Para aquellos que
se preguntan por qué es importante la “guerra civil” siria, contestamos que en
ella se juega, en parte, el destino del mundo. Hace siete años que el Imperio y
su brazo armado, la NATO, juntamente con sus ocasionales aliados, las
monarquías árabes, Israel y varios grupos de terroristas islámicos (denominados
“rebeldes” o “militantes” por la prensa occidental) intentan destruir
minuciosamente ese país. Los sirios se lo bancan, al precio de un país
semidestruido, cerca de medio millón de muertos y 11 millones de desplazados,
más de un tercio de ellos emigrantes. La nota que sigue es de Jonathan Cook y
salió publicada ayer en el sitio web CounterPunch. A ver si te gusta:
Título: Syria is
the Dam Against More Bloody Chaos
Texto: A decade
ago I published a book, Israel and the Clash of Civilisations, that examined
Israel’s desire to Balkanise the Middle East, using methods it had refined over
many decades in the occupied Palestinian territories. The goal was to unleash
chaos across much of the region, destabilising key enemy states: Iran, Iraq,
Syria and Lebanon.
The book further
noted how Israel’s strategy had influenced the neoconservative agenda in
Washington that found favour under George Bush’s administration. The neocons’
destabilisation campaign started in Iraq, with consequences that are only too
apparent today.
My book was
published when efforts by Israel and the neocons to move the Balkanisation
campaign forward into Iran, Syria and Lebanon were stumbling, and before it was
clear that other actors, such as ISIS, would emerge out of the mayhem. But I
predicted – correctly – that Israel and the neocons would continue to push for
more destabilisation, targeting Syria next, with disastrous consequences.
Today, Israel’s
vision of the region is shared by other key actors, including Saudi Arabia, the
Gulf states, and Turkey. The current arena for destabilisation, as I warned, is
Syria. But if successful, the Balkanisation process will undoubtedly move on
and intensify against Lebanon and Iran.
Although
commentators tend to focus on the “evil monsters” who lead the states targeted
for destruction, it is worth remembering that before their disintegration most
were also oases of secularism in a region dominated by medieval sectarian
ideologies, whether the Wahhabism of Saudi Arabia or the Orthodox Judaism of
Israel.
Syria’s Bashar
Assad, Iraq’s Saddam Hussein and Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi are or were ruthless
and brutal in the way all dictators are, against opponents who threaten the
regime. But before their states were targeted for “intervention”, they also
oversaw societies in which there were high levels of education and literacy,
well-established welfare states, and low levels of sectarianism. These were not
insignificant achievements (even if they are largely overlooked now) –
achievements that large sections of their populations appreciated, even more so
when they were destroyed through outside intervention.
These achievements
were not unrelated to the fact that the regimes were or are more independent of
the US than the US and Israel desired. The rulers of these states, which
comprise disparate sectarian groups, had an interest in maintaining internal
stability through a carrot and stick approach: benefits for those who submitted
to the regime, and repression for those who resisted. They also made strong
alliances with similar regimes to limit moves by Israel and the US to dominate
the region.
Balkanisation has
been a powerful way to isolate and weaken these states, allowing the process to
be expanded to other renegade states.
This is not to
excuse human rights violations by dictatorial regimes. But it is to concentrate
on an even more important issue. What we have seen unfolding over the past 15
years is part of a lengthy process – often described in the West as a “war on
terror” – that is not designed to “liberate” or “democratise” Middle Eastern
states. If that were the case, Saudi Arabia would have been the first state
targeted for “intervention”.
Rather, the “war
on terror” is part of efforts to violently break apart states that reject
US-Israeli hegemony in the region, so as to maintain US control over the
region’s resources in an age of diminishing access to cheap oil.
Although it is
tempting to prioritise human rights as the yardstick according to which the
parties should be judged, by now there should be little doubt that the
conflicts unfolding in the Middle East are not about the promotion of rights.
Syria offers all
the clues we need.
The agents trying
to overthrow Assad in Syria are no longer civil society groups and democracy
activists. They were too small in number and too weak to bring about change or
threaten the Assad regime. Instead, whatever civil war there may initially have
been has transformed into a proxy war. (In a closed society like Syria, it is
of course almost impossible to know what drove the initial opposition – was it
a fight for greater human rights, or growing dissatisfaction with the regime
concerning other issues, such as food shortages and population displacements
that were themselves a consequence of long-term processes triggered by climate
change?)
A coalition of
the US, Saudi Arabia, the Gulf states, Turkey and Israel exploited those
initial challenges to the Syrian regime, seeing them as an opening. They did
not do so to help democracy activists but to advance their own, largely shared
agendas. They used Sunni jihadist groups like al-Qaeda and ISIS to advance
their interests, which depend on the break-up of the Syrian state and its
replacement by a void that empowers them while disempowering their enemies in
the region.
Saudi Arabia and
the Gulf states want Iran and its Shia allies weakened; Turkey wants a freer
hand against Kurdish dissident groups in Syria and elsewhere; and Israel wants
to foster the forces of sectarianism in the Middle East to undermine pan-Arab
nationalism, thereby ensuring its regional hegemony will go unchallenged.
The agents trying
to stabilise Syria are the regime itself, Russia, Iran and Hizbollah. Their
concern is to use whatever force is necessary to repel the agents of anarchy
and restore the regime’s dominance.
Neither side can
be characterised as “good”. There are no “white hats” in this gunfight. But
there is clearly a side to prefer if the yardstick is minimising not only the
current suffering in Syria but also future suffering in the region.
The agents of
stability want to rebuild Syria and strengthen it as part of a wider Shia bloc.
In practice, their policy would achieve – even if it does not directly aim for
– a regional balance of forces, similar to the stand-off between the US and
Russia in the Cold War. It is not ideal, but it is far preferable to the
alternative policy pursued by the agents of anarchy. They want key states in
the Middle East to implode, as has already happened in Iraq and Libya and has
been partially achieved in Syria.
We know the
consequences of this policy: massive sectarian bloodspilling, huge internal
population displacement and the creation of waves of refugees who head towards
the relative stability of Europe, the seizure and dispersal of military
arsenals that spur yet more fighting, and the inspiration of more militant and
reactionary ideologies like that of ISIS.
If Syria falls,
it will not become Switzerland. And if it falls, it will not be the end of the
“war on terror”. Next, these agents of anarchy will move on to Lebanon and
Iran, spreading yet more death and destruction.
'Para aquellos que se preguntan por qué es importante la “guerra civil” siria, contestamos que en ella se juega, en parte, el destino del mundo'. En esta frase, ¿qué quiere decir "mundo"? Recuerdo que en un reportaje Moria Casán refiriéndose a una fiesta dijo que estaba todo el "mundo", y se entendía lo que quería decir. Me parece que está usada en el mismo sentido.
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