On the OpEdge page of Russia Today, a station now watched by enough politically aware people in this country to increase certain by-election candidates' share of the vote nearly sevenfold, Neil Clark writes:
The prospects of a peaceful solution to the
Syrian crisis is still a long way off. We won’t get an end to the violence
until the foreign powers who have been fuelling the conflict, the US included,
radically change their policies towards the country.
RT reports that following the visit of US
Secretary of State John Kerry to Moscow this week, the US and Russia have "reiterated
their commitment to bringing the sides of the Syrian conflict to the negotiating
table, and that they have announced an international conference to be called by
the end of May which will serve as a follow-up to the Geneva communiqué. The
Geneva communiqué should be a roadmap to a new Syria, not a forgotten piece of
paper, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and US Secretary of State John
Kerry told reporters after their Tuesday
Moscow meeting."
So is it time to toast the imminent end of a
terrible, bloody conflict which, according to a UN estimate in February, has
cost, up to then, around 70,000 lives?
As Sergey Lavrov pointed out on Wednesday, the
Syrian government has for a long time shown a willingness to talk, but their
readiness to make compromises to find a peaceful, political solution to the
conflict has not been matched by the so-called ‘rebels’. Instead of using their
influence to pressurize anti-government militia to lay down their arms and to
negotiate directly with Damascus, the foreign supporters of the rebels have
been egging them on to intensify their campaign to violently overthrow the
Syrian government. It’s a campaign which has involved some appalling acts of
terrorism, such as last week’s bombing of a main square in Damascus in which at
least 13 people were killed.
These countries stoking the conflict in Syria
have, up to now, not been interested in compromises, or in allowing the Syrian
people to decide their own future, as the new 2012 Constitution allows them to
do, but have been hell-bent on achieving ‘regime change’ for
geo-strategic reasons- most importantly to ‘knock out‘ the strongest regional
ally of Iran.
Despite John Kerry’s support for an international
conference, he has still to rule out direct US military aid to the rebels. When
asked about the bill recommending the direct arming of the rebels which is
before Congress, Kerry said that the future of the bill would depend “to
some degree on the state of the evidence in respect to chemical weapons”.
Yet only a few days ago, Carla Del Ponte of the UN Commission of Inquiry said
that there was "no, no indication at all" that the Syrian
government had used chemical weapons, on the contrary she said there were “strong,
concrete suspicions” that the opponents of the government themselves had
used them.
If the US stance still leaves a lot to be
desired, the position of the UK in relation to Syria is arguably even worse.
The UK’s neo-conservative dominated government is trying all it can to
pressurize other EU countries to lift the Syrian arms embargo. Today we hear
that they have sent a ‘discussion paper’ to other EU members making the
case either for a total lifting of the ban or an easing of it.
But the UK government's line is deceitful.
They claim they want to help the ‘good’ i.e. non radical Islamist
rebels, yet a report in the New York Times claimed that “nowhere in
rebel-controlled Syria is there a secular fighting force to speak of.”
We’ve already had the al-Nusra front, one of the largest groups which make up the
‘rebels’ openly pledging their allegiance to al-Qaeda but that still
isn’t enough to change the UK’s policy. The double standards are breathtaking:
the UK government which gave support to the French military action against al-
Qaeda linked radical Islamists fighting the authorities in Mali, is spending
British taxpayers’ money on helping an uprising dominated by radical Islamists
to topple a secular government in Syria.
Peace will only come to Syria when the foreign
countries currently menacing it start acting as fire-fighters and not
arsonists. That means telling the rebels that its time to end their campaign of
violence and to negotiate directly with Damascus. It also means accepting that
whether or not President Assad and the Ba'ath Party continue to rule Syria, is
up to the Syrian people alone, and not the US, Turkey, Qatar, Britain, France,
Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Israel or indeed anyone else.
The trouble is that the countries concerned have
invested so much time and money into trying to topple Bashar al-Assad that it’s
highly unlikely that they’ll change direction now, even though continuing with
their destructive, destabilizing policies towards Syria only means that the
bloodshed will continue.
RT is "now watched by enough politically aware people in this country to increase certain by-election candidates' share of the vote nearly sevenfold." Who do you mean? It isn't likely to be to the taste of UKIP voters.
ReplyDeleteIn reality, only cranks, 9/11 truthers and holocaust deniers appear on RT. "Broadcaster", propagandist and dictator's friend Neil Clark is appropriately exiled there.
Oliver Kamm? Brendan Simms? Been on it, both of them.
ReplyDeleteAnd it is no exile - http://www.newstatesman.com/world-affairs/europe/2013/05/anti-fox-news