because such incidents occur as a matter of course in similar
missions.

79. The Mission arrived in Syria after the imposition of sanctions aimed at compelling to implement what
was agreed to in the Protocol. Despite that, the Mission was welcomed by the opposition, loyalists and the Government. Nonetheless, questions remains as to how the Mission should fulfil its mandate. It should be noted that the mandate established for the Mission in the Protocol was changed in response to developments on the ground and the reactions thereto. Some of those were violent reactions by entities that were not mentioned in the Protocol. All of these developments necessitated an expansion of and a change in the Mission’s mandate. The most important point in this regard is the commitment of all sides to cease all acts of violence, thereby
allowing the Mission to complete its tasks and, ultimately, lay the groundwork for the political process.

80. Should there be agreement to extend its mandate, then the Mission must be provided with
communications equipment, means of transportation and all the equipment it requires to carry out its mandate
on the ground.

81. On the other hand, ending the Mission’s work after such a short period will reverse any progress, even if partial, that has thus far been made. This could perhaps lead to chaos on the ground because all the parties involved in the crisis thus remain unprepared for the political process required to resolve the Syrian crisis.

82. Since its establishment, attitudes towards the Mission have been characterized by insincerity or, more broadly speaking, a lack of seriousness. Before it began carrying out its mandate and even before its members had arrived, the Mission was the target of a vicious campaign directed against the League of Arab States and the Head of the Mission, a campaign that increased in intensity after the observers’ deployment. The Mission still lack the political and media support it needs in order to fulfil its mandate. Should its mandate be extended, the goals set out in the Protocol will not be achieved unless such support is provided and the Mission receives the backing it needs to ensure the success of the Arab solution.

(signed) Muhammad Ahmad Mustafa Al-Dabi
Head of the Mission


This report, censored by the Arab League, was obtained and made public by Inner City Press; it is reproduced here for non-profit educational purposes. See, also, Sharmine Narwani, "Foolishly Ignoring the Arab League Report on Syria" (Mideast Shuffle, 3 February 2012).

See also (quote from) “Exposed: The Arab agenda in Syria” by Pepe Escobar, Feb 4, 2012 in left column on Geopolitiek in perspectief.

                  

dinsdag 31 januari 2012

The Iran complex: why history matters

by Paul Rogers

Pro Mossadeq demonstration
Photo provided by Nasser-sadeghi on WikiMedia Commons

A sense of enduring history and more recent experience of bitter conflict inform Iran's nuclear stance. To understand this could be a way to avoid war.

The United States navy currently has two aircraft-carrier battle-groups on station in the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Sea, led by the USS Abraham Lincoln and the USS Carl Vinson. Both deployments are said by official sources to be "routine", and it is true that there are often two battle-groups in the region during a changeover. In the present circumstances, however, both have just joined the fleet and are likely to be on station for several months (see “The thirty-year war: past, present, future”, 20 January 2012).

The group led by the Abraham Lincoln has transited the Strait of Hormuz into the Persian Gulf without incident. There is concern that impending Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) naval exercises could add to tensions. At present, though, the American deployments look for the moment to be more a case of preparing for uncertainties in the wake of possible Israeli action rather than setting the scene for direct US action against Iran.

This assessment is supported by the visit to Israel of the new chair of the US chiefs of staff, General Martin Dempsey. At a press conference there, he argued for greater engagement between Israel and Iran, not least on regional issues (“U.S.Military Chief in Israel Amid Iran Tensions”, Defense News/AFP, 20 January 2012).

These developments notwithstanding, many in Israel do want military action against Iranian nuclear sites; and many American neo-conservatives and others on the political right scorn Barack Obama as a weak and flawed president unable to deal with Iran or its growing influence in Baghdad.

For many in Israel and for hawks in Washington, a nuclear-armed Iran would be an existential threat. Their approach, however, tends to ignore or dismiss attitudes within Iran - including those that inform the nuclear ambitions not just among senior regime figures but more broadly across Iranian society. It may be helpful to look at this angle more broadly, not least in terms of what compromises might be possible to avoid a dangerous war.

The traces of history

An appropriate starting-point is Iran's sense of history and place in the world. The former includes a continuous Persian statehood spanning many dynasties, including the Parthian and Sassanid, across four millennia. A key component of this awareness is Persia's cultural independence when the country was controlled by the Mongols and its ability to avoid falling under the sway of the neighbouring Ottomans.

The latter includes a conviction that for several thousand years, Iran - with the Indus valley and Mongol empires to the east and Babylon, Greece, Rome and Egypt to the west - has been at the world's civilisational centre. Even today this is a country of nearly 80 million people in a region of great geopolitical significance whose desire for modernity on its own terms is admixed with the singular religious dimension of Shi’a Islam.

Iran's experience since the late 19th century is to a great degree seen in tension with this earlier history. The country was never directly colonised by the Europeans, and its modernising path was launched from within by the constitutional revolution of 1905-07. But the sustained tussle between the British and the Russians in the imperial era, lasting into the second world war and beyond, has left a lasting impression of the dangers of external interference and threats to national integrity.

The monarchical regime of Reza Shah Pahlavi installed in 1925 (and passed to his son in 1941) was by the early 1950s increasingly viewed as a creature of the British and Americans, whose role in Iran was understood as motivated by the desire to control the country's oil resources. The ousting of the nationalistic prime minister Mohammad Mossadegh in 1953 with the aid of MI6 and the CIA, and the Shah's authoritarian rule and pro-western stance in the following years, implanted this impression further in the minds of millions of Iranians. Such sentiments helped to fuel the revolution of 1978-79.

A consequence of this history is that in Iranian political culture there is a distinct combination of self-confidence and insecurity. If the former is rooted in that long history, the latter is a response to this recent experience. The challenge represented by this complex psychology is nowhere more acutely present than in the nuclear issue. In particular, for very many Iranians (far beyond regime insiders) the country's civil- nuclear power programme has become a key symbol of modernity which and one that will not lightly be discarded - even in a post-Fukishima environment where nuclear power is in retreat.

Many uncertainties surround Iran's nuclear-weapons ambitions, including whether the aim is eventually to actually have a deterrent or else maintain a "virtual" capability. Iran's sense of insecurity may mean both that the latter is non-negotiable (at least for now) but that former is - given the financial costs and the technical difficulties - a "development too far". This itself could allow some room for compromise.

Beyond this general context lies an important specific factor relating to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. This force was at the forefront of defending the revolution against Saddam Hussein’s Iraqi invasion in 1980, the spark of an eight-year war that cost the lives of over half a million Iranians, mostly young men, in one of the most brutal static wars since the western front in 1914-18.

Since the early 1990s, the IRGC has been transformed - and as its economic activities have increased, its status as the guardian of the revolution has declined. Many in Iran see it as both powerful yet also as having "gone soft"; and some in the upper echelons of the Revolutionary Guard see a violent confrontation, especially with Israel, as a way of restoring a sense of purpose and not a little prestige.

The cost of distrust

Two related elements must here be taken into account. The first is that many of the most senior leaders in the modern-day Revolutionary Guard were in the 1980s young soldiers and paramilitaries, and retain vivid memories of the Iran-Iraq war (much as the American military leadership practising "shock and awe" in the early 1990s against Iraq had experienced the trauma of Vietnam). The second, particularly relevant in current circumstances, is how the Iran-Iraq war ended in early 1988.

By that time the Iranians, after eight years of bitter conflict, were slowly gaining the ascendancy. But the more they did, the more the United States came down on the side of the Iraqis. This tilt reached an extraordinary peak in March-April 1988, and was exemplified in two incidents. The first was the Saddam regime's chemical-weapon assault on the Kurdish town of Halabja on 16 March which killed more than 3,000 people, an event which received less attention than it deserved and was surrounded by unjustified rumour as to its source - in great part because the Reagan administration's hostility to Iran and indulgence of Iraq at the time shaped its response.

The second came at the end of a protracted "tanker war" involving both Iraq and Iran, when in April the US navy engaged in a series of actions against its small Iranian counterpart. Operation Praying Mantis involved the destruction of the Iranian frigate Sahand (and severe damage to a second, Sabalan), the pulverising of three armed speedboats, and the disabling of two oil platforms; the whole operation greatly weakened the Iranian navy.

The US navy could cite Iranian "provocations" - but in Iranian eyes the attacks were a clear demonstration of Washington "taking sides" with Iraq in order to prevent an Iran-Iraq ceasefire that might otherwise be reached on Iranian terms. In any event, the ceasefire that resulted involved Iran - which had been invaded in 1980 - making painful compromises. The wounds were intensified by the USS Vincennes's shooting down in mid-1988 of an Iranian airbus, in which all 290 civilian passengers and crew were killed.

Such events, albeit though more than two decades ago, remain prominent in Iran's political memory - especially among Revolutionary Guard forces in the current leadership. They reinforce an enduring distrust of the United States and specific antagonism towards the US navy.

In itself this distrust and the experiences it draws on do not make war inevitable or even more likely - and the very destruction of Iranian ships and facilities in 1988 is a stark reminder of the US's superior military forces in the region. Such influences, however, do underpin Iran's search for a nuclear-deterrent force and do erect real obstacles to the kind of trust-building that is essential to a peaceful compromise.

Paul Rogers is professor in the department of peace studies at Bradford University. His books include Why We’re Losing the War on Terror (Polity, 2007), and Losing Control: Global Security in the 21st Century (Pluto Press, 3rd edition, 2010). He is on twitter at: @ProfPRogers

This article first appeared on openDemocracy January 26, 2012