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Now that the law of "accountability of
Syria was passed by the "US Congress" and the Zionist entity's air
strike on Syrian territory, what is next? …Self Defense?
Israel’s attack on Syria is a sign of weakness, not
strength, for without direct US participation in an attack and
occupation of Syria, it’s difficult to see what options beyond
intimidation and bluff, Sharon has to offer.
So where to now? Is the attack merely a ‘diversion’ for
Israeli domestic consumption? For short of actually invading and
occupying Syria, something that for purely economic reasons let alone
how the rest of the states in the region would react, Israel is
incapable of carrying out and sustaining such a massive operation (that
is, without direct US
involvement).
Israel's proxy war?
William Bowles
10/07/03: Israel’s attack on Syria this past weekend revives an aspect
of the Cold War period that most thought a thing of the past, namely
utilising a third party to do your fighting for you – war by proxy – a
tactic used so effectively by the US in Nicaragua, El Salvador,
Afghanistan, Angola and elsewhere in the 1970s and 1980s.
Given
the US’s current inability to wage war on several fronts plus rising
opposition on the domestic front to any expansion of its ‘war on
terrorism’, using Israel to open a ‘second front’ against Syria and in
the fullnes of time, elsewhere, makes perfect sense, especially as
Israel can use the ‘war on terrorism’ as a pretext for the removal of
what it believes to be the last obstacle to its ‘final solution’ to the
Palestinian question.
But is
the attack on Syria the opening shot in the next stage of the US
imperium’s strategy to make the Middle East safe for its ally Israel and
at the same time, remove what it believes to be the last obstacle to
guarantee its access to oil and open the way for further moves eastward?
The statements by John Negroponte,
US ambassador to the UN and by Bush the smaller that effectively support
the Israeli attack, would appear to confirm this view. And we can be
sure that
Israel makes no controversial move without first
‘clearing it’ with Washington.
Israel’s flagrant contravention of international law is not only a
dangerous escalation of an already drastically destabilised situation,
it also opens up a Pandora’s Box, as having been given carte blanche
by the US, Israel is now free to extend its operations against Syria and
ultimately, anywhere else in the Middle East. At least that’s the
theory.
Driven
by the fact that its terror tactics in occupied Palestine are futile and
leading to increasingly desperate acts on the part of the Palestinian
resistance that can only continue, the attack on Syria represents the
actions of a bankrupt Sharon government, that has boxed itself into a
corner.
With no
place left to go, short of recognising the rights of the Palestinian
people – something it has no intention of doing – it can only seek to
widen its war knowing that the US, now firmly entrenched in the region,
can in theory be used as a lever.
The UN
Security Council, dominated as it is by by the US has proved to be
totally ineffective in curbing the ambitions of an imperialist Israel,
let alone the imperial ambitions of the US, as the statement it issued
clearly illustrates, so as things stand, the UN is an impotent force.
From bluff to blunder
So
where to now? Is the attack merely a ‘diversion’ for Israeli domestic
consumption? For short of actually invading and occupying Syria,
something that for purely economic reasons let alone how the rest of the
states in the region would react, Israel is incapable of carrying out
and sustaining such a massive operation (that is, without direct US
involvement).
Some opponents of Israel’s expansionist strategy are commenting that
this will be the next step, but I beg to differ. Israel’s economy is all
but bankrupt. Unemployment is rife and inflation is rising. The burden
of supporting such a vast arms bill without massive
US support, already running into tens of billions of dollars a year, is
simply unsustainable. The cost of occupation would be the final straw
that would break Israel’s
economy and would undoubtedly lead to the downfall of the Sharon
government.
And
with 250,000 troops tied down in Iraq, the US is in a real bind. The
Rumsfeld ‘strategy’ has turned out to be a total disaster, both
strategically, politically and economically. With every passing day,
resistance to the occupation grows. Delusions of empire are, like
Napoleon’s march on Moscow foundering, not in the snows of the steppes
but in the sands of the desert. This is a reality that no amount of
bluster or propaganda can alter. And the US presidential election draws
ever nearer.
Israel’s attack on Syria is a sign of weakness, not
strength, for without direct US participation in an attack and
occupation of Syria, it’s difficult to see what options beyond
intimidation and bluff, Sharon has to offer.
desperation, the US/Israel axis could commit the even greater blunder of
over-extending itself even further, but is this likely? It’s already
clear that there are serious divisions emerging within the US
administration over the conduct of the war and the failure of the
occupation to achieve even the most minimal ‘pacification’ of Iraq. And
it’s difficult to see what appointing Condoleeza Rice as some kind of
‘administrator’ will do to alter the situation aside from appeasing
those within the State Department who see a total disaster looming on
the horizon.
Ye reap what ye sow
I contend that Israel has run out of road, for the
Intifada, far from being broken, has been left no other option but to
continue to resist, whether for a two- or single state solution. As I
pointed out even as the ‘road-map’ was published, it was dead in the
water.
The US
is in a parallel bind in Iraq. Leaving now opens up a power vacuum that
would in all likelyhood permit just the ‘wrong’ people taking power and
staying on just drags the US even deeper into a quagmire of its own
making.
It must surely be apparent to any thinking person from the Beltway to
Baghdad, that aside from anything else, the nature of the invasion and
occupation was ill conceived and on every level. It beggars belief just
what the ‘planners’ in
Washington
DC thought they were doing in allowing the total physical destruction of
the state apparatus, even in their own interests as the new ‘owners’.
They have, in effect, created a Middle Eastern Somalia, a ‘failed state’
of their own creation.
One
need only look at the people who have been put in ‘charge’ of the
occupation such as pro-consul Bremer, marching about in a suit and
combat boots or Ahmed Chalabi, convicted felon and the US’s hand-picked
puppet. These are not the stuff colonial administrators are made of,
they are not equipped even nominally to perform the functions they have
been assigned. They are at best, simply Bush and co’s cronies, what used
to be called carpetbaggers. There has been absolutely no attempt to
create even the most nominal of administrations and finding local
quislings to do the job for them is becoming increasingly difficult,
it’s just too dangerous.
As I
pointed out in 'David Kay and the CIA', the 'crony factor' even
extends to what passes for a goverment in benighted Iraq, with the
'interim governing council' no more than mere employees of a San
Diego-based defence corporation, SAIC, who live out their lives behind
concrete walls, sandbags and US armour, not daring to set foot outside
without being ferried around armoured convoys.
This is an occupation under
siege from the population.
With no
room left for the US and Israel to manouver in, can it be too long
before the world community wakes up and demands international
intervention of some kind, although what form it would take is as yet
unknown. But it’s obvious that the current situation is simply
unsustainable and can only lead to further instability that threatens to
spin completely out of control.
One
looks for some kind of sign that the USUK power elite are worried, but
so complete is their state of self-delusion, that one gets the feeling
that like the captain of the Titanic, they’ll go down with their
respective ships, saluting as they disappear beneath the chaotic waters
they have churned up in their manic quest for domination.