The De Facto
US/Al Qaeda Alliance
October
29, 2016 Consortiumnews.com
By Robert Parry
A curious
aspect of the Syrian conflict – a rebellion sponsored largely by the United
States and its Gulf state allies – is the disappearance in much of the American
mainstream news media of references to the prominent role played by Al Qaeda in
seeking to overthrow the secular Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad.
There’s
much said in the U.S. press about ISIS, the former “Al Qaeda in Iraq” which
splintered off several years ago, but Al Qaeda’s central role in commanding
Syria’s “moderate” rebels in Aleppo and elsewhere is the almost unspoken
reality of the Syrian war. Even in the U.S. presidential debates, the
arguing between Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton has been
almost exclusively about ISIS, not Al Qaeda.
Though Al Qaeda got the ball rolling on America’s revenge wars
in the Middle East 15 years ago by killing several thousand Americans and
others in the 9/11 attacks, the terrorist group has faded into the background
of U.S. attention, most likely because it messes up the preferred “good guy/bad
guy” narrative regarding the Syrian war.
For
instance, the conflict in Aleppo between Syrian government forces and rebels
operating primarily under Al Qaeda’s command is treated in the Western media as
simply a case of the barbaric Assad and his evil Russian ally Vladimir Putin
mercilessly bombing what is portrayed as the east Aleppo equivalent of Disney
World, a place where innocent children and their families peacefully congregate
until they are targeted for death by the Assad-Putin war-crime family.
The
photos sent out to the world by skillful rebel propagandists are almost always
of wounded children being cared for by the “White Helmet” rebel civil defense
corps, which has come under growing criticism for serving as a
public-relations arm of Al Qaeda and other insurgents. (There also are
allegations that some of the most notable images have been staged,
like a fake war scene from the 1997 dark comedy, “Wag the Dog.”).
Rare Glimpse of Truth
Yet,
occasionally, the reality of Al Qaeda’s importance in the rebellion breaks
through, even in the mainstream U.S. media, although usually downplayed and
deep inside the news pages, such as the A9 article in Saturday’s New York Times by Hwaida
Saad and Anne Barnard describing a rebel offensive in Aleppo. It acknowledges:
“The new offensive was a strong sign that rebel groups vetted by
the United States were continuing their tactical alliances with groups linked
to Al Qaeda, rather than distancing themselves as Russia has demanded and the
Americans have urged. … The rebels argue that they cannot afford to shun any
potential allies while they are under fire, including well-armed and motivated
jihadists, without more robust aid from their international backers.” (You
might note how the article subtly blames the rebel dependence on Al Qaeda on
the lack of “robust aid” from the Obama administration and other outside
countries – even though such arms shipments violate international law.)
What the
article also makes clear in a hazy kind of way is that Al Qaeda’s affiliate,
the recently renamed Nusra Front, and its jihadist allies, such as Ahrar
al-Sham, are waging the brunt of the fighting while the CIA-vetted “moderates”
are serving in mostly support roles. The Times reported:
“The
insurgents have a diverse range of objectives and backers, but they issued
statements of unity on Friday. Those taking part in the offensive include the
Levant Conquest Front, a militant group formerly known as the Nusra Front that
grew out of Al Qaeda; another hard-line Islamist faction, Ahrar al-Sham; and
other rebel factions fighting Mr. Assad that have been vetted by the United
States and its allies.”
The
article cites Charles Lister, a senior fellow and Syria specialist at the
Middle East Institute in Washington, and other analysts noting that “the vast
majority of the American-vetted rebel factions in Aleppo were fighting inside
the city itself and conducting significant bombardments against Syrian
government troops in support of the Qaeda-affiliated fighters carrying out the
brunt of front-line fighting.”
Lister
noted that 11 of the 20 or so rebel groups conducting the Aleppo “offensive
have been vetted by the C.I.A. and have received arms from the agency,
including anti-tank missiles. …
“In
addition to arms provided by the United States, much of the rebels’ weaponry
comes from regional states, like Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, Mr. Lister
said, including truck-borne multiple-rocket launcher systems and Czech-made
Grad rockets with extended ranges.”
The U.S./Al Qaeda Alliance
In other
words, the U.S. government and its allies have smuggled sophisticated weapons
into Syria to arm rebels who are operating in support of Al Qaeda’s new
military offensive against Syrian government forces in Aleppo. By any logical
analysis, that makes the United States an ally of Al Qaeda.
The Times article also includes a quote from Genevieve
Casagrande, a Syria research analyst from the Institute for the Study of War, a
neoconservative “think tank” that has supported more aggressive U.S. military
involvement in Syria and the Middle East.
“The
unfortunate truth, however, is that these U.S.-backed groups remain somewhat
dependent upon the Al Qaeda linked groups for organization and firepower in
these operations,” Casagrande said.
The other
unfortunate truth is that the U.S.-supplied rebels have served, either directly
or indirectly, as conduits to funnel U.S. military equipment and ordnance to Al
Qaeda.
One might
think that the editors of The New York Times – if they were operating with
old-fashioned news judgment rather than with propagandistic blinders on – would
have recast the article to highlight the tacit U.S. alliance with Al Qaeda and
put that at the top of the front page.
Still,
the admissions are significant, confirming what we have reported at
Consortiumnews.com for many months, including Gareth Porter’s article last
February saying:
“Information from a wide range of sources, including some of those the United
States has been explicitly supporting, makes it clear that every armed
anti-Assad organization unit in those provinces [of Idlib and Aleppo] is
engaged in a military structure controlled by [Al Qaeda’s] Nusra militants. All
of these rebel groups fight alongside the Nusra Front and coordinate their
military activities with it. …
“At least
since 2014 the Obama administration has armed a number of Syrian rebel groups
even though it knew the groups were coordinating closely with the Nusra Front,
which was simultaneously getting arms from Turkey and Qatar.”
Double Standards
The Times
article on page A9 also deviated from the normal propaganda themes by allowing
a statement by Syrian officials and the Russians regarding their suspension of
airstrikes over the past week to permit the evacuation of civilians from east
Aleppo and the rebels’ refusal to let people leave, even to the point of firing
on the humanitarian corridors:
“The [Syrian] government and its [Russian] allies accused the
rebels of forcing Aleppo residents to stay, and of using them as human
shields.”
The
“human shields” argument is one that is common when the United States or its
allies are pummeling some city controlled by “enemy” forces whether Israel’s
bombardment of Gaza or the U.S. Marines’ leveling of Fallujah in Iraq or the
current campaign against ISIS in the Iraqi city of Mosul. In those cases, the
horrific civilian bloodshed, including the killing of children by U.S. or
allied forces, is blamed on Hamas or Sunni insurgents or ISIS but never on the
people dropping the bombs.
An
entirely opposite narrative is applied when U.S. adversaries, such as Syria or
Russia, are trying to drive terrorists and insurgents out of an urban area.
Then, there is usually no reference to “human shields” and all the carnage is
blamed on “war crimes” by the U.S. adversaries. That propaganda imperative
helps explain why Al Qaeda and its jihadist comrades have been largely whited
out of the conflict in Aleppo.
Over the
past few years, U.S. regional allies, such as Israel and Saudi Arabia, also
have shifted their public attitudes toward Al Qaeda, seeing it as a blunt
instrument to smash the so-called “Shiite crescent” reaching from Iran through
Syria to Lebanon. For instance, in September 2013, Israel’s Ambassador to the
United States Michael Oren, then a close adviser to Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, told the Jerusalem Post that Israel favored Syria’s Sunni
extremists over President Assad.
“The
greatest danger to Israel is by the strategic arc that extends from Tehran, to
Damascus to Beirut. And we saw the Assad regime as the keystone in that arc,”
Oren told the Jerusalem Post in an
interview. “We always wanted Bashar Assad to go, we always preferred
the bad guys who weren’t backed by Iran to the bad guys who were backed by
Iran.” He said this was the case even if the “bad guys” were with Al Qaeda.
And, in June
2014, speaking as a former ambassador at an Aspen Institute conference, Oren
expanded on his position, saying Israel would even prefer a victory by
the brutal Islamic State over continuation of the Iranian-backed Assad in
Syria. “From Israel’s perspective, if there’s got to be an evil that’s got to
prevail, let the Sunni evil prevail,” Oren said.
Warming to Al Qaeda
As
Israeli officials shifted toward viewing Al Qaeda and even ISIS as the lesser
evils and built a behind-the-scenes alliance with Saudi Arabia and the Sunni
states, American neoconservatives also began softening their tone regarding the
perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks.
Across the U.S. foreign policy establishment, pressure built for
“regime change” in Damascus even if that risked handing Syria to Sunni
jihadists. That strategy hit a road bump in 2014 when ISIS began chopping off
the heads of Western hostages in Syria and capturing swathes of territory in
Iraq, including Mosul.
That
bloody development forced President Barack Obama to begin targeting ISIS
militants in both Iraq and Syria, but the neocon-dominated Washington
establishment still favored the Israeli-Saudi objective of “regime change” in
Syria regardless of how that might help Al Qaeda.
Thus, Al
Qaeda’s Nusra Front and its jihadist ally, Ahrar al-Sham, faded into the
background under the fiction that the anti-Assad forces were primarily noble
“moderates” trying to save the children from the bloodthirsty fiends, Assad and
Putin.
Grudgingly,
The New York Times, deep inside Saturday’s newspaper, acknowledged at least
part of the troubling reality, that the U.S. government has, in effect, allied
itself with Al Qaeda terrorists.
[For more
background on this issue, see Consortiumnews.com’s “New Group Think for War with
Syria/Russia.”]
Investigative reporter
Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and
Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest book, America’s Stolen Narrative, either in print here or as an
e-book (from Amazon and barnesandnoble.com).
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