February 20, 2016
Exclusive: To Washington’s
neocons like David Ignatius, Sen. Sanders should be disqualified as a
presidential candidate for being a “closet realist.” Sanders seems not to
accept their forced “regime change” in Syria, nor their plans for
more “nation building” like the neocon handiwork in Afghanistan,
Iraq and Libya, writes Robert Parry.
By Robert Parry
How little Official
Washington’s neocon-dominated foreign policy elite has learned from the past
couple of decades can be measured by reading the last line of Friday’s
Washington Post op-ed
by David Ignatius, supposedly one of the deeper thinkers from the American
pundit class.
Ignatius writes, regarding the
Syrian mess, “It’s never too late for the United States to do the right thing —
which is to build, carefully, the political and military framework for a new
Syria.”
Reading Ignatius and other
neocon-oriented policy prescribers, it’s as if Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya –
not to mention other failed states following U.S. interventions – never
happened. Just like Iraq was a cakewalk, Syria will be one of those child
puzzles with only 24 pieces, easy to assemble and reassemble.
Though Ignatius doesn’t get
into the nitty-gritty of his nation-building scheme, it should be obvious that
for President Barack Obama to “do the right thing” in Ignatius’s way of
thinking, the U.S. military would first have to invade and occupy Syria,
killing any Syrians, Iranians, Russians and others who might get in the way.
Then there would be the tricky process of “carefully” putting Syria back
together again amid the predictable IEDs, suicide bombings and sectarian
strife.
One is tempted to simply
dismiss Ignatius as not a serious person, but he is considered part of the
crème de la crème of Official Washington’s current foreign-policy
establishment. He’s sought after to moderate foreign policy conferences
and he pontificates regularly from the well-read pages of The Washington Post.
But he is really just another
example of how dangerous it was for the American people to exact no
accountability from the hubristic neoconservatives and their “liberal
interventionist” sidekicks for their many disastrous miscalculations and war
crimes.
If Americans still had
pitchforks, they should have chased down this arrogant elite for inflicting so
much pain and bloodshed on both the people of these tragic countries and on the
U.S. soldiers who were dispatched so casually to make the benighted policies
work. There’s also the little issue of the trillions of dollars in taxpayers’
money wasted.
But the neocons
are impervious to criticism from the “little people.” Within the neocon
“bubble,” the Syrian crisis is just the result of President Obama not
intervening earlier and bigger by shipping even more weapons to Syria’s
mythical “moderate” rebels.
No one ever wants to admit
that these “moderates” were always dominated by Sunni jihadists and – by 2012 –
had become essentially their front men for receiving sophisticated U.S. weapons
before passing the hardware on, willingly or not, to Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front,
Islamic State and other extremist groups.
Read, for instance, a
remarkable account from veteran foreign affairs writer Stephen Kinzer, who
describes in a
Boston Globe op-ed the reign of terror that the Syrian rebels have
inflicted on the people of Aleppo, while the mainstream U.S. news media painted
pretty pictures about these noble insurrectionists.
Kinzer scolds his media
colleagues for their malfeasance in reporting on the Syrian crisis, writing: “Coverage
of the Syrian war will be remembered as one of the most shameful episodes in
the history of the American press. Reporting about carnage in the ancient city
of Aleppo is the latest reason why.”
Another inconvenient truth is
that the “moderate” rebels of Aleppo operate hand in glove with Al Qaeda’s
Nusra Front. So much so that a proposal for a partial Syrian
cease-fire failed because U.S. diplomats wanted to extend its
protections to Al Qaeda’s forces, also known inside Syria as Jabhat
al-Nusra.
As The Washington Post’s Karen
DeYoung nonchalantly mentioned deep inside a
story on Saturday, “Jabhat al-Nusra, whose forces are intermingled with
moderate rebel groups in the northwest near the Turkish border, is particularly
problematic. Russia was said to have rejected a U.S. proposal to leave Jabhat
al-Nusra off-limits to bombing as part of the cease-fire, at least temporarily,
until the groups can be sorted out.”
In other words, the cease-fire
plan is being delayed — and possibly killed — because the Obama administration
doesn’t want the Syrian army and the Russian air force attacking Al Qaeda.
This strange reality
underscores reporting by Mideast expert Gareth Porter who wrote that
“Information from a wide range of sources, including some of those the United
States has been explicitly supporting, makes it clear that every armed
anti-Assad organization unit in those provinces [around Aleppo] is engaged in a
military structure controlled by Nusra militants. All of these rebel
groups fight alongside the Nusra Front and coordinate their military activities
with it.” [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Risking
Nuclear War for Al Qaeda.”]
Believing in Unicorns
However, to be accepted in
Official Washington as a profound thinker, you must believe in the
unicorns of “moderate” Syrian rebels, just like earlier you had to accept as
“flat fact” that Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein was lying when he denied having
weapons of mass destruction and that Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was lying
when he claimed to be under attack by terrorists.
But what is truly remarkable
about these Washington “wise men and women” who are so unwise is that they
simply move from one catastrophe to the next. The journalists and
columnists among them routinely get basic facts wrong but are never fired by
their editors and publishers, presumably because the editors and publishers are
kindred ideologues.
And the neocon/liberal-hawk
politicians also float above any meaningful accountability for their grotesque
misjudgments and for their contributions to war crimes. On the Republican side,
all the establishment candidates – the likes of Marco Rubio, Jeb Bush and John
Kasich – favor doubling down on neoconservative foreign policies as
they prove how “serious” they are.
On the Democratic side, the
reputed frontrunner, Hillary Clinton, not only voted for the Iraq War but
promoted similar warmongering as Secretary of State, pushing for a senseless
escalation in Afghanistan, masterminding the mindless Libyan operation,
and blocking any timely peace initiatives in Syria.
Her supporters may call her a
“liberal” or “humanitarian” interventionist but there is no discernible
difference between her policies and those of the neocons. [For details, see
Consortiumnews.com’s “Hillary
Clinton and the Dogs of War.”]
There may be some hope from
the anti-establishment candidates – Donald Trump on the Republican side and
Bernie Sanders in the Democratic race – but that’s mostly because they have
steered clear of precise foreign policy prescriptions. They have, however,
decried the Iraq War and suggested that collaboration with Russia makes more
sense than confrontation.
Not surprisingly then,
Washington’s neocon-dominated foreign policy elite has been scathing toward
both men, seeking to marginalize them so far from the mainstream that aspiring
pundits and academics with hopes for professional advancement will obsequiously
vouch for the diplomatic chops of Hillary Clinton and the seriousness of the
GOP establishment contenders.
Sniffing Out ‘Realism’
As for Sanders, David Ignatius
has detected a clearly disqualifying characteristic, that the Vermont senator
may be, gasp, a “closet realist.”
On Feb. 12, Ignatius raised
that shocking possibility in another Washington Post column:
“Is Bernie Sanders a closet foreign policy ‘realist’? Reading his few
pronouncements on foreign policy, you sense that he embraces the realists’ deep
skepticism about U.S. military intervention.”
Having sniffed out this foul
odor of “realism,” Ignatius further asks, “Now that Sanders has nearly tied
Clinton in Iowa and won New Hampshire, there’s a real possibility that he may
emerge as the Democratic nominee. And the question is: How scared should
mainstream Democrats be about Sanders as a foreign policy president?”
That’s right, how scary would
it be if there was a “realist” in the White House?
But Ignatius observes that
President Obama already has demonstrated some of the same disturbing “realist”
traits although Sanders might be even worse. The pundit prognosticates,
“If I had to guess, I’d say that Sanders would continue – and reinforce –
President Obama’s wary approach to using force, whereas Clinton would be more
hawkish. But that’s just a guess. Perhaps Sanders would be far more dovish.”
Like a hapless Inspector
Clouseau, Ignatius then presses ahead trying to determine exactly how bad – or
“realistic” – Sanders would be:
“Sanders’s statements on Syria
suggest that he would take a position embraced by many self-described realists.
His first priority, he has said, would be a ‘broad coalition, including
Russia,’ to defeat the Islamic State. ‘Our second priority must be getting rid
of [President Bashar al-Assad] through some political settlement, working with
Iran, working with Russia.’”
Ignatius, of course, finds
Sanders’s priorities troubling and pulls out an old canard to make the point,
reviving the long-discredited claim that Assad was responsible for the lethal
sarin gas attack outside Damascus on Aug. 21, 2013. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “Was
Turkey Behind Syria-Sarin Attack?” and “A
Call for Proof on Syria-Sarin Attack.”]
Ignoring the lack of evidence
against Assad, Ignatius writes: “Some critics would argue that it’s immoral to
make replacing a leader who used chemical weapons a secondary concern.”
Yes, in neocon land, the moral
thing is to accuse someone of a heinous crime without any verifiable evidence –
and indeed with the evidence going in the opposite direction – and then
invading and occupying the country in defiance of international law, killing hundreds
of thousands of its people, much like neocon policymakers did with Iraq as
Ignatius and other foreign policy “moralists” cheered them on.
However, with
Syria, Ignatius tells us, it would be so simple to follow up the invasion
and occupation with a plan “to build, carefully, the political and military
framework for a new Syria.” No wonder Ignatius and other neocons are so hostile
to “realism” and to Bernie Sanders.
Investigative reporter Robert
Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and
Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest book, America’s Stolen Narrative,
either in print
here or as an e-book (from Amazon
and barnesandnoble.com).
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