Tuesday, July 30, 2013

US on UN Veto: "Disgusting", "Shameful", "Deplorable", "a Travesty" . . . Really?

Feb 05 2012 by Bassam Haddad

A Quick Listing of The United States' Record of Veto Use at the United Nations (UN): 19722011*

[Including Resolutions against Decades of Atrocities and Violations, Often Supported and/or Bankrolled by the United States]


Year  Resolution Vetoed by the United States

1972 Condemns Israel for killing hundreds of people in Syria and Lebanon in air raids.

1973 Affirms the rights of the Palestinians and calls on Israel to withdraw from the occupied territories.

1976 Condemns Israel for attacking Lebanese civilians.

1976 Condemns Israel for building settlements in the occupied territories.

1976 Calls for self determination for the Palestinians.

1976 Affirms the rights of the Palestinians.

1978 Urges the permanent members (USA, USSR, UK, France, China) to insure UN decisions on the maintenance of international peace and security.

1978 Criticises the living conditions of the Palestinians.

1978 Condemns the Israeli human rights record in occupied territories.

1978 Calls for developed countries to increase the quantity and quality of development assistance to underdeveloped countries.

1979 Calls for an end to all military and nuclear collaboration with the apartheid South Africa.

1979 Strengthens the arms embargo against South Africa.

1979 Offers assistance to all the oppressed people of South Africa and their liberation movement.

1979 Concerns negotiations on disarmament and cessation of the nuclear arms race.

1979 Calls for the return of all inhabitants expelled by Israel.

1979 Demands that Israel desist from human rights violations.

1979 Requests a report on the living conditions of Palestinians in occupied Arab countries.

1979 Offers assistance to the Palestinian people.

1979 Discusses sovereignty over national resources in occupied Arab territories.

1979 Calls for protection of developing counties' exports.

1979 Calls for alternative approaches within the United Nations system for improving the enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms.

1979 Opposes support for intervention in the internal or external affairs ofstates.

1979 For a UN Conference on Women.

1979 To include Palestinian women in the UN Conference on Women.

1979 Safeguards rights of developing countries in multinational trade negotiations.

1980 Requests Israel to return displaced persons.

1980 Condemns Israeli policy regarding the living conditions of the Palestinian people.

1980 Condemns Israeli human rights practices in occupied territories: 3 resolutions.

1980 Affirms the right of self determination for the Palestinians.

1980 Offers assistance to the oppressed people of South Africa and their national liberation movement.

1980 Attempts to establish a New International Economic Order to promote the growth of underdeveloped countries and international economic co-operation.

1980 Endorses the Program of Action for Second Half of UN Decade for Women.

1980 Declaration of non-use of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear states.

1980 Emphasises that the development of nations and individuals is a human right.

1980 Calls for the cessation of all nuclear test explosions.

1980 Calls for the implementation of the Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples.

1981 Promotes co-operative movements in developing countries.

1981 Affirms the right of every state to choose its economic and social system in accord with the will of its people, without outside interference in whatever form it takes.

1981 Condemns activities of foreign economic interests in colonial territories.

1981 Calls for the cessation of all test explosions of nuclear weapons.

1981 Calls for action in support of measures to prevent nuclear war, curb the arms race and promote disarmament.

1981 Urges negotiations on prohibition of chemical and biological weapons.

1981 Declares that education, work, health care, proper nourishment, national development, etc are human rights.

1981 Condemns South Africa for attacks on neighbouring states, condemns apartheid and attempts to strengthen sanctions: 7 resolutions.

1981 Condemns an attempted coup by South Africa on the Seychelles.

1981 Condemns Israel's treatment of the Palestinians, human rights policies, and the bombing of Iraq:
18 resolutions.

1982 Condemns the Israeli invasion of Lebanon:
6 resolutions (1982 to 1983).

1982 Condemns the shooting of 11 Muslims at a shrine in Jerusalem by an Israeli soldier.

1982 Calls on Israel to withdraw from the Golan Heights occupied in 1967.

1982 Condemns apartheid and calls for the cessation of economic aid to South Africa: 4 resolutions.

1982 Calls for the setting up of a World Charter for the protection of the ecology.

1982 Sets up a United Nations conference on succession of states in respect to state property, archives, and debts.

1982 Nuclear test bans and negotiations and nuclear free outer space: 3 resolutions.

1982 Supports a new world information and communications order.

1982 Prohibition of chemical and bacteriological weapons.

1982 Development of international law.

1982 Protects against products harmful to health and the environment .

1982 Declares that education, work, health care, proper nourishment, and national development are human rights.

1982 Protects against products harmful to health and the environment.

1982 Development of the energy resources of developing countries.

1983 Resolutions about apartheid, nuclear arms, economics, and international law: 15 resolutions.

1984 Condemns support of South Africa in its Namibian and other policies.

1984 International action to eliminate apartheid.

1984 Condemns Israel for occupying and attacking southern Lebanon.

1984 Resolutions about apartheid, nuclear arms, economics, and international law. 18 resolutions.

1985 Condemns Israel for occupying and attacking southern Lebanon.

1985 Condemns Israel for using excessive force in the occupied territories.

1985 Resolutions about cooperation, human rights, trade and development. 3 resolutions.

1985 Measures to be taken against Nazi, Fascist, and neo-Fascist activities .

1986 Calls on all governments (including the United States) to observe international law.

1986 Imposes economic and military sanctions against South Africa.

1986 Condemns Israel for its actions against Lebanese civilians.

1986 Calls on Israel to respect Muslim holy places.

1986 Condemns Israel for sky-jacking a Libyan airliner.

1986 Resolutions about cooperation, security, human rights, trade, media bias, the environment, and development: 8 resolutions.

1987 Calls on Israel to abide by the Geneva Conventions in its treatment of the Palestinians.

1987 Calls on Israel to stop deporting Palestinians.

1987 Condemns Israel for its actions in Lebanon:
2 resolutions.

1987 Calls on Israel to withdraw its forces from Lebanon.

1987 Cooperation between the UN and League of Arab States.

1987 Calls for compliance in the International Court of Justice concerning military and paramilitary activities against Nicaragua and a call to end the trade embargo against Nicaragua: 2 resolutions.

1987 Measures to prevent international terrorism, study the underlying political and economic causes of terrorism, convene a conference to define terrorism and to differentiate it from the struggle of people from national liberation.

1987 Resolutions concerning journalism, international debt, and trade: 3 resolutions.

1987 Opposition to the build up of weapons in space.

1987 Opposition to the development of new weapons of mass destruction.

1987 Opposition to nuclear testing. 2 resolutions.

1987 Proposal to set up South Atlantic "Zone of Peace".

1988 Condemns Israeli practices against Palestinians in the occupied territories: 5 resolutions (1988 and 1989).

1989 Condemns US invasion of Panama.

1989 Condemns US troops for ransacking the residence of the Nicaraguan ambassador in Panama.

1989 Condemns US support for the Contra army in Nicaragua.

1989 Condemns illegal US embargo of Nicaragua.

1989 Opposing the acquisition of territory by force.

1989 Calling for a resolution to the Arab-Israeli conflict based on earlier UN resoltions.

1990 To send three UN Security Council observers to the occupied territories.

1995 Affirms that land in East Jerusalem annexed by Israel is occupied territory.

1997 Calls on Israel to cease building settlements in East Jerusalem and other occupied territories:
2 resolutions.

1999 Calls on the United States to end its trade embargo on Cuba:
8 resolutions (1992 to 1999).

2001 To send unarmed monitors to the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

2001 To set up the International Criminal Court.

2002 To renew the peace keeping mission in Bosnia. 

[Chart above from http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/geoff/UNresolutions.htm]


[Chart below from: http://www.krysstal.com/democracy_whyusa03.html]

2002 Condemns the killing of a UN worker from the United Kingdom by Israeli forces. Condemns the destruction of the World Food Programme warehouse.
2003 Condemns a decision by the Israeli parliament to "remove" the elected Palestinian president, Yasser Arafat.
2003 Condemns the building of a wall by Israel on Palestinian land.
2003 To end the US's forty-year embargo of Cuba.
2004 Condemns the assassination of Hamas leader Sheik Ahmad Yassin.
2004 Condemns the Israeli incursion and killings in Gaza.
2004 Production and processing of weapon-usable material should be under international control.
2006 Calls for an end to Israeli military incursions and attacks on Gaza.
2006 Calls for an end to the financial embargo against Cuba.
2007 Calls for peaceful uses for outer space.
2007 Calls for a convention against female descrimination.
2007 Concerning the rights of children.
2007 Concerning the right to food.
2007 On the applicability of the Geneva Convention to the protection of civilians in time of war.
2007 Calls for the protection of the Global Climate.
2007 Calls for Indian Ocean to be declared a zone of peace. Calls for a nuclear weapon-free South East Asia.

2007 Calls for the right of self determination for the Palestinian people. Other resolutions regarding the Palestinians and their rights.
2008 Calls for progress towards an arms trade treaty.
2008 Banning the development of new weapons of mass destruction.
2008 Assuring non-nuclear states they will not be attacked or threatened with nuclear weapons.
2008 Prevention of the development of an arms race in outer space and transparency in outer space activities.
2008 Calls to decrease the operational readiness of nuclear weapons systems and to ban nuclear weapons.
2008 Calls to end the use of depleted Uranium in weapons.
2008 Concerning the trade in illicit small arms.
2008 Calls for a nuclear free Central Asia and a nuclear free Southern Hemisphere. Prevention of proliferation in the Middle East.
2008 Calls for a comprehensive (nuclear) test ban treaty. Calls for a nuclear weapon free world.
2008 Calls for a treaty on children's rights.
2008 Condemns racial descrimination.
2008 Affirms the soverignty of Palestinians over the occupied territories and their resources.
2008 Affirms the right of the Palestinians to self determination.
2008 Calls on Israel to pay the cost of cleaning up an oil slick off the coast of Lebanon caused by its bombing.
2008 Calls for a new economic order.
2008 Calls for a right of development for nations.
2008 Calls for a right to food.
2008 Respect for the right to universal freedom of travel and the vital importance of family reunification.
2008 Concerning developments in information technology for international security.
2008 Resolutions concerning Palestine, its people, their property, and Israeli practices in Palestine, including settlements.
2009 Calls for an end to the twenty-two-day-long Israeli attack on Gaza.
2011 Calls for a halt to the illegal Israeli West Bank settlements.
2011 Calls for Israel to cease obstructing the movement and access of the staff, vehicles and supplies of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees.
2011 Calls for the immediate and complete cessation of all Israeli settlement activities in all of the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and in the occupied Syrian Golan.


* Between 1972 and 2001, the United States used its veto power in the Security Council thirty-nine times to block resolutions critical of Israeli policies in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, more than all other countries have used their veto on all other issues combined. (Source: Stephen Zunes, Tinderbox: US Middle East Policy and the Rootes of September Terrorism.)

Monday, July 29, 2013

A mistaken case for Syrian regime change

By Aisling Byrne


"War with Iran is already here," wrote a leading Israeli commentator recently, describing "the combination of covert warfare and international pressure" being applied to Iran.

Although not mentioned, the "strategic prize" of the first stage of this war on Iran is Syria; the first campaign in a much wider sectarian power-bid. "Other than the collapse of the Islamic Republic itself," Saudi King Abdullah was reported to have said last summer, "nothing would weaken Iran more than losing Syria." [1]

By December, senior United States officials were explicit about their regime change agenda for Syria: Tom Donilon, the US National Security Adviser, explained that the "end of the [President Bashar al-]Assad regime would constitute Iran's

greatest setback in the region yet - a strategic blow that will further shift the balance of power in the region against Iran."

Shortly before, a key official in terms of operationalizing this policy, Under Secretary of State for the Near East Jeffrey Feltman, had stated at a congressional hearing that the US would "relentlessly pursue our two-track strategy of supporting the opposition and diplomatically and financially strangling the [Syrian] regime until that outcome is achieved". [2]

What we are seeing in Syria is a deliberate and calculated campaign to bring down the Assad government so as to replace it with a regime "more compatible" with US interests in the region.
The blueprint for this project is essentially a report produced by the neo-conservative Brookings Institute for regime change in Iran in 2009. The report - "Which Path to Persia?" [3] - continues to be the generic strategic approach for US-led regime change in the region.

A rereading of it, together with the more recent "Towards a Post-Assad Syria" [4] (which adopts the same language and perspective, but focuses on Syria, and was recently produced by two US neo-conservative think-tanks) illustrates how developments in Syria have been shaped according to the step-by-step approach detailed in the "Paths to Persia" report with the same key objective: regime change.

The authors of these reports include, among others, John Hannah and Martin Indyk, both former senior neo-conservative officials from the George W Bush/Dick Cheney administration, and both advocates for regime change in Syria. [5] Not for the first time are we seeing a close alliance between US/British neo-cons with Islamists (including, reports show [6], some with links to al-Qaeda) working together to bring about regime change in an "enemy" state.

Arguably, the most important component in this struggle for the "strategic prize" has been the deliberate construction of a largely false narrative that pits unarmed democracy demonstrators being killed in their hundreds and thousands as they protest peacefully against an oppressive, violent regime, a "killing machine" [7] led by the "monster" [8] Assad.

Whereas in Libya, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) claimed it had "no confirmed reports of civilian casualties" because, as the New York Times wrote recently, "the alliance had created its own definition for 'confirmed': only a death that NATO itself investigated and corroborated could be called confirmed".

"But because the alliance declined to investigate allegations," the Times wrote, "its casualty tally by definition could not budge - from zero". [9]

In Syria, we see the exact opposite: the majority of Western mainstream media outlets, along with the media of the US's allies in the region, particularly al-Jazeera and the Saudi-owned al-Arabiya TV channels, are effectively collaborating with the "regime change" narrative and agenda with a near-complete lack of questioning or investigation of statistics and information put out by organizations and media outlets that are either funded or owned by the US/European/Gulf alliance - the very same countries instigating the regime change project in the first place.

Claims of "massacres", "campaigns of rape targeting women and girls in predominantly Sunni towns" [10] "torture" and even "child-rape" [11] are reported by the international press based largely on two sources - the British-based Syrian Observatory of Human Rights and the Local Co-ordination Committees (LCCs) - with minimal additional checking or verification.

Hiding behind the rubric - "we are not able to verify these statistics" - the lack of integrity in reporting by the Western mainstream media has been starkly apparent since the onset of events in Syria. A decade after the Iraq war, it would seem that no lessons from 2003 - from the demonization of Saddam Hussein and his purported weapons of mass destruction - have been learnt.

Of the three main sources for all data on numbers of protesters killed and numbers of people attending demonstrations - the pillars of the narrative - all are part of the "regime change" alliance.

The Syrian Observatory of Human Rights, in particular, is reportedly funded through a Dubai-based fund with pooled (and therefore deniable) Western-Gulf money (Saudi Arabia alone has, according to Elliot Abrams [12] allocated US$130 billion to "palliate the masses" of the Arab Spring).
What appears to be a nondescript British-based organization, the Observatory has been pivotal in sustaining the narrative of the mass killing of thousands of peaceful protesters using inflated figures, "facts", and often exaggerated claims of "massacres" and even recently "genocide".

Although it claims to be based in its director's house [13], the Observatory has been described as the "front office" of a large media propaganda set-up run by the Syrian opposition and its backers. The Russian Foreign Ministry [14] stated starkly:

The agenda of the [Syrian] transitional council [is] composed in London by the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights ... It is also there where pictures of 'horror' in Syria are made to stir up hatred towards Assad's regime.

The Observatory is not legally registered either as a company or charity in the United Kingdom, but operates informally; it has no office, no staff and its director is reportedly awash with funding.
It receives its information, it says, from a network of "activists" inside Syria; its English-language website is a single page with al-Jazeera instead hosting a minute-by-minute live blog page for it since the outset of protests. [15]

The second, the LCCs, are a more overt part of the opposition's media infrastructure, and their figures and reporting is similarly encompassed only [16] within the context of this main narrative: in an analysis of their daily reports, I couldn't find a single reference to any armed insurgents being killed: reported deaths are of "martyrs", "defector soldiers", people killed in "peaceful demonstrations" and similar descriptions.

The third is al-Jazeera, whose biased role in "reporting" the Awakenings has been well documented. Described by one seasoned media analyst [17] as the "sophisticated mouthpiece of the state of Qatar and its ambitious emir", al-Jazeera is integral to Qatar's "foreign-policy aspirations".

Al-Jazeera has, and continues, [18] to provide technical support, equipment, hosting and "credibility" to Syrian opposition activists and organizations. Reports show that as early as March 2011, al-Jazeera was providing messaging and technical support to exiled Syrian opposition activists [19] , who even by January 2010 were co-ordinating their messaging activities from Doha.
Nearly 10 months on, however, and despite the daily international media onslaught, the project isn't exactly going to plan: a YouGov poll commissioned by the Qatar Foundation [20] showed last week that 55% of Syrians do not want Assad to resign and 68% of Syrians disapprove of the Arab League sanctions imposed on their country.

According to the poll, Assad's support has effectively increased since the onset of current events - 46% of Syrians felt Assad was a "good" president for Syria prior to current events in the country - something that certainly doesn't fit with the false narrative being peddled.
As if trumpeting the success of their own propaganda campaign, the poll summary concludes:

The majority of Arabs believe Syria's President Basher al-Assad should resign in the wake of the regime's brutal treatment of protesters ... 81% of Arabs [want] President Assad to step down. They believe Syria would be better off if free democratic elections were held under the supervision of a transitional government. [21]

One is left wondering who exactly is Assad accountable to - the Syrian people or the Arab public? A blurring of lines that might perhaps be useful as two main Syrian opposition groups have just announced [22] that while they are against foreign military intervention, they do not consider "Arab intervention" to be foreign.

Unsurprisingly, not a single mainstream major newspaper or news outlet reported the YouGov poll results - it doesn't fit their narrative.

In the UK, the volunteer-run Muslim News [23] was the only newspaper to report the findings; yet only two weeks before in the immediate aftermath of the suicide explosions in Damascus, both the Guardian [24], like other outlets, within hours of the explosions were publishing sensational, unsubstantiated reports from bloggers, including one who was "sure that some of the bodies ... were those of demonstrators".

"They have planted bodies before," he said; "they took dead people from Dera'a [in the south] and showed the media bodies in Jisr al-Shughour [near the Turkish border.]"
Recent reports have cast serious doubt on the accuracy of the false narrative peddled daily by the mainstream international press, in particular information put out by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and the LCCs.

In December, the mainstream US intelligence group Stratfor cautioned:

Most of the [Syrian] opposition's more serious claims have turned out to be grossly exaggerated or simply untrue ... revealing more about the opposition's weaknesses than the level of instability inside the Syrian regime. [25]

Throughout the nine-month uprising, Stratfor has advised caution on accuracy of the mainstream narrative on Syria: in September it commented that "with two sides to every war ... the war of perceptions in Syria is no exception". [26]

Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and LCC reports, "like those from the regime, should be viewed with skepticism", argues Stratfor; "the opposition understands that it needs external support, specifically financial support, if it is to be a more robust movement than it is now. To that end, it has every reason to present the facts on the ground in a way that makes the case for foreign backing."

As Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov observed: "It is clear that the purpose is to provoke a humanitarian catastrophe, to get a pretext to demand external interference into this conflict." [27] Similarly, in mid-December, American Conservative reported:

CIA [Central Intelligence Agency] analysts are skeptical regarding the march to war. The frequently cited United Nations report that more than 3,500 civilians have been killed by Assad's soldiers is based largely on rebel sources and is uncorroborated. The Agency has refused to sign off on the claims.
Likewise, accounts of mass defections from the Syrian army and pitched battles between deserters and loyal soldiers appear to be a fabrication, with few defections being confirmed independently. Syrian government claims that it is being assaulted by rebels who are armed, trained and financed by foreign governments are more true than false. [28]
As recently as November, the Free Syria Army implied their

numbers would be larger, but, as they explained to one analyst, they are "advising sympathizers to delay their defection" until regional conditions improve. [29]


A guide to regime change


In relation to Syria, section three of the "Paths to Persia" report is particularly relevant - it is essentially a step-by-step guide detailing options for instigating and supporting a popular uprising, inspiring an insurgency and/or instigating a coup. The report comes complete with a "Pros and Cons" section:

An insurgency is often easier to instigate and support from abroad ... Insurgencies are famously cheap to support ... covert support to an insurgency would provide the United States with "plausibility deniability" ... [with less] diplomatic and political backlash ... than if the United States were to mount a direct military action ... Once the regime suffers some major setback [this] provides an opportunity to act.
Military action, the report argues, would only be taken once other options had been tried and shown to have failed as the "international community" would then conclude of any attack that the government "brought it on themselves" by refusing a very good deal.
Key aspects for instigating a popular uprising and building a "full-fledged insurgency" are evident in relation to developments in Syria.
These include:
  • "Funding and helping organize domestic rivals of the regime" including using "unhappy" ethnic groups;
  • "Building the capacity of 'effective oppositions' with whom to work" in order to "create an alternative leadership to seize power";
  • Provision of equipment and covert backing to groups, including arms - either directly or indirectly, as well as "fax machines ... Internet access, funds" (on Iran the report noted that the "CIA could take care of most of the supplies and training for these groups, as it has for decades all over the world");
  • Training and facilitation of messaging by opposition activists;
  • Constructing a narrative "with the support of US-backed media outlets could highlight regime shortcomings and make otherwise obscure critics more prominent" - "having the regime discredited among key 'opinion shapers' is critical to its collapse";
  • The creation of a large funding budget to fund a wide array of civil-society-led initiatives (a so-called "$75 million fund" created under former US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice-funded civil society groups, including "a handful of Beltway-based think-tanks and institutions [which] announced new Iran desks)" [30];
  • The need for an adjacent land corridor in a neighboring country "to help develop an infrastructure to support operations".
  • "Beyond this," continues the report, "US economic pressure (and perhaps military pressure as well) can discredit the regime, making the population hungry for a rival leadership."

    The US and its allies, particularly Britain [31] and France, have funded and helped "shape" the opposition from the outset - building both on attempts started by the US in 2006 to construct a unified front against the Assad government, and the perceived "success" of the Libyan Transitional National Council model. [32]

    Despite months of attempts - predominately by the West - at cajoling the various groups into a unified, proficient opposition movement, they remain "a diverse group, representing the country's ideological, sectarian and generational divides".

    "There neither has been nor is [there] now any natural tendency towards unity between these groups, since they belong to totally different ideological backgrounds and have antagonistic political views," one analyst concluded. [33]

    At a recent meeting with the British foreign secretary, the different groups would not even meet with William Hague together, instead meeting him separately. [34]
    Nevertheless, despite a lack of cohesion, internal credibility and legitimacy, the opposition, predominately under the umbrella of the Syrian National Council (SNC), is being groomed for office. This includes capacity-building, as confirmed by the former Syrian ambassador to the US, Rafiq Juajati, now part of the opposition.

    At a closed briefing in Washington DC in mid-December 2011, he confirmed that the US State Department and the SWP-German Institute for International and Security Affairs (a think-tank that provides foreign policy analysis to the German government) were funding a project that is managed by the US Institute for Peace and SWP, working in partnership with the SNC, to prepare the SNC for the takeover and running of Syria.

    In a recent interview, SNC leader Burhan Ghaliyoun disclosed (so as to "speed up the process" of Assad's fall) [35] the credentials expected of him: "There will be no special relationship with Iran," he said. "Breaking the exceptional relationship means breaking the strategic, military alliance," adding that "after the fall of the Syrian regime, [Hezbollah] won't be the same." [36]

    Described in Slate magazine [37] as the "most liberal and Western-friendly of the Arab Spring uprisings", Syrian opposition groups sound as compliant as their Libyan counterparts prior to the demise of Muammar Gaddafi, whom the New York Times described as "secular-minded professionals - lawyers, academics, businesspeople - who talk about democracy, transparency, human rights and the rule of law" [38]; that was, until reality transitioned to former leader of the Libyan Islamist Fighting Group Abdulhakim Belhaj and his jihadi colleagues.

    The import of weapons, equipment, manpower (predominantly from Libya) [39] and training by governments and other groups linked to the US, NATO and their regional allies began in April-May 2011, [40] according to various reports [41], and is co-ordinated out of the US air force base at Incirlik in southern Turkey. From Incirlik, an information warfare division also directs communications to Syria via the Free Syria Army. This covert support continues, as American Conservative reported in mid-December:

    Unmarked NATO warplanes are arriving at Turkish military bases close to Iskenderum on the Syrian border, delivering weapons ... as well as volunteers from the Libyan Transitional National Council ... Iskenderum is also the seat of the Free Syrian Army, the armed wing of the Syrian National Council. French and British special forces trainers are on the ground, assisting the Syrian rebels while the CIA and US Spec Ops are providing communications equipment and intelligence to assist the rebel cause, enabling the fighters to avoid concentrations of Syrian soldiers. [42]

    The Washington Post exposed in April 2011 that recent WikiLeaks showed that the US State Department had been giving millions of dollars to various Syrian exile groups (including the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated Movement for Justice and Development in London) and individuals since 2006 via its "Middle East Partnership Initiative" administered by a US foundation, the Democracy Council. [43]

    Leaked WikiLeak cables confirmed that well into 2010, this funding was continuing, a trend that not only continues today but which has expanded in light of the shift to the "soft power" option aimed at regime change in Syria.

    As this neo-con-led call for regime change in Syria gains strength within the US administration, [44] so too has this policy been institutionalized among leading US foreign policy think-tanks, many of whom have "Syria desks" or "Syria working groups" which collaborate closely with Syrian opposition groups and individuals (for example USIP [45] and the Foundation for the Defense of Democracy) [46] and which have published a range of policy documents making the case for regime change.

    In the UK, the similarly neo-con Henry Jackson Society (which "supports the maintenance of a strong military, by the United States, the countries of the European Union and other democratic powers, armed with expeditionary capabilities with a global reach" and which believes that "only modern liberal democratic states are truly legitimate") is similarly pushing the agenda for regime change in Syria [47].

    This is in partnership with Syrian opposition figures including Ausama Monajed, [48] a former leader of the Syrian exile group, the Movement for Justice & Development, linked to the Muslim Brotherhood, which was funded by the US State Department from 2006, as we know from WikiLeaks.

    Monajed, a member of the SNC, currently directs a public relations firm [49] recently established in London and incidentally was the first to use the term "genocide" in relation to events in Syria in a recent SNC press release. [50]

    Since the outset, significant pressure has been brought to bear on Turkey to establish a "humanitarian corridor" along its southern border with Syria. The main aim of this, as the "Paths to Persia" report outlines, is to provide a base from which the externally-backed insurgency can be launched and based.

    The objective of this "humanitarian corridor" is about as humanitarian as the four-week NATO bombing of Sirte when NATO exercised its "responsibility to protect" mandate, as approved by the UN Security Council.

    All this is not to say that there isn't a genuine popular demand for change in Syria against the repressive security-dominated infrastructure that dominates every aspect of people's lives, nor that gross human-rights violations have not been committed, both by the Syrian security forces, armed opposition insurgents, as well as mysterious third force characters operating since the onset of the crisis in Syria, including insurgents, [51] mostly jihadis from neighboring Iraq and Lebanon, as well as more recently Libya, among others.

    Such abuses are inevitable in low-intensity conflict. Leading critics [52] of this US-France-UK-Gulf-led regime change project have, from the outset, called for full accountability and punishment for any security or other official "however senior", found to have committed any human-rights abuses.
    Ibrahim al-Amine writes that some in the regime have conceded "that the security remedy was damaging in many cases and regions [and] that the response to the popular protests was mistaken ... it would have been possible to contain the situation via clear and firm practical measures - such as arresting those responsible for torturing children in Deraa". And it argues that the demand for political pluralism and an end to the all-encompassing repression is both vital and urgent. [53]
    But what may have began as popular protests, initially focused on

    local issues and incidents (including the case of the torture of young boys in Dera'a by security forces) were rapidly hijacked by this wider strategic project for regime change. Five years ago, I worked in northern Syria with the United Nations managing a large community development project.

    After evening community meetings, it wasn't uncommon to find the mukhabarat (military intelligence) waiting for us to vacate the room so they could scan flipcharts posted on the walls. That almost every aspect of people's daily lives was regulated by a sclerotic dysfunctional Ba'ath party/security bureaucracy, devoid of any ideology apart from the inevitable corruption and nepotism that comes with authoritarian power, was apparent in every feature of people's lives.
    Tuesday, December 20 was reportedly the "deadliest day of the nine-month [Syrian] uprising "with the "organized massacre" of a "mass defection" of army deserters widely reported by the international press in Idlib, northern Syria. Claiming that areas of Syria were now "exposed to large-scale genocide", the SNC lamented the "250 fallen heroes during a 48-hour period", citing figures provided by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. [54] Quoting the same source, the Guardian reported that the Syrian army was:

    ... hunt[ing] down deserters after troops ... killed close to 150 men who had fled their base". A picture has emerged ... of a mass defection ... that went badly wrong ... with loyalist forces positioned to mow down large numbers of defectors as they fled a military base. Those who managed to escape were later hunted down in hideouts in nearby mountains, multiple sources have reported. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights estimated that 100 deserters were besieged, then killed or wounded. Regular troops allegedly also hunted down residents who had given shelter to the deserters. [55]

    The Guardian's live blog-quoted AVAAZ, the citizen political advocacy/public relations group, which "claimed 269 people had been killed in the clashes", and cited AVAAZ's precise breakdown of casualties: "163 armed revolutionaries, 97 government troops and 9 civilians". [56] They noted that AVAAZ "provided nothing to corroborate the claim".
    The Washington Post reported only that they had spoken to

    "an activist with the rights group AVAAZ [who] said he had spoken to local activists and medical groups who put the death toll in that area Tuesday at 269". [57]
    A day after initial reports of the massacre of fleeing deserters, however, the story had changed. On December 23, the Telegraph reported:

    At first they were said to be army deserters attempting to break into Turkey to join the FSA [Free Syrian Army], but they are now said to be unarmed civilians and activists attempting to escape the army's attempts to bring the province back under control. They were surrounded by troops and tanks and gunned down until there were no survivors, according to reports. [58]

    The New York Times had, on December 21, reported that the "massacre", citing the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights, was of "unarmed civilians and activists, with no armed military defectors among them, the rights groups said".

    It quoted the head of the Observatory who described it as "an organized massacre" and said his account corroborated a Kfar Owaid witness' account: "The security forces had lists of names of those who organized massive anti-regime protests ... the troops then opened fire with tanks, rockets and heavy machine guns [and], bombs filled with nails to increase the number of casualties. [59]

    The LA Times quoted an activist it had spoken to via satellite connection who, from his position "sheltering in the woods" commented: "The word 'massacre' seems like too small a word to describe what happened." Meanwhile, the Syrian government reported that on December 19 and 20, it had killed "tens" of members of "armed terrorist gangs" in both Homs and Idlib, and had arrested many wanted individuals. [60]

    The truth of these two "deadly" days will probably never be known - the figures cited above (between 10-163 armed insurgents, 9-111 unarmed civilians and 0-97 government forces) differ so significantly in both numbers reported killed and who they were, that the "truth" is impossible to establish.

    In relation to an earlier purported "massacre" in Homs, a Stratfor investigation found "no signs of a massacre", concluding that "opposition forces have an interest in portraying an impending massacre, hoping to mimic the conditions that propelled a foreign military intervention in Libya". [61]

    Nevertheless, the "massacre" of December 19-20 in Idlib was reported as fact, and was etched into the narrative of Assad's "killing machine".

    Both the recent UN Human Rights Commissioner's report and a recent data blog report [62] on reported deaths in "Syria's bloody uprising" by the Guardian (published December 13) - two examples of attempts to establish the truth about numbers killed in the Syrian conflict - rely almost exclusively on opposition-provided data: interviews with 233 alleged "army defectors" in the case of the UN report, and on reports from the Syrian Human Rights Observatory, the LCCs and al-Jazeera in the case of the Guardian's data blog.

    The Guardian reports a total of 1,414.5 people (sic) killed - including 144 Syrian security personnel - between January and November 21, 2011. Based solely on press reports, the report contains a number of basic inaccuracies (eg sources not matching numbers killed with places cited in original sources): their total includes 23 Syrians killed by the Israeli army in June on the Golan Heights; 25 people reported "wounded" are included in total figures for those killed, as are many people reported shot.

    The report makes no reference to any killings of armed insurgents during the entire 10-month period - all victims are "protesters", "civilians" or "people" - apart from the 144 security personnel.
    Seventy percent of the report's data sources are from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, the LCCs and "activists"; 38% of press reports are from al-Jazeera, 3% from Amnesty International and 1.5% from official Syrian sources.

    In response to the UN Commissioner's report, Syria's ambassador to the UN commented: "How could defectors give positive testimonies on the Syrian government? Of course they will give negative testimonies against the Syrian government. They are defectors."

    In the effort to inflate figures of casualties, the public relations-activist group AVAAZ has consistently outstripped even the UN. AVAAZ has publicly stated it is involved in "smuggling activists ... out of the country", running "secret safe houses to shelter ... top activists from regime thugs" and that one "AVAAZ citizen journalist" "discover[ed] a mass grave". [63]
    It states proudly that the BBC and CNN have said that AVAAZ data amounts to some 30% of their news coverage of Syria. The Guardian reported AVAAZ's latest claim to have "evidence" of killings of some 6,200 people (including security forces and including 400 children), claiming 617 of whom died under torture [64] - their justification to have verified each single death with confirmation by three people, "including a relative and a cleric who handled the body" is improbable in the extreme.
    The killing of one brigadier-general and his children in April last year in Homs illustrates how near impossible it is, particularly during sectarian conflict, to verify even one killing - in this case, a man and his children:

    The general, believed to be Abdu Tallawi, was killed with his children and nephew while passing through an agitated neighborhood. There are two accounts of what happened to him and his family, and they differ about the victim's sect.
    Regime loyalists say that he was killed by takfiris - hardline Islamists who accuse other Muslims of apostasy - because he belonged to the Alawite sect. The protesters insist that he is a member of the Tallawi family from Homs and that he was killed by security forces to accuse the opposition and destroy their reputation. Some even claim that he was shot because he refused to fire at protesters.
    The third account is ignored due to the extreme polarization of opinions in the city [Homs]. The brigadier-general was killed because he was in a military vehicle, even though he had his kids with him. Whoever killed him was not concerned with his sect but with directing a blow to the regime, thus provoking an even harsher crackdown, which, in turn, would drag the protest movement into a cycle of violence with the state. [65]

    Notes
    1. See here.
    2. See here.
    3. See here.
    4. See here.
    5. See here and here.
    6. See here.
    7. See here.
    8. See here.
    9. See here.
    10. See here.
    11. See here.
    12. See here.
    13. See here.
    14. See here.
    15. See here.
    16. See here.
    17. See here.
    18. See here.
    19. See here.
    20. See here.
    21. ibid.
    22. See here.
    23. See here.
    24. See here.
    25. See here.
    26. See here.
    27. See here.
    28. See here.
    29. See here.
    30. See here.
    31. See here.
    32. See here.
    33. See here.
    34. See here.
    35. See here.
    36. See here.
    37. See here.
    38. See here.
    39. See here.
    40. See here.
    41. See here.
    42. See here.
    43. See here.
    44. See here.
    45. See here.
    46. See here.
    47. See here.
    48. See here.
    49. See here.
    50. See here.
    51. See here.
    52. See here.
    53. See here.
    54. See here.
    55. See here.
    56. See here.
    57. See here.
    58. See here.
    59. See here.
    60. See here.
    61. See here.
    62. See here.
    63. See here.
    64. See here.
    65. See here.
    Aisling Byrne is Projects Co-ordinator with Conflicts Forum and is based in Beirut.
    (Copyright 2012 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)

    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/NA05Ak03.html

    The United States Should Stay Out of Syria

    Bob Dreyfuss

    A Syrian soldier, who has defected to join the Free Syrian Army, holds up his rifle and waves a Syrian independence flag in the Damascus suburb of Saqba on January 27, 2012. REUTERS/Ahmed Jadallah

    Let’s be clear what is and what is not happening in Syria.

    Lined up in support of regime change in Damascus are the Middle East’s major Sunni powers, led by Saudi Arabia and Turkey. Also backing regime change, though less publicly, is the international network known as the Muslim Brotherhood, a Sunni powerhouse that is providing much, if not most, of the increasingly militarized Syrian opposition forces, especially in Sunni strongholds such as Homs. And backing the Sunni-led regional forces for regime change is NATO, the United States and its allies, who are outraged, just outraged, that Russia and China would dare to veto a carefully crafted UN Security Council resolution targeting President Bashar al-Assad.

    The Syrian opposition, at least in its external form, is murky at best.

    As Aisling Byrne wrote recently in the Asia Times:

    What we are seeing in Syria is a deliberate and calculated campaign to bring down the Assad government so as to replace it with a regime “more compatible” with US interests in the region.

    Various hawks, neoconservatives, think-tank denizens at places like AEI and the Washington Institution for Near East Policy, various pro-Israel right-wingers and most of the Republican candidates for president are demanding stronger action from the Obama administration, and some of them want outright military intervention, arms embargos, direct lethal aid to the insurgents and their paramilitary wing, and other support.

    For Saudi Arabia, the Arab states of the Persian Gulf and Turkey, this is about building a Sunni, anti-Shiite coalition against Iran. Iraq, whose Shiite regime is more and more dependent on Iran, is tilting toward Assad, who’s getting strong Iranian support. (Although lately Iran seems to be hedging its bets, talking to the Syrian opposition, in case Assad collapses.) So in its fervor to isolate Iran, the United States is poised at the edge of joining the Syrian civil war. This is not good.

    The killings in Syria are ugly, but no doubt wildly exaggerated. Nearly all, repeat all, of the information about the violence in Syria is coming from a handful of exiled Syrian opposition groups backed by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and various Western powers. Did 200 people really die in Homs this past weekend, conveniently just on the eve of the UNSC debate? Who knows? The only source for the fishy information, though ubiquitously quoted in the New York Times, the wire services, the network news and elsewhere, are the suspect Syrian opposition groups, who have axes galore to grind.

    As Byrne reports, skeptically:

    Of the three main sources for all data on numbers of protesters killed and numbers of people attending demonstrations—the pillars of the narrative—all are part of the “regime change” alliance. The Syrian Observatory of Human Rights, in particular, is reportedly funded through a Dubai-based fund with pooled (and therefore deniable) Western-Gulf money…. What appears to be a nondescript British-based organization, the Observatory has been pivotal in sustaining the narrative of the mass killing of thousands of peaceful protesters using inflated figures, “facts”, and often exaggerated claims of “massacres” and even recently “genocide”.

    And Byrne points out that the Syrian opposition is getting strong backing and propaganda support from Al Jazeera, the Qatar-based news network that is an arm of the Qatari royal family.

    Let me add that I agree 100 percent with Sergei Lavrov, Russia’s foreign minister:

    There are some in the West who have given evaluations of the vote on Syria in the United Nations Security Council that sound, I would say, indecent and perhaps on the verge of hysterical. Those who get angry are rarely right.

    Lavrov, along with Russia’s intelligence chief, is planning to meet with Assad on Tuesday in Damascus to seek a compromise or some sort of deal. Vitaly Churkin, Russia’s ambassador to the UN, said accurately: “The Security Council is not the only diplomatic tool on the planet.”

    Both Russia and China vetoed the UN resolution on Syria, triggering huffs and puffs of outrage in the United States.

    The Washington Post notes:

    Georgy Mirsky, a senior researcher at the Institute of World Economy and International Relations, told the newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta that Russia’s blocking of the U.N. resolution is unlikely to deter Saudi Arabia. “Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey will not be standing aside: they will send military instructors, advisers and arms to Syria without any UN Security Council resolutions,” he was quoted as saying. “The Muslim Brotherhood movement may come to power in Syria instead of Assad.

    “All this may result in a bloody massacre of the Alawites and a confrontation between the Sunnis and Shiites in the Middle East,” he said.

    All true.

    http://www.thenation.com/blog/166096/united-states-should-stay-out-syria#

    Syria and 'The Great Game'

     

    Amira Mohsen Galal

    Broadcast journalist and political analyst focusing on the Middle East

    16/02/2012 00:00

    It would probably surprise many of you out there that a conflict that started 200 years ago is still alive, well and 'coming soon to a cinema near you'- in fact, if you are in the Middle East then it's already on your doorstep. The 'Great Game' was a term coined back during the 19th century, describing strategic rivalry and conflict between the British Empire and the Russian Empire for supremacy in Central Asia.

    The 'Great Game' is considered as having started with the Russo-Persian Treaty of 1813 to the Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907. Further conflict followed the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 and again with the 'Cold War' from the 1950s through to 1991.

    Recent events in the Middle East suggest that the 'Great Game' has been revived or, in fact, it never died. Not even the players have changed! The game is still dominated by two players: the Anglo Saxon 'West' and Russian 'East'. The stakes are still the same and the battlegrounds remain. Take the first Anglo-Afghan war of 1838- Afghanistan was captured by the British to act as a buffer between Russia and the 'Jewel in the Crown' India. By the 1890s, the Great Game was ready to move eastwards to China, with Russia taking a strategic decision to reform and modernise China and bring their largest neighbour on side.

    Throughout the 20th century, the battle for Afghanistan continued, resulting in the country's total destruction and creating a no-man's land between the two great empires. China has flourished economically and, since the fall of the Soviet Union, relations between the two countries have improved dramatically with great scale cooperation economically, militarily and, of course, on a foreign policy level. It would also appear that the Anglo-Saxon dream of dominating Persia has gone unabated, with continued threats made against Tehran.

    So what has changed? Of course, there have been developments across the world over the last 200 years. The epicenter for Anglo Saxon forces has moved from Britain to the United States and new economic powers have emerged in the Gulf, which have significantly impacted the balance of the Great Game. What remains unclear is whether those forces - principally Saudi Arabia and Qatar - will be able to manipulate the big political powers sufficiently to achieve their own ends or, whether they will be consumed, losing all sense of identity and ability to set their own agendas. Money talks but then one must remember that the main players of the Great Game have been playing for much longer.

    Since the 1950s, the largely socialist regimes of the Middle East were considered satellites of the Soviet Union, whereas Israel was a point on the map for the West, it may even be argued that one of the main reasons for Western backing of the Zionist state was in order to have a strong ally in the region. Extensive armament funding would seem to substantiate this belief.

    With the decline of the Soviet Union, many Arab states were to discover that their socialist dreams were to go up in smoke and many turned to Western free market finance in an attempt to keep their flailing economies afloat.

    By the end of the 20th century, it became painfully obvious that most Arab countries were, to varying degrees, failed states. A former giant of the Arab world, Egypt found itself dependent on handouts from the US government, which would continue to be poured into the army and not the wellbeing of the country's impoverished citizens. Iraq welcomed in the 21st century with a US invasion which has destroyed the country's infrastructure and ignited sectarian tensions. Syria has been dominated by one ruling family for forty years, suffering decades of human rights abuses, nepotism and a complete absence of democracy.

    The UN Security Council meeting on Syria in February 2012 should have made it clear that none of the members of the committee care for the suffering of thousands of people paying the price in Syria; it should also tell us that the game is ongoing and seems to be escalating.

    Cables from the US embassy in Damascus, released by Wikileaks, provide evidence to the suspicion that the Syrian Revolution has been employed as a stepping stone in a much larger game - ultimately insignificant to the top players' endgame. The cables reveal how the US government cynically and systematically identified key points of weakness in the Syrian regime and went on to identify ways in which these could be exploited. Out of nine action points, most have been exploited to varying degrees, culminating with the outbreak of the Arab uprisings of 2011, which threw the entire region into disarray.

    Syria has proven to be a more complex scenario than most, due to its diverse sectarian make up and unequivocal support from Tehran, by extension making the country a satellite of Russia and China. Western and Gulf backed media have launched a grand scale media attack, which will surely be later noted as one of great historical significance. The Syrian regime partly played into this with their reluctance to allow media coverage. Nonetheless, the one sided portrayal and almost sole reliance on anonymous 'activists' for information makes a mockery of journalistic codes of objectivity and non-partisan reporting.

    Unfortunately, the prognosis is not good for Syria or, for the people being cynically manoeuvred to fight on the ground. As British novelist Rudyard Kipling said, "When everyone is dead, the Great Game is finished. Not before".

     

    http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/amira-mohsen-galal/syria-and-the-great-game_b_1279161.html

    Moral principles, the ‘Leftists’, and the Syrian Revolution

     

    Odai Al-Zoubi 7 March 2012

    ---------------------------------------

    Criticizing the uprising, in itself, is not immoral. But what is immoral, is to criticize the uprising without declaring their solidarity with the Syrian people.

    ---------------------------------------

    Every week, we read articles, from the leftists, criticizing the Syrian revolution. Throughout this article, when I talk about the leftists, I mean these leftists only [for example, Jonathan Steele in Russia Today or Robert Dreyfuss in The Nation]. The leftists whom I refer to frequently state that they don’t back Assad. And that they don’t take sides. They criticize the Syrian uprising for what they think is its relationship to America and Saudi Arabia on one hand, and its Islamist programme on the other. However, they have never criticized the Syrian regime. For them, it looks like a battle between two groups, and they comment on it, every now and then, criticizing the opposition.

    The way that these leftists are criticizing the uprising is immoral. They haven’t shown any solidarity with the Syrian people. Criticizing the uprising, in itself, is not immoral. But what is immoral, is to criticize the uprising without declaring their solidarity with the Syrian people.

    The reaction to the Arab Spring from this leftist point of view is very disappointing (See Rupert Read’s excellent critique of this point of view). The reaction is confused, because they didn’t ask, or start from, any moral principle of solidarity or freedom.  They took as their guide in international politics a ‘pragmatic’ starting point. While, the guide they should have taken, the alternative, was a moral stance.

    The pragmatic question is: do America and other imperialist powers support or agitate for the Syrian revolution? The leftists answer yes. Many reporters and journalists, begin with this question, and then try to understand what is going on in Syria. This is mistaken for, at least, two reasons.

    First, it distorts the facts. It suggests to whoever is imbibing it, that America, Saudi Arabia, the imperialist in general, and their Islamist allies, lead and support the revolution. This is a lie. It is more than a lie. It is a myth created by the Syrian regime, and used to justify killing the peaceful protestors in Syria. The leftists who repeat the lie, whether they are ignorant of this or not, help the regime in killing thousands of Syrians. To put it more dramatically, those leftists have blood on their hands.

    Why it is a lie? Because, no one supported any revolution in any country in the Arab Spring (with the possible exception of Libya, when Benghazi was threatened with a massacre. Nevertheless, the story is the same. When the revolution started in Libya, no one supported it. It was not motivated by anyone, except the Libyan people). The Arab Spring is the people’s revolution. This is the first point of information that is distorted.

    Let me explain this, in relation to Syria. The revolution starts in 15 March, with a heroic protest in Damascus. After 3 days, there was a protest in Daraa. The reason behind the demonstration in Daraa, was that the police arrested (and tortured) children, who wrote on the walls of Daraa slogans attacking the president. Then, when the people ask Ateef Najeeb, the president’s cousin, to free them, he insults them. Since then, the regime is shooting people in every protest, anywhere in Syria.  What has America, or Saudi Arabia, or anyone on this planet, have to do with this incident in Daraa? Or with subsequent protests in Banias and Homs? There is nothing more insulting than saying that those protestors are American ‘puppets’. This is a revolution of the Syrian people: them alone.

    Perhaps the leftists are racists. They don’t believe that the Syrians, those strange Arabs who live in the Middle East, can, could, or would, start a revolution for freedom. They cannot possess high moral principles which impel them to change the world. According to these leftists, sunk as many of them are in conspiracy-style-thinking, the Arabs are part of a world where America controls everything.

    This might explain their deep suspicion of what the Arabs want. In addition, this would explain why the leftists start their articles, and end them, by pointing again and again at what America wants and plans to do. All the other questions - of what Syrians want, of the reasons behind their revolution, of the main aims of the Syrian opposition, and how they all agree on the need to end the regime, why they do agree, and what did happen in Daraa, in Homs, in Doma, in Idlib, in Hama, city by city, in detail, are not the questions which you will see in any article that criticizes the Syrian revolution. All this is ‘not important’. What is important, for the leftists, is only one question. A question, which, to spell it out clearly and without frills, is completely unimportant.

    It is unimportant what America thinks, because the rebels, and the demonstrators in Syria, when they started their revolution, didn’t ask what America thinks (this is true of Tunisia, of Egypt, of Libya, of Bahrain, of Yemen – and of Syria). After eleven months, the people have organized their movements and their demonstrations without once asking what America thinks.

    This problem the leftists have is very deep. They see international politics purely as a battleground against the American system. They judge the world according to what America wants. If America agrees on one thing, then it is condemned. If America disagrees, then it is welcomed and supported. In the case of Syria, if America supports the revolution (which it did not), then the revolution is condemned, and Syria’s dictator is depicted as some anti-imperialist hero.

    Furthermore, the leftist’s picture is an imperialist picture. It sees the world as centred on ‘the West’. ‘The West’ is the centre. They judge every single event, on the basis of western interests. Whatever the Arabs say or do is not important.

    The moral principle, which is missing here, is this one. What do the Arabs want? What do the people want? Why did they start a revolution? Once you start from here, you can think clearly.

    The moral question that should be posed by these people, then, would be: how can we, leftists, help the Arabs in their revolution? To spell it out: the ethical call is for solidarity, not military intervention. Whatever your opinion is on the intervention, you should not lose sight of this ethical principle. Being against any intervention in the Middle East should not force leftists into repeatedly doubting the people’s choice.

    I can’t see any moral principle behind the criticism of the Syrian revolution. There could not be a wider gulf between these two approaches. The first one fully supports the revolution, tries to help it, and at the same time, points out the risks and mistakes you see in it. The second, criticizing the revolution alone, and doubting only its aims and motivations, sees only a conflict in the balance between the opposition and the regime, as if it were an equal battle. It is not. It is a war by the regime upon the people. The first perspective should be the leftist view. The second is what I criticize here. 

    About the author

    Odai Al-Zoubi, born in Damascus in 1981 is studying for a philosophy doctorate in the University of East Anglia, having studied electrical engineering in Damascus University (1998-2004),  and philosophy in the Lebanese University (2003-2007).;

     

    http://www.opendemocracy.net/odai-al-zoubi/moral-principles-%E2%80%98leftists%E2%80%99-and-syrian-revolution

    Sunday, July 28, 2013

    “ஹிந்து தேசியம்” என்று பேசுவது, தேசியத்திற்கு எதிரானது - மார்கண்டேய கட்ஜு

     

    நெல்லை சலீம்

    முதலில் இந்தியர்கள் என்று நாம் ஒன்று பட வேண்டும். அதுதான், இந்திய தேசியவாதிகளின் அடையலாம். ஹிந்து, முஸ்லிம், சீக்கியம் மற்றும் கிறிஸ்துவம் என்று பேசுவது தேசியத்திற்கு எதிரானது என்று  ப்ரஸ் கவுன்சில் ஆஃப் இந்தியா சேர்மன் மார்கண்டேய கட்ஜு கூறினார்.

    மேலும், அவர் கூறியதாவது ஊடகங்கள் மற்றும் இந்திய குடிமக்களுக்கு கேட்டு கொள்வது என்னவென்றால் இந்திய தேசியவாதத்தை ஊக்குவிக்கவேண்டும். மராத்தி டெய்லி லோக்மாத் என்ற பத்திரிகை ஏற்பாடு செய்த விழாவில் “இதழியலின் சிறப்பும், சமய, சார்பன்மையை ஊக்குவிப்பதில் மீடியாவின் பங்கும்” என்ற தலைப்பல் சிறப்புரையாற்றினார்.

    அதில் கூறியதாவது, இன்று ஹிந்து தேசியவாதம் என்று சிலர் பேசி வருகின்றனர். ஆனால், இது பிளவுகளை ஏற்படுத்தக்கூடிய ஒன்றாக தான் இருக்கின்றது. நான் இந்துக்களை குற்றம் சொல்லவில்லை. இன்-றைய தலை-வர்-கள் இதை வலி-யு-றுத்-தியே உரை-யாற்றி வரு-கின்-ற-னர். ஆனால், இது பரிவினைக்கு வலி வகுக்கும் என்று கருதுகிறேன் என்றார்.

    மேலும், ஊடகம் மற்றும் அறிவு ஜீவிகள் மதம், ஜாதி, மொழி, இனம் போன்ற பரிவினை போக்குகளுக்கு எதிராக போராட வேண்டும். இதை வலி-யு-றுத்தி போ-ராட்-டங்-க-ளில் ஈடு-ப-டு-ப-வர்-களை புறக்-க-ணிக்க வேண்-டும்.  ஒன்றுபட்ட இந்தியா தான் முன்னேற்றத்தின் பாதை என்றார்.

    இந்திய நாட்டின் முதல் தர குடிமக்கள் மற்றும் சமூகங்களுக்கு இடையே எந்த பாகுபாடும் காட்டக்கூடாது.  முஸ்லிம்கள் இன்று தவறாக  சித்தரிக்கப்படுகிறார்கள். எங்காவது குண்டு வெடித்தால், ஆதாரமில்லாமல் டிவிகளும் நாளிதழ்களும், போலியான எஸ்.எம்.எஸ், ஈமெயில் போன்றவற்றை காட்டி முஸ்லிம் இயக்கங்கள் இந்த குண்டிவெடிப்புக்கு பொறுப்பேற்று உள்ளனர் என்று செய்தி வெளியிடுகின்றனர். இதனால், ஒட்டு மொத்த முஸ்லிம் சமூகமும் குற்ற பரம்பரையாக நிற்கின்றனர். இதற்கு யார் பொறுப்பு என்று மார்கண்டேய கட்ஜு  கேள்வி எழுப்பனார்.

    அனைத்து சமூகங்களிலும் 99 சதவீத மக்கள் நல்லவர்கள் தான். ஆனால், பெரும்பாலும் ஒரு முயற்சியாக, பயங்கரவாதிகள் அனைவரும் முஸ்லிம்கள் என்று சித்தரிக்கபடுகின்றார்கள். இந்தியர்கள் தேர்தலில் ஜாதி மற்றும் மத அடிப்படையில் வாக்களிக்கின்றனர். இது, தெளிவாக மக்கள் இனவாதத்தில் மூழ்கி இருக்கிறார்கள் என்பதை தெளிவாக எடுத்துக்காட்டுகிறது என்றார். 

    SOURCE - http://www.firstpost.com/india/talk-of-hindu-nationalism-is-anti-national-markandey-katju-989965.html

    It’s State-sponsored conspiracy from day-1 but SIT ignored it, says Zakia

    Ahmedabad, July 26, 2013

    Darshan Desai

    Zakia Jaffry

    Zakia Jaffry

    Zakia Jaffry, widow of the former Congress MP Ehsan Jaffry killed in the 2002 riots, has made a serious allegation that there was plenty of evidence to suggest there was a State-sponsored conspiracy to expand the aftermath of the Godhra train burning incident across Gujarat, but a Special Investigation Team (SIT) tasked with looking at this completely ignored the facts before it.

    Ms. Jaffry’s counsel Mihir Desai on Thursday tore apart the SIT’s report that gave Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi a clean chit in the 2002 riots and pointed out that there was a conspiracy from day one — February 27, 2002 — to spread the outrage over the Godhra incident across the length and breadth of Gujarat. He questioned, before a metropolitan court here, why the SIT appointed by the Supreme Court glossed over damning evidence.

    Citing the SIT report, he stated when Mr. Modi was asked about the Gujarat bandh called by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) on February 28, 2002, the day after the Godhra train attack, Mr. Modi replied he came to know about it at 9 p.m. When told that his own party, the Bharatiya Janata Party, had supported the bandh, Mr. Modi claimed that he came to know about it from the newspapers on February 28, 2002. “And the SIT believes this, without questioning further,” wondered Mr. Desai.

    The VHP had given the call for a Gujarat bandh on the day the Godhra train-burning occurred. The very same day, evidence suggests, a decision was taken at the highest level, in the presence of the Chief Minister, who had arrived in Godhra, to hand over the bodies of the dead to VHP general secretary Jaideep Patel and his assistant Hasmukh Patel. The bodies were brought to Ahmedabad in four trucks and one tempo van.

    “The very decision to hand over the bodies of those killed in the Godhra train carnage to VHP office-bearers and then allowing them to parade them in Ahmedabad smacks of a conspiracy to spread violence across the State,” Mr. Desai argued. He condented that “all this cannot be treated as an administrative lapse, but is a deliberate action” to whip up communal passions across the State.

    Zakia’s counsel cited the statement by Jaideep Patel before the SIT that he brought out the bodies from the burning train and even took them to Ahmedabad. Officials of the Gujarat Government, including the then District Magistrate Jayanti Ravi, are on record that the VHP leader took the bodies out and to Ahmedabad.

    Mr. Desai wondered how private persons could be handed over charge of matters which were completely in the domain of the police and the government.

    Mr. Desai pointed out that this proved that the VHP cadres had already been mobilised on Day One, including for removing and transporting the bodies from Godhra, while this should have been the job of the police and the administration. Citing evidence after evidence that the SIT already had to prove that the State Government “actually wanted” a post-Godhra backlash, he argued that the investigation agency deliberately ignored them like a “greenhorn school student.”

    During the arguments on Wednesday, he said that instead of functioning like a dispassionate investigating agency, the SIT had gone on to negate that the former MOS Revenue Haren Pandya and former DCP-Intelligence Sanjiv Bhatt were not present at the meeting that took place at Mr. Modi’s residence on the night of February 27, 2002, where the latter allegedly asked his officials to allow a Hindu backlash to the Godhra incident.

    Mr. Desai argued that this meeting, called a law and order review meeting, went on for almost two hours but the SIT that gave a clean chit to Mr. Modi, instead of putting the “variegated evidence in its final report has shown its bias when all it has done is tried to state that inflammatory, criminal and unconstitutional words were not spoken by Narendra Modi who was also the chief minister that day.”

    He expressed surprise that various officials gave contradictory versions the presence of Mr. Bhatt at the controversial February 27, 2002 meeting, but pointed out that it proved that such a meeting did take place. Mr. Desai wondered why, after having established that this meet did take place, no officer from the Intelligence department was called here.

    Keywords: Zakia Jaffry, Godhra incident, Special Investigation Team, Narendra Modi, Gujarat government

    Copyright© 2013, The Hindu

    SIT turned blind eye to damaging evidence: Zakia

    Ahmedabad, July 28, 2013

    Darshan Desai


  • SIT never bothered to probe incendiary pamphlets

  • Counsel produces document after document, from SIT’s own records, on conspiracy


  • SIT, which gave Modi a clean chit, itself behaved like a conspirator, counsel tells court

    Zakia Jaffry, wife of former Congress MP Ehsan Jaffry who was killed in the 2002 riots, has alleged that the then Gujarat Additional Chief Secretary (Home), Ashok Narayan, brought to the notice of Narendra Modi that Hindu outfits distributed incendiary pamphlets among crowds when bodies of the Godhra train burning victims were being paraded in Ahmedabad but the Chief Minister took it casually.

    During the last session of arguments in the court of a metropolitan magistrate here on Friday evening, Zakia’s counsel Mihir Desai produced several pamphlets allegedly distributed by the Hindu outfits appealing to the community to socially and economically boycott people from the minority community.

    Mr. Desai claimed that though Special Investigation Team member A.K. Malhotra produced the contents of the pamphlets in his first report before the Supreme Court, the team dropped them in the final report.

    According to counsel, these pamphlets also reached Mr. Ashok Narayan, who even told the SIT that he had discussed them with the Chief Minister but Mr. Modi took it casually. As for the SIT, it “never bothered to take these accounts seriously and did not probe these pamphlets. This smacks of a conspiracy.”

    Through nine days of persistent arguments against the SIT that gave Mr. Modi a clean chit, Mr. Desai alleged that it behaved like a conspirator and deliberately glossed over a wealth of official evidence which suggested State complicity in the incidents.

    Counsel produced document after document from the SIT’s own records to point out that there was a conspiracy to whip up communal frenzy in the State right from the day the Sabarmati Express train was attacked, killing 58 persons on February 27, 2002.

    He told the court that the first decision at the controversial late-night February 27 meeting at the Chief Minister’s residence, presided over by Mr. Modi to take the bodies of those killed in the train incident to Ahmedabad, and cremate unidentified bodies after a massive funeral procession, besides parading the dead were clear indicators that there was a plan to spread the outrage outside Godhra and across Gujarat. At the meeting, held in the presence of senior administration and police officials, the latter were asked to let happen a backlash to the Godhra incident.

    And all hell broke loose right the next day (February 28) when major targeted massacres occurred in Gulberg Society, Naroda Patia and Naroda Gam in Ahmedabad. Mr. Desai said the SIT had huge evidence to link up the series of events but simply ignored all of it.

    In both its reports — one filed by Mr. Malhotra before the Supreme Court on May 12, 2010, and the final report dated February 8, 2012 — the SIT deceived both the court and its amicus curiae as the team concealed vital evidence collected by it, whether it was in the form of Police Control Room (PCR) records or the statements of the accused and witnesses, counsel alleged.

    Mr. Desai displayed documents to suggest how “frantic PCR messages warning of bloodthirsty mobilisation [of Sangh Parivar cadres] as corpses of the Godhra victims were cynically brought to Ahmedabad in a bid to unleash hate and violence on the streets” were ignored first by the senior administration and then by the SIT.

    “Even on the serious issue of hate speech and poison spread by the Vishwa Hindu Parishad, a collaborator and conspirator with the ruling BJP, both Mr. Malhotra and IPS official and SIT member Himanshu Shukla simply not investigated the critical documents provided by the former Additional Director-General of Police (Intelligence), R.B. Sreekumar.”

    Mr. Sreekumar, in a letter on April 16, 2002, recommended prosecution of “the authors and publishers of this venom” but the Home Department headed by Mr. Modi simply ignored the suggestion. “The SIT simply did not investigate the issue,” counsel asserted.

    Mr. Desai said the “investigation records tell a gory story. In anticipation of the procession of VHP activists, known for their rabid anti-minority speeches and mobilisations accompanying the bodies from Godhra,” panic messages demanding bandobust and protection were sent from the local police authorities anticipating trouble. But there was no response from either the DGP’s office or the Commissioner of Police’s office.” Counsel said the SIT had ignored all of this.

    Copyright© 2013, The Hindu

    Egypt warns sit-ins as weekend death toll climbs

    CAIRO, July 28, 2013

    AP

    Supporters of Egypt's ousted President Mohamed Morsy during a protest rally in Cairo. File photo

    AP Supporters of Egypt's ousted President Mohamed Morsy during a protest rally in Cairo. File photo

     

    Egypt’s interior minister on Sunday pledged to deal decisively with any attempts to destabilise the country, a thinly veiled warning to supporters of ousted President Mohamed Morsy occupying two squares in Cairo in a month-long stand-off with the security forces.

    The warning came as authorities said that the death toll in weekend clashes between Mr. Morsy’s Islamist backers and security forces near one of those sit-ins had reached 72, in the deadliest single outbreak of violence since the July 3 military coup.

    “I assure the people of Egypt that the police are determined to maintain security and safety to their nation and are capable of doing so,” Mr. Mohammed Ibrahim told a graduation ceremony at the national police academy. “We will very decisively deal with any attempt to undermine stability,” said Mr. Ibrahim, who is in charge of the police.

    Mr. Ibrahim’s comments added pressure on Mr. Morsy’s backers three weeks after the Islamist president was ousted in a military coup that followed days of street protests by millions calling on him to step down.

    On Friday, millions again took to the streets in a show of support for Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the military chief who ousted Mr. Morsy. Those protests were in response to Abdel-Fattah’s call for a mandate for him and the police to tackle what he called violence and potential terrorism.

    Mr. Ibrahim, who had been appointed by Mr. Morsy, took an uncompromising stance in a news conference on Saturday, accusing the pro-Morsy side of provoking bloodshed to win sympathy and suggesting that authorities could move against the two main pro-Morsy protest camps- one outside the Rabaah al-Adawiya mosque in eastern Cairo and another in Nahda Square near the main campus of Cairo university.

    “Soon we will deal with both sit-ins,” Mr. Ibrahim said.

    On Tuesday, Khaled el-Khateeb, head of the ministry’s emergency and intensive care department, said that beside the 72 killed in the Cairo clashes, eight were killed in clashes in the Mediterranean city of Alexandria also over the weekend.

    A total of 792 people were wounded in both incidents, which spanned Friday and early Saturday, he said.

    The Cairo violence took place when pro-Morsy protesters sought to expand their sit-in camp by moving onto a nearby main boulevard, only to be confronted by police and unidentified armed men in civilian clothes.

    Civilians, sometimes with weapons, are frequently seen alongside police in Cairo demonstrations. In some cases, they appear to be police auxiliaries or plainclothesmen, in others residents who back the security forces.

    Authorities concede that the vast majority of the dead in Cairo were demonstrators, but the Interior Ministry says some policemen were wounded and it is not clear if civilians who sided with police were among the dead.

    The extent of the bloodshed pointed to a rapidly building confrontation between the country’s two camps, sharply divided over the coup that removed Egypt’s first freely elected president following protests by millions of Egyptians demanding he step down.

    Officials from Mr. Morsy’s Muslim Brotherhood and their allies decried what they called a new “massacre” against their side, only weeks after July 8 clashes with army troops in Cairo that left more than 50 Morsi supporters dead.

    Keywords: Egypt political crisis, Egypt ousted President Mohamed Morsy, sit-in rallies, Mohammed Ibrahim, Egypt Interior Minister

    Copyright© 2013, The Hindu

    Saturday, July 27, 2013

    CBI probe ordered into IIT-M appointments from 1995 to 2000

    CHENNAI, July 26, 2013

    Special Correspondent

    The Madras High Court on Thursday ordered a CBI enquiry into the correctness and legality of the appointments made in the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, from 1995 till September 26, 2000. During the probe, if the agency found that any illegality had been committed, amounting to an offence, it should prosecute those responsible.

    Justice S.Nagamuthu passed the order while allowing writ petitions by W.B.Vasantha, an Associate Professor in IIT-Madras.

    In the petition, Dr. Vasantha sought quashing of the records relating to selections for faculty positions based on an advertisement in 1995, and a direction to the Chairman, Board of Governors, IIT, Madras, and the institution’s Director to select her as an Associate Professor by a duly-constituted selection committee following the reservation for OBC for faculty positions. She said the selections were arbitrary, illegal and discriminatory. The petition was filed in 1997, but was disposed of after nearly 16 years.

    Mr.Justice Nagamuthu said Dr.Vasantha should be treated to have been appointed as an Associate Professor from July 27, 1995 and as Professor from December 18, 1996 in IIT, Madras. Her pay and allowances from July 27, 1995 till December 17, 1996 should be calculated notionally for fixing her future salary and for this period, the petitioner should not be entitled to backwages.

    Bhaskar Ramamurthi, director, IIT- Madras, said he was looking into the matter, and necessary steps would be taken soon.

    Dr.Vasantha submitted she had acquired a high first class degree in mathematics and a post-graduate degree in mathematics. She was appointed lecturer in mathematics in a college at Katpadi in 1974. She was appointed as a Lecturer in Mathematics in IIT, Madras, in August 1988. She had a total service of 23 years, both as a researcher and as a teacher either in the Madras University or in colleges, including IIT.

    As she had no experience in research guidance, she was not considered for the post of Assistant Professor. The authorities selected two persons with no experience in guiding research and appointed them as Associate Professors in 1995. This was despite her being a research guide for two candidates. She was denied the post only due to “prejudice and mala fide intentions.” The two who were selected belonged to the ‘forward’ community. Her repeated representations went in vain. She was the only person who was denied promotion in eight years except for an upgrade as an Assistant Professor which was uniformly given to all lecturers in all the five IITs. When she applied for the post of Professor in 1996, she was selected as an Associate Professor, which she accepted without prejudice to her rights to challenge the selections held in 1996. For accepting the post with such a condition, the Deputy Director, IIT, insisted that she should delete the sentence “without prejudice to my rights to challenge the selection of Professor for the year 1996” in her acceptance letter. If she had challenged the selections, her service would have been terminated using the “probation clause” in the order of selection. Having no other option, she approached the High Court. She alleged that as years passed by, the meritorious institution instead of tending towards creative excellence had diluted even the norms prescribed. When contacted, Dr. Vasantha said the judgment had brought much relief to her, but it still could not make amends for the agony she faced in the last 19 years, fighting the case. “I have been an assistant professor for the last 25 years. I have never been promoted, despite guiding 13 PhD students and authoring over 80 books.”

    Many of her juniors, she said, had been promoted, but she was never considered. “The judgment has restored my belief in the system.” She claimed that she faced harassment on all counts. The case was removed from the hearing list.

    Keywords: CBI enquiry, IIT- Madras, IIT-M teacher appointments

    High Court will no longer monitor Ishrat case

    Ahmedabad, July 27, 2013


  • The CBI charge sheet, filed on July 3, termed it a fake encounter killing

  • Seven Gujarat Police officers were named in preliminary charge sheet


  • As CBI has already filed charge sheet, we do not deem it necessary to continue, said Division Bench

    The Gujarat High Court on Friday announced that it would no longer monitor the Ishrat Jahan encounter case as the Central Bureau of Investigation had filed a charge sheet in a special CBI court.

    In the charge sheet filed on July 3, the CBI — which has been investigating the case on high court orders — had termed the encounter killing of Ishrat Jahan and three others as fake and a “joint operation” of the Gujarat Police and the Central Intelligence Bureau (IB).

    A Division Bench of Justices Jayant Patel and Abhilasha Kumari stated that since the charge sheet had already been filed, it need not monitor the investigation henceforth.

    “Since the magistrate’s court is already in possession of the charge sheet, we do not deem it necessary to continue the monitoring,” the Bench said.

    Seven Gujarat Police officers, including suspended IPS officers G.L. Singhal, N.K. Amin, D.G. Vanzara, retired Deputy Superintendent of Police J.G. Parmar, DSP Tarun Barot, commando Anaju Chaudhary and absconding Additional Director-General of Police P.P. Pandey were named as accused in the first charge sheet.

    IB Special Director Rajinder Kumar may, according to sources, figure in the supplementary charge sheet that will be filed after he retires on July 31 this year.

    Copyright© 2013, The Hindu