The US-NATO-Israel Sponsored
Al Qaeda Insurgency in Syria. Who Was Behind the 2011 “Protest Movement”?
It Started in Daraa on March
17, 2011
Global Research, December
14, 2019
Global Research 3 May 2011
Author’s note
Almost nine years since the
beginning of the war on Syria in March 2011, so-called progressives have
supported the so-called opposition, which is largely made up of Al Qaeda
affiliated mercenaries. A US-NATO led war of aggression is portrayed as a
“civil war”.
President Bashar
Al Assad is
casually described as a dictator who is killing his own people. The millions of
deaths resulting from US-NATO led wars are not an object of concern.
The anti-war movement died
in the wake of the Iraq war (April 2003). Responsibility to Protect (R2P) and
counterterrorism prevail.
The war on Syria started
more than nine years ago in Daraa on the 17th of March 2011.
The following article first
published in May 2011 examines the inception of the jihadist terrorist
insurgency.
It recounts the events of
March 17-18, 2011 in Daraa, a small border town with Jordan.
Media reports have finally
acknowledged that the so-called “protest movement” in Syria was instigated by
Washington. This was known and documented from the very inception of the
Syrian crisis in March 2011.
It was not a protest
movement, it was an armed insurgency integrated by US-Israeli and allied
supported “jihadist” death squads?
From Day One, the Islamist
“freedom fighters” were supported, trained and equipped by NATO and Turkey’s
High Command. According to Israeli intelligence sources (Debka, August 14,
2011):
NATO headquarters in
Brussels and the Turkish high command are meanwhile drawing up plans for their
first military step in Syria,
which is to arm the rebels with weapons for combating the tanks and helicopters
spearheading the Assad regime’s crackdown on dissent. … NATO strategists are
thinking more in terms of pouring large quantities of anti-tank and anti-air
rockets, mortars and heavy machine guns into the protest centers for beating
back the government armored forces. (DEBKAfile, NATO to give rebels anti-tank weapons, August 14, 2011)
This initiative, which was
also supported by Saudi Arabia the UAE and Qatar, involved a process of organized recruitment of
thousands of jihadist “freedom fighters”, reminiscent of the enlistment
of Mujahideen to wage the CIA’s jihad (holy war) in the heyday of the
Soviet-Afghan war:
Also discussed in Brussels
and Ankara, our sources report, is a campaign to enlist thousands of
Muslim volunteers in Middle East countries and the Muslim world to fight
alongside the Syrian rebels. The Turkish army would house these
volunteers, train them and secure their passage into Syria. (Ibid,
emphasis added)
These mercenaries were
subsequently integrated into US and allied sponsored terrorist organizations
including Al Nusrah and ISIS.
The Daraa “protest movement”
on March 17-18 had all the appearances of a staged event involving covert
support to Islamic terrorists by Mossad and/or Western intelligence.
Government sources pointed
to the role of radical Salafist groups (supported by Israel).
In chorus, the Western media
described the events in Daraa as a protest movement against Bashar Al Assad.
In a bitter irony, the
deaths of policemen were higher than those of “demonstrators”.
In Daraa, roof top snipers
were targeting both police and demonstrators.
Reading between the lines of
Israeli and Lebanese news reports (which acknowledge the police deaths) a
clearer picture of what happened in Daraa on March 17-18 had emerged. The
Israel National News Report (which can not be accused of being biased in favor
of Bashar al Assad) confirmed that:
“Seven police officers and
at least four demonstrators in Syria have been killed in continuing violent clashes that erupted in
the southern town of Daraa last Thursday. … and the Baath Party
Headquarters and courthouse were torched, in renewed violence on Sunday. (Gavriel
Queenann, Syria: Seven Police Killed,
Buildings Torched in Protests, Israel National News, Arutz Sheva, March 21, 2011,
emphasis added)
The Lebanese news report
also acknowledged the killings of seven policemen in Daraa.
[They were killed] “during
clashes between the security forces and protesters… They got killed
trying to drive away protesters during demonstration in Dara’a”
The Lebanese Ya Libnan
report quoting Al Jazeera also acknowledged that protesters had “burned
the headquarters of the Baath Party and the court house in Dara’a” (emphasis
added)
These news reports of the
events in Daraa confirmed that from the very outset this was not a
“peaceful protest” as claimed by the Western media.
Moreover, from an assessment
of the initial casualty figures (Israel News), there were more policemen than
“demonstrators” who were killed.
This is significant because
it suggests that the police force may have initially been outnumbered by a well
organized armed gang of professional killers.
What was clear from these
initial reports is that many of the demonstrators were not demonstrators but
terrorists involved in premeditated acts of killing and arson.
The title of the Israeli
news report summarized what happened: Syria: Seven Police Killed, Buildings
Torched in Protest
The US-NATO-Israel agenda
consisted in supporting an Al Qaeda affiliated insurgency integrated by death
squads and professional snipers. President Bashar al Assad is then to be
blamed for killing his own people.
Does it Sound
familiar?
The same “false flag”
strategy of killing innocent civilians was used during the Ukraine Maidan
protest movement. On February 20th, 2014, professional snipers were
shooting at both demonstrators and policemen with a view to accusing president
Viktor Yanukovych of “mass murder.”
It was subsequently revealed
that these snipers were controlled by the opponents of president Yanukovych,
who are now part of the coalition government.
The “humanitarian mandate”
of the US and its allies is sustained by diabolical “false flag” attacks which
consist in killing civilians with a view to breaking the legitimacy of
governments which refuse to abide by the diktats of Washington and its allies.
Michel
Chossudovsky, March 17, 2019, December 14, 2019
SYRIA: Who is Behind The
Protest Movement? Fabricating a Pretext for a US-NATO “Humanitarian
Intervention”
by Michel Chossudovsky
Global Research, May 3, 2011
There is evidence of gross
media manipulation and falsification from the outset of the protest movement in
southern Syria on March 17th [2011].
The Western media has
presented the events in Syria as part of the broader Arab pro-democracy protest
movement, spreading spontaneously from Tunisia, to Egypt, and from Libya to
Syria.
Media coverage has focussed
on the Syrian police and armed forces, which are accused of indiscriminately
shooting and killing unarmed “pro-democracy” demonstrators. While these police
shootings did indeed occur, what the media failed to mention is that among
the demonstrators there were armed gunmen as well as snipers who were
shooting at both the security forces and the protesters.
The death figures presented
in the reports are often unsubstantiated. Many of the reports are “according to
witnesses”. The images and video footages aired on Al Jazeera and CNN do not
always correspond to the events which are being covered by the news reports.
There is certainly cause for
social unrest and mass protest in Syria: unemployment has increased in recent
year, social conditions have deteriorated, particularly since the adoption in
2006 of sweeping economic reforms under IMF guidance. The IMF’s “economic
medicine” includes austerity measures, a freeze on wages, the deregulation of
the financial system, trade reform and privatization.
While Syria is [2011] no
“model society” with regard to civil rights and freedom of expression, it
nonetheless constitutes the only (remaining) independent secular state in the
Arab world. Its populist, anti-Imperialist and secular base is inherited from
the dominant Baath party, which integrates Muslims, Christians and Druze.
Moreover, in contrast to
Egypt and Tunisia, in Syria there is considerable popular support for President
Bashar Al Assad. The large rally in Damascus on March 29, “with tens of
thousands of supporters” (Reuters) of President Al Assad is barely mentioned.
Yet in an unusual twist, the images and video footage of several pro-government events
were used by the Western media to convince international public opinion that
the President was being confronted by mass anti-government rallies.
Tens of thousands of Syrians
gather for a pro-government rally at the central
bank square in Damascus March 29, 2011. (Reuters Photo)
Syrians display a giant
national flag with a picture of Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad during a pro-government rally at the central bank square in Damascus March 29, 2011.
(Reuters Photo)
The “Epicenter” of the
Protest Movement. Daraa: A Small Border Town in southern Syria
What is the nature of the
protest movement? From what sectors of Syrian society does it emanate? What
triggered the violence?
What is the cause of the
deaths?
The existence of an
organized insurrection composed of armed gangs involved in acts of killing and
arson has been dismissed by the Western media, despite evidence to the
contrary.
The demonstrations did
not start in Damascus, the nation’s capital. At the outset, the protests were
not integrated by a mass movement of citizens in Syria’s capital.
The demonstrations started
in Daraa, a small border town of 75,000 inhabitants, on the Syrian Jordanian
border, rather than in Damascus or Aleppo, where the mainstay of organized
political opposition and social movements are located. (Daraa is a small border
town comparable e.g. to Plattsburgh, NY on the US-Canadian border).
The Associated Press report
(quoting unnamed “witnesses” and “activists”) describes the early protests in
Daraa as follows:
The violence in Daraa, a
city of about 300,000 near the border with Jordan, was fast becoming a
major challenge for President Bashar Assad, …. Syrian police launched a
relentless assault Wednesday on a neighborhood sheltering
anti-government protesters [Daraa], fatally shooting at least 15 in an operation
that began before dawn, witnesses said.
At least six were killed in the early morning attack on the al-Omari
mosque in the southern agricultural city of Daraa, where protesters have taken
to the streets in calls for reforms and political freedoms, witnesses
said. An activist in contact with people in Daraa said
police shot another three people protesting in its Roman-era city center after
dusk. Six more bodies were found later in the day, the activist said.
As the casualties mounted,
people from the nearby villages of Inkhil, Jasim, Khirbet Ghazaleh and
al-Harrah tried to march on Daraa Wednesday night but security forces opened fire as
they approached, the activist said. It was not immediately clear if there were
more deaths or injuries. (AP, March 23, 2011, emphasis added)
The AP report inflates the
numbers: Daraa is presented as a city of 300,000 when in fact its population is
75,000; “protesters gathered by the thousands”, “casualties mounted”.
The report is silent on the
death of policemen which in the West invariably makes the front page of the
tabloids.
The deaths of the policemen
are important in assessing what actually happened. When there are police
casualties, this means that there is an exchange of gunfire between opposing
sides, between policemen and “demonstrators”.
Who are these
“demonstrators” including roof top snipers who were targeting the police.
Israeli and Lebanese news
reports (which acknowledge the police deaths) provide a clearer picture of what
happened in Daraa on March 17-18. The Israel National News Report (which
cannot be accused of being biased in favor of Damascus) reviews these same
events as follows:
Seven police officers and at
least four demonstrators in Syria have been killed in continuing violent clashes that erupted in
the southern town of Daraa last Thursday.
…. On Friday police opened
fire on armed protesters killing four and injuring as many as
100 others. According to one witness, who spoke to the press on condition of anonymity,
“They used live ammunition immediately — no tear gas or anything else.”
…. In an uncharacteristic
gesture intended to ease tensions the government offered to release the
detained students, but seven police officers were killed, and the Baath
Party Headquarters and courthouse were torched, in renewed violence on
Sunday. (Gavriel Queenann, Syria: Seven Police Killed,
Buildings Torched in Protests, Israel National News, Arutz Sheva, March 21, 2011,
emphasis added)
The Lebanese news report,
quoting various sources, also acknowledges the killings of seven policemen in
Daraa: They were killed “during clashes between the security forces and
protesters… They got killed trying to drive away protesters during
demonstration in Dara’a”
The Lebanese Ya Libnan
report quoting Al Jazeera also acknowledged that protesters had “burned
the headquarters of the Baath Party and the court house in Dara’a”
(emphasis added)
These news reports of the events
in Daraa confirm the following:
1. This was not a “peaceful
protest” as claimed by the Western media. Several of the “demonstrators” had
fire arms and were using them against the police: “The police opened fire
on armed protesters killing four”.
2. From the initial casualty
figures (Israel News), there were more policemen than demonstrators who were
killed: 7 policemen killed versus 4 demonstrators. This is significant
because it suggests that the police force might have been initially outnumbered
by a well organized armed gang. According to Syrian media sources, there were
also snipers on rooftops which were shooting at both the police and the
protesters.
What is clear from these
initial reports is that many of the demonstrators were not demonstrators but
terrorists involved in premeditated acts of killing and arson. The
title of the Israeli news report summarizes what happened: Syria:
Seven Police Killed, Buildings Torched in Protests. The title
suggests that the “demonstrators” rather than the police had the upper hand.
The Daraa “protest movement”
on March 18 had all the appearances of a staged event involving, in all
likelihood, covert support to Islamic terrorists by Mossad and/or Western
intelligence. Government sources point to the role of radical Salafist groups (supported
by Israel)
Other reports have pointed
to the role of Saudi Arabia in financing the protest movement.
What has unfolded in Daraa
in the weeks following the initial violent clashes on 17-18 March, is the
confrontation between the police and the armed forces on the one hand and armed
units of terrorists and snipers on the other which had infiltrated the protest
movement.
Reports suggest that these
terrorists are integrated by Islamists. There is no concrete evidence as to
which Islamic organizations are behind the terrorists and the government has
not released corroborating information as to who these groups are.
Both the Syrian Muslim
Brotherhood (whose leadership is in exile in the UK) and the banned Hizb
ut-Tahrir (the Party of Liberation), among others have paid lip service to the
protest movement. Hizb ut Tahir (led in the 1980s by Syrian born Omar Bakri
Muhammad) tends to “dominate the British Islamist scene” according to Foreign
Affairs. Hizb ut Tahir is also considered to be of strategic importance
to Britain’s Secret Service MI6. in the pursuit of Anglo-American interests in
the Middle East and Central Asia. (Is Hizb-ut-Tahrir another project of
British MI6? | State of Pakistan).
Syria is a secular Arab
country, a society of religious tolerance, where Muslims and Christians have
for several centuries lived in peace. Hizb ut-Tahrir (the Party of Liberation)
is a radical political movement committed to the creation of an Islamic caliphate.
In Syria, its avowed objective is to destabilize the secular state.
Since the Soviet-Afghan war,
Western intelligence agencies as well as Israel’s Mossad have consistently used
various Islamic terrorist organizations as “intelligence assets”. Both Washington
and its indefectible British ally have provided covert support to “Islamic
terrorists” in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Kosovo and Libya, etc. as a means to
triggering ethnic strife, sectarian violence and political instability.
The staged protest movement
in Syria is modelled on Libya. The insurrection in Eastern Libya is integrated
by the Libya Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) which is supported by MI6 and the
CIA. The ultimate objective of the Syria protest movement, through media lies
and fabrications, is to create divisions within Syrian society as well as
justify an eventual “humanitarian intervention”.
Armed Insurrection in Syria
An armed insurrection
integrated by Islamists and supported covertly by Western intelligence is
central to an understanding of what is occurring on the ground.
The existence of an armed
insurrection is not mentioned by the Western media. If it were to be
acknowledged and analysed, our understanding of unfolding events would be
entirely different.
What is mentioned profusely
is that the armed forces and the police are involved in the indiscriminate
killing of protesters.
The deployment of the armed
forces including tanks in Daraa is directed against an organized armed
insurrection, which has been active in the border city since March 17-18.
Casualties are being
reported which also include the death of policemen and soldiers.
In a bitter irony, the
Western media acknowledges the police/soldier deaths while denying the
existence of an armed insurrection.
The key question is how does
the media explain these deaths of soldiers and police?
Without evidence, the
reports suggest authoritatively that the police is shooting at the soldiers and
vice versa the soldiers are shooting on the police. In a April 29 Al Jazeera
report, Daraa is described as “a city under siege”.
“Tanks and troops control
all roads in and out. Inside
the city, shops are shuttered and nobody dare walk the once bustling market
streets, today transformed into the kill zone of rooftop snipers.
Unable to crush the people
who first dared rise up against him – neither with the secret
police, paid thugs or the special forces of his brother’s
military division – President Bashar al-Assad has sent thousands of
Syrian soldiers and their heavy weaponry into Deraa for an operation the regime
wants nobody in the world to see.
Though almost all
communication channels with Deraa have been cut, including the Jordanian mobile
service that reaches into the city from just across the border, Al
Jazeera has gathered firsthand accounts of life inside the city from residents
who just left or from eyewitnesses inside who were able to get outside the
blackout area.
The picture that emerges is
of a dark and deadly security arena, one driven by the actions of the
secret police and their rooftop snipers, in which soldiers and protestors alike
are being killed or wounded, in which cracks are emerging in the
military itself, and in which is created the very chaos which the regime uses
to justify its escalating crackdown. (Daraa, a City under Siege, IPS / Al
Jazeera, April 29, 2011)
The Al Jazeera report
borders on the absurd. Read carefully.
“Tanks and troops control
all roads in and out”, “thousands of Syrian soldiers and their heavy
weaponry into Daraa”
This situation has prevailed
for several weeks. This means that bona fide protesters who are not already
inside Daraa cannot enter Daraa.
People who live in the city
are in their homes: “nobody dares walk … the streets”. If nobody dares walk the
streets where are the protesters?
Who is in the streets?
According to Al Jazeera, the protesters are in the streets together with the
soldiers, and both the protesters and the soldiers are being shot at by “plain
clothes secret police”, by “paid thugs” and government sponsored snipers.
The impression conveyed in
the report is that these casualties are attributed to infighting between the
police and the military.
But the report also says
that the soldiers (in the “thousands”) control all roads in and out of the
city, but they are being shot upon by the plain clothed secret police.
The purpose of this web of
media deceit, namely outright fabrications –where soldiers are being
killed by police and “government snipers”– is to deny the existence of
armed terrorist groups. The later are integrated by snipers and “plain clothed
terrorists” who are shooting at the police, the Syrian armed forces and local
residents.
These are not spontaneous
acts of terror; they are carefully planned and coordinated attacks. In recent
developments, according to a Xinhua report (April 30, 2011), armed “terrorist
groups” “attacked the housing areas for servicemen” in Daraa province, “killing
a sergeant and wounding two”.
While the government bears
heavy responsibility for its mishandling of the military-police operation,
including the deaths of civilians, the reports confirm that the armed terrorist
groups had also opened fire on protesters and local residents. The casualties
are then blamed on the armed forces and the police and the Bashar Al Assad
government is portrayed by “the international community” as having ordered
countless atrocities.
The fact of the matter is
that foreign journalists are banned from reporting inside Syria, to the extent
that much of the information including the number of casualties is obtained
from the unverified accounts of “witnesses”.
It is in the interest of the
US-NATO alliance to portray the events in Syria as a peaceful protest movement
which is being brutally repressed by a “dictatorial regime”.
The Syrian government may be
autocratic. It is certainly not a model of democracy but neither is the US
administration, which is characterized by rampant corruption, the derogation of
civil liberties under the Patriot legislation, the legalisation of torture, not
to mention its “bloodless” “humanitarian wars”:
“The U.S. and its NATO
allies have, in addition to U.S. Sixth Fleet and NATO Active Endeavor military
assets permanently deployed in the Mediterranean, warplanes, warships and
submarines engaged in the assault against Libya that can be used against Syria
at a moment’s notice.
On April 27 Russia and China
evidently prevented the U.S. and its NATO allies from pushing through an
equivalent of Resolution 1973 against Syria in the Security Council, with
Russian deputy ambassador to the UN Alexander Pankin stating that the current
situation in Syria “does not present a threat to international peace and
security.” Syria is Russia’s last true partner in the Mediterranean and the
Arab world and hosts one of only two Russian overseas naval bases, that at
Tartus. (The other being in Ukraine’s Crimea.)” (Rick Rozoff, Libyan Scenario For Syria: Towards A
US-NATO “Humanitarian Intervention” directed against Syria? Global Research, April 30, 2011)
The ultimate purpose is to
trigger sectarian violence and political chaos within Syria by covertly
supporting Islamic terrorist organizations.
What lies ahead?
The longer term US foreign
policy perspective is “regime change” and the destabilization of Syria as an
independent nation-state, through a covert process of “democratization” or
through military means.
Syria is on the list of
“rogue states”, which are targeted for a US military intervention. As confirmed
by former NATO commander General Wesley Clark the “[The] Five-year campaign
plan [includes]… a total of seven countries, beginning with Iraq, then
Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Iran, Somalia and Sudan” (Pentagon official quoted by
General Wesley Clark).
The objective is to weaken
the structures of the secular State while justifying an eventual UN
sponsored “humanitarian intervention”. The latter, in the first instance, could
take the form of a reinforced embargo on the country (including sanctions) as
well as the freezing of Syrian bank assets in overseas foreign financial
institutions.
While a US-NATO military
intervention in the immediate future seems highly unlikely, Syria is
nonetheless on the Pentagon’s military roadmap, namely an eventual war on Syria
has been contemplated both by Washington and Tel Aviv.
If it were to occur, at some
future date, it would lead to escalation. Israel would inevitably be involved.
The entire Middle East Central Asian region from the Eastern Mediterranean to
the Chinese-Afghan border would flare up.
Michel
Chossudovsky is
an award-winning author, Professor of Economics (Emeritus) at the University of
Ottawa, Director of the Centre for Research on Globalization (CRG) and
Editor of globalresearch.ca. He is the author of The Globalization of Poverty and
The New World Order (2003) and America’s “War on Terrorism” (2005). He is also
a contributor to the Encyclopaedia Britannica. His writings have been published
in more than twenty languages. He spent a month in Syria in early 2011.
The original source of this
article is Global Research
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