Imperialism increases its hand in Syrian war
By David Sole
March 20, 2013
The hand of Western imperialism in the war against Syria becomes clearer
every day.
French President François Hollande called for an end of the European
Union’s embargo on arms shipments to Syria just prior to an EU summit
meeting in Brussels on March 14. Britain also has taken this position. Both
countries are considering directly shipping weapons to the “rebels”
if the EU does not lift the embargo. (New York Times, March 15)
Meanwhile, the first 300 rebels trained in Jordan by U.S. military officers
returned to combat in Syria. They received instructions in “anti-tank,
anti-aircraft and other types of advanced systems,” according to CNN.com
(March 15). Earlier press reports exposed that Saudi Arabia has vastly
increased its arms shipments to the rebels since December.
The mass media, however, have focused on reports from “anonymous
Western officials” that Iran has significantly stepped up military
support to the Syrian government headed by President Bashar al-Assad (Reuters,
March 14). The same reports claim that the Lebanese revolutionary Hezbollah
militia is “increasingly active on the ground” inside Syria,
according to an unnamed envoy. However, Syria has warned the Lebanese
government that armed rebels are regularly being confronted trying to enter
Syria from Lebanon.
Despite some recent gains, the rebels continue to show an inability to
organize any coordinated offensive. This reflects the political divisions that
are widely evident both at the top of the Syrian Opposition Coalition and at
the grassroots level inside Syria. The opposition is a patchwork of groups and
individuals who share only hostility to the current Syrian nationalist regime.
And they hold together only under intense pressure from U.S. and European
foreign policy officials.
On the ground in Syria, numerous reports expose the lack of a united program
or military coordination. Describing territory in northern Syria under control
of rebel military units, a young fighter told the New York Times, “Syria
right now is a jungle where everyone is competing to be in power …
another six months of that and people are going to want Assad back because they
are fed up.” (March 14).
Amnesty International, which has been attacking the Syrian government for
battle tactics that have caused civilian casualties, has started reporting more
and more on war crimes by the rebels. The organization says, “Syrian
rebels routinely kill captured soldiers and suspected regime informers.”
This amounts to “mounting war crimes committed by those trying to topple
President Bashar Assad.” (Associated Press, March 14)
The extended and bitter fighting is, not surprisingly, also taxing the
Syrian military. The Syrian armed forces were organized and trained for decades
to confront and face the U.S.-backed Israeli military. The type of warfare now
entering its third year is inevitably forcing the development of new leadership
and new tactics. A number of reports indicate that Syria is expanding the role
of popular militias throughout the country.
Sometimes called Popular Committees, these groups receive arms and training
from the government and usually defend their own neighborhoods and villages
against rebel incursions.
The Syrian government is also calling on patriotic and anti-interventionist
youth to enlist in the army. A recent television broadcast by a leading Muslim
cleric, the grand mufti Sheik Ahmad Badr al Dine Hassoun, urged young people of
all religions to join the armed forces and defend Syria against foreign
intervention. He called Syria “a civilized nation which converts
diversity into richness instead of clashes and weakness.” (New York
Times, March 12).
Organizations of mothers whose sons have died in the fighting are also
standing up in defense of the Syrian government. Ten mothers were honored at
the kickoff in Damascus for the Martyr’s Mother Fund initiative.
“The event aims at boosting the role of the civil community and youth
volunteers in caring for the families of martyrs and enhancing and respecting
the principles of … sacrifice for the sake of the homeland,”
reported Sana, the Syrian Arab
News Agency, on March 16.
Fighting has also spread into Iraq. Forty Syrian government troops who
retreated under fire into Iraq were ambushed as they were being escorted to a
different border crossing to Syria on March 4. At least 40 Syrian and 10 Iraqi
troops were killed by Iraqi militias supporting the Syrian rebels. In the
northern Lebanese city of Tripoli, three fuel tanker trucks loaded for travel
to Syria were attacked and set ablaze by rebel supporters. The danger is
growing that the Syrian conflict will engulf neighboring countries.
The growing involvement by U.S. and European powers in the Syrian war
threatens even greater danger of a regional conflict.