Netanyahu Pushes Trump Toward Wider Wars
July 18, 2017 consortiumnews.com
By Robert
Parry
A weakened,
even desperate President Donald Trump must decide whether to stand up to
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu or to repudiate the Syrian partial
ceasefire, which Trump hammered out with Russian President Vladimir Putin on July 7.
Whether
intentionally or not, this crossroads is where the months of Russia-gate
hysteria have led the United States, making Trump even more vulnerable to
Israeli and neoconservative pressure and making any cooperation with Russia
more dangerous for him politically.
After meeting
with French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris on Sunday, Netanyahu declared that Israel was totally opposed to the Trump-Putin cease-fire deal
in southern Syria because it perpetuates Iranian presence in Syria in support
of the Syrian government of President Bashar al-Assad.
Netanyahu’s
position increases pressure on Trump to escalate U.S. military involvement in
Syria and possibly move toward war against Iran and even Russia. The American
neocons, who generally move in sync with Netanyahu’s wishes, already have
as their list of current
goals “regime changes” in
Damascus, Tehran and Moscow – regardless of the dangers to the Middle East and
indeed the world.
At the G-20
summit on July 7, Trump met for several hours with Putin coming away with an
agreed-upon cease-fire for southwestern Syria, an accord that has proven more
successful than previous efforts to reduce the violence that has torn the
country apart since 2011.
But that
limited peace could mean failure for the proxy war that Israel, Saudi Arabia, Turkey
and other regional players helped launch six years ago with the goal of
removing Assad from power and shattering the
so-called “Shiite crescent” from
Tehran through Damascus to Beirut. Instead, that “crescent” appears more firmly
in place, with Assad’s military bolstered by Shiite militia forces from Iran
and Lebanon’s Hezbollah.
In other
words, the “regime change” gambit against Assad’s government would have
backfired, with Iranian and Hezbollah forces arrayed along Israel’s border with
Syria. And instead of accepting that reversal and seeking some modus vivendi
with Iran, Netanyahu and his Sunni-Arab allies (most notably the Saudi
monarchy) have decided to go in the other direction (a wider war) and to bring
President Trump along with them.
Neophyte
Trump
Trump – a
relative neophyte in global intrigue – has been slow to comprehend how his
outreach to Netanyahu and Saudi King Salman runs counter to his collaboration
with Putin on efforts to defeat the Sunni jihadist groups, including Al Qaeda
and Islamic State, which have served as the point of the spear in the war to
overthrow Assad.
Al Qaeda and
Islamic State have received direct and
indirect support from
Saudi Arabia, the Gulf States, Turkey, Israel and even the Obama
administration, albeit sometimes unwittingly. To block Assad’s overthrow – and
the likely victory by these terror groups – Russia, Iran and Hezbollah came to
Assad’s defense, helping to turn the tide of the war since 2015.
In his nearly
half year in office, Trump has maintained an open hostility toward Iran –
sharing a position held by Washington’s neocons as well as Netanyahu and Salman
– but the U.S. President also has advocated cooperation with Russia to crush
Islamic State and Al Qaeda inside Syria.
Collaboration
with Russia – and indirectly with Iran and the Syrian military – makes sense
for most U.S. interests, i.e., stabilizing Syria, reversing the refugee flow
that has destabilized Europe, and denying Al Qaeda and Islamic State a base for
launching terror strikes against Western targets.
But the same
collaboration would be a bitter defeat for Netanyahu and Salman who have
invested heavily in this and other “regime change” projects that require major
U.S. investments in terms of diplomacy, money and military manpower.
So, in last
weekend’s trip to Paris, Netanyahu chose to raise the stakes on Trump at a time
when Democrats and the U.S. mainstream media are pounding him daily with the Russia-gate
scandal, even raising the possibility that his son, Donald Trump Jr., might be
prosecuted and imprisoned for having a meeting in June 2016 with a Russian lawyer.
If Trump
wants the Russia-gate pain to lessen, he will be tempted to give Netanyahu what
he wants and count on the savvy Israeli leader to intervene with the
influential neocons of Official Washington to pull back on the
scandal-mongering.
The problem,
however, would be that Netanyahu really wants the U.S. military to complete the
“regime change” project in Syria – much as it did in Iraq and Libya – meaning
more American dead, more American treasure expended and a likely wider war,
extending to Iran and possibly nuclear-armed Russia.
That might
fulfill the neocon current menu of “regime change” schemes but it runs the risk
of unleashing a nuclear conflagration on the world. In that way, liberals and
even some progressives – who have embraced Russia-gate as a way to remove the
hated Donald Trump from office – may end up contributing to the end of human
civilization as well.
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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