US Syria attacks only bolster extremism

A senior Iranian diplomat has slammed the United States’ so-called anti-ISIL campaign in Syria, noting that Washington’s insane strikes, which actually target the country’s infrastructure, only serve to bolster extremism.

“The illegal and insane US attacks on Syria will only lead to further strengthening of extremism in the region,” Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister for Arab and African Affairs Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said in a Monday interview.

He noted that the US is actually destroying the Syrian infrastructure in its so-called campaign against ISIL Takfiris, arguing that that Washington must prove its honesty by blocking the Takfiri group’s financial transactions.

“If the US is honest, it should prevent the ISIL’s dollar-based transactions in the financial and banking system instead of targeting Syria’s oil and gas facilities and infrastructure,” the Iranian diplomat said.

Amir-Abdollahian also pointed to the US schemes to overthrow the Syrian government since 2011, saying, “Regime change in Syria through the simultaneous strengthening of terrorism and propaganda military strikes is a dream that will not come true.”

US-led airstrikes against ISIL continue to target Syrian infrastructure across the country and have led to more civilian deaths.

Since September 22, the US and its allies, including Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Jordan, have been conducting airstrikes against the ISIL inside Syria without any authorization from Damascus or a UN mandate.

The airstrikes are an extension of the US-led aerial campaign against ISIL positions in Iraq.

While most European governments have refrained from joining the US-led air campaign in Syria, France, the Netherlands, Denmark, Belgium and Britain are contributing to the US campaign.

Washington has been supporting the militants operating against the government in Syria since March 2011. Many ISIL terrorists have reportedly received training by the CIA in Jordan and Turkey. Saudi Arabia and Qatar have been also staunch supporters of militants fighting the Syrian government.

ASH/HMV/SS

‘We can’t stabilize Syria under Assad’

As a US-led coalition continues to strike ISIL strongholds inside Syria, President Barack Obama says “we are not going to stabilize” the country under President Bashar al-Assad.

In an interview aired Sunday on CBS’ “60 Minutes” program, Obama acknowledged the contradictory nature of his Syria strategy.”I recognize the contradiction in a contradictory land and a contradictory circumstance.”

The US president explained that the military campaign against the ISIL terror network and al-Qaeda-affiliated groups was also helping the Syrian government.

Many militants who were initially trained and armed by the US and some of its Arab allies to fight the government of President Assad later joined the ISIL terrorist organization.

Obama has authorized airstrikes against ISIL militants in Iraq and Syria, but has repeatedly ruled out American boots on the ground in a combat role, a promise many experts say might soon be broken.

The administration hopes that local forces, comprised of “moderate” militants in Syria and military forces and Kurdish fighters in Iraq, would lead the ground offensive against ISIL, and recapture the lost territory.

As part of that strategy, the US Congress approved a plan earlier this month for the Pentagon to begin arming and equipping 5,000 so-called moderate insurgents in Syria.

Pentagon leaders have said a force of up to 15,000 trained militants was required in Syria to take on both ISIL and the Assad government.

In Iraq, the US has deployed about 1,600 troops to bolster security for American diplomats and facilities there and “advise” Iraqi government forces fighting the ISIL militants.

Earlier on Sunday, House Speaker John Boehner said the United States may have “no choice” but to send American troops to combat if the current strategy failed.

Obama said Sunday that the coalition’s military campaign had “a strong chance for success in Iraq” but added that Syria was “a more challenging situation.”

The president also admitted that the US intelligence had “underestimated what had been taking place in Syria.”

HRJ/HRJ

‘Iran, Russia resolved to improve ties’

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani says Iran and Russia’s common interests have strengthened the two countries’ cooperation, saying Tehran and Moscow are determined to further improve ties.

“The importance of Russia has increased in Iran’s regional and strategic relations and numerous meetings between the two countries’ officials are a proof of the consolidation of ties and the two sides’ determination to expand them,” Rouhani said in a meeting with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, in Astrakhan city on Monday.

Rouhani added that he had held meetings with the Russian president four times over the past year and discussed bilateral, regional and international developments.

President Rouhani also touched upon the issue of anti-terrorism campaign and said, “Those who currently intend to lead the fight against terrorists in the region have started to pay attention [to this the problem] too late. This is among the Iranian nation’s honors that it identified the danger before others and fought it.”

The Russian president, for his part, said Tehran and Moscow share a common stance on many regional and international issues.

He added that enhanced cooperation between the two countries has been an important factor behind stability in Central Asia and the Middle East.

The Iranian president paid a two-day visit to Russia to attend the 4th summit of the Caspian Sea littoral states after he wrapped up his visit to New York where he attended the 69th annual session of the United Nations General Assembly.

SF/HMV/SS

Turkey seeks mandate to attack ISIL

The Turkish government has announced its decision to submit motions to parliament, requesting extended mandate for military action in Iraq and Syria against the ISIL cult.

“The motions have not yet been sent to parliament. They may come tomorrow,” Turkeys’ Parliament Speaker Cemil Cicek said on Monday.

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has said the motions will be debated on Thursday.

Turkey initially refused to join the US-led coalition, but President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says Ankara’s position has changed.

“We will hold discussions with our relevant institutions this week. We will definitely be where we need to be,” Erdogan said on Sunday, adding, “We cannot stay out of this.”

On Tuesday, Turkey’s top general, Necdet Ozel, will speak to the cabinet, and Erdogan will chair a security summit on the issue.

The Turkish government is accused of providing heavy logistical support for the ISIL terrorists. Since the start of the crisis in Syria in 2011, Turkey has reportedly allowed its borders to be used as a conduit for aid, weapons and militants heading to Syria.

Turkey has reportedly been the main entry point for foreign militants who seek to join the ISIL in Iraq as well as Syria.

There have been at least 190 US airstrikes on ISIL targets in Iraq since bombing started there in August, according to statistics from US Central Command, which coordinates military activity in the region.

Since September 22, the US and its allies have been also conducting airstrikes against the ISIL inside Syria without any authorization from Damascus or a UN mandate. The airstrikes are an extension of the US-led aerial campaign against the ISIL positions in Iraq.

The ISIL terrorists currently control large swathes of territory across Syria and Iraq. They have carried out heinous atrocities in both countries, including mass executions and beheadings of people.

MP/AB/SS

‘US dual policies recipe for terrorism’

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Muallem has slammed the US double standards in fighting terrorism, saying such policies only prolong the crisis in Syria.

Addressing the 69th meeting of the UN General Assembly meeting on Monday, Muallem slammed Washington’s “dual policy” of launching strikes on some militants in Syria while providing money, weapons and training to others.

“This is a real recipe for the increase of violence and terrorism, shedding of Syrian blood, [and] prolonging of the Syrian crisis,” Muallem said, adding, “This behavior creates a fertile ground for the growth of these terrorist groups that commit the most heinous crimes on Syrian territory.”

Muallem added that some of the key supporters of “armed terrorist groups” are among the countries which have joined the so-called coalition led by the US against ISIL, adding that the foreign-backed militants have been “unleashed like a monster” against Syria, Iraq and Lebanon.

“Let us together stop this ideology and its exporters. Let us simultaneously exert pressure on the countries that joined the coalition led by the United States to stop their support of armed terrorist groups. Only then, combating terrorism militarily becomes viable,” he said.

The top Syrian diplomat pointed to the election of President Bashar al-Assad in June’s poll and noted that those who claim to want a political solution in Syria should respect the Syrians’ choice and will.

Muallem reiterated that Damascus is committed to a political solution to the ongoing crisis in Syria.

Since September 22, the US and its allies, including Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Jordan, have been conducting airstrikes against the ISIL inside Syria without any authorization from Damascus or a UN mandate.

The airstrikes are an extension of the US-led aerial campaign against ISIL positions in Iraq.

While most European governments have refrained from joining the US-led air campaign in Syria, France, the Netherlands, Denmark, Belgium and Britain are contributing to the US campaign.

Washington has been supporting the militants operating against the government in Syria since March 2011. Many ISIL terrorists have reportedly received training by the CIA in Jordan and Turkey. Saudi Arabia and Qatar have been also staunch supporters of militants fighting the Syrian government.

ASH/HMV/SS

US-Israel bond hindering defeat of ISIL

The US government’s close ties with Israel have “tragically” prevented it from cooperating with the Syrian government to eradicate the ISIL terrorist group, a journalist and author in California says.

“The tragedy is that the Americans and the Syrians have the exact same goal in staving off this terrorism,” said Tim King, a correspondent for Salem News.

“It’s unfortunate that the American bonds with Israel prevented it from being able to  work with [Syrian President] Bashar al-Assad and to establish this common goal of eradicating or at least leveling out this terrorism,” King told Press TV in an interview on Monday.

“I just think that it’s a tragedy that the Americans don’t have the willingness to simply work with a partner like Bashar al-Assad,” he added. “I think that they can quickly eradicate the problem if they did.”

The ISIL terrorists, who were initially trained by the CIA in Jordan in 2012 to destabilize the Syrian government, control large parts of Syria’s northern and eastern territory. The group sent its fighters into Iraq in June, quickly seizing vast expanse of land straddling the border between the two countries.

Warplanes from the US and several of its allies began striking ISIL targets in Syria on September 23. The US military has already conducted hundreds of airstrikes against ISIL in Iraq since mid-August.

President Barack Obama insists that he would not send American troops to combat against ISIL.

US Senator Chris Murphy, however, has told CNN that the United States does not have a “realistic political strategy” to prevent a prolonged military engagement in Syria.

AHT/HRJ

UK Osborne proposes benefit freeze

British Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne has announced plans to freeze state benefits for the country’s working-age population for two years if the Tories win the 2015 general elections.

In a speech at the Conservative Party’s annual conference in Birmingham on Monday, Osborne said the squeeze on benefits would enable the UK to save £3.0 billion (USD 4.9 billion).

“Working-age benefits will have to be frozen for two years. This is the choice that Britain needs to take to protect our economic stability and to secure a better future,” he said.

Osborne also noted that the move is aimed at providing a “fair” welfare system and ensuring that benefits are not rising faster than taxpayers’ earnings.

Disability, pensioner and carer benefits will be excluded from the change, he added.

The Chancellor further noted that an extra £25 billion of permanent savings or new taxes would be required to eliminate the country’s deficit.

British Labour Shadow Treasury Secretary Chris Leslie, however, hit back at Osborne’s plans and accused him of serving the rich while ignoring those struggling to make ends meet.

“He (Osborne) is choosing to give the richest one per cent a £3 billion-a-year tax cut and opposing a mansion tax while cutting tax credits which make work pay for millions of striving families. While working people have seen their wages fall by £1,600 a year since 2010, the Tories have once again shown they are the party of a privileged few at the top,” Leslie said.

Britain’s current coalition government launched austerity measures when it came to power in 2010 in a bid to tackle the country’s mounting debt and sluggish growth, but the policies have sparked opposition and public protests in recent years.

SSM/HMV/SS

Flood still nagging Kashmir Muslims

Muslims in the Indian-controlled Kashmir are still struggling with the aftermath of the deadly floods that hit South Asia earlier this month, Press TV reports.

The initial estimates by business federation say Kashmir has lost businesses worth millions of dollars, Press TV’s Shahana Butt reported from the region.

To worsen the situation, government is moving at turtle pace in its cleanliness strive and that is why people keep protesting against the government for its inefficiency, she added.

“We have never thought of destruction at this scale. We waited for government to take action. But when it failed, we started on our own,” said one resident there.

The situation comes as the biggest Muslim festival of Eid al-Adha (Feast of Sacrifice), which marks the culmination of the annual Hajj pilgrimage, is just a week away.

“People are getting sick and the government is watching like a silent spectator. We have lost everything. We have nothing to celebrate,” noted another resident.

Earlier this month, monsoon floods inundated Kashmir, killing more than 270 people in the Indian-controlled portion of the Himalayan region, which is divided between India and Pakistan.

The flash floods have led Kashmir towards its worst economic condition, says Press TV correspondent, who noted, “Experts say the pace with which New Delhi is dealing with the destruction seems to be a deliberate attempt to keep Kashmiri people away from the sentiment of freedom. However, this deliberate attempt seems to be playing a catalytic role in provoking anger against Indian rule in the region.”

HN/AB/SS

US seeks lasting ‘footprint’ in Mideast

The main objective of the US military campaign against ISIL in Iraq and Syria is to “maintain a military footprint” in the Middle East and to “topple” the Syrian government, an American commentator says.       

The US-led airstrikes, which lack a clear strategy, are also aimed at increasing Western influence in that region and benefiting the US arms industry, said Karen Kwiatkowski, a former Pentagon and intelligence official in Virginia.

“The fundamental goal from the US perspective is to maintain a military footprint in the Middle East and… to topple the Syrian regime and to create more opportunities for US and Western influence in this part of the world,” Kwiatkowski told Press TV on Monday.

Another goal that is never discussed is to “feed the military manufacturing machine here in the United States,” she added.

The US and several of its allies, including Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Jordan, have been conducting airstrikes against the ISIL terrorist group inside Syria without any authorization from Damascus or a UN mandate.

The airstrikes are an extension of the US aerial campaign against ISIL positions in Iraq.

However, top US military officials have said an air campaign alone would not be sufficient to achieve the announced goal of defeating ISIL, and that the US might ultimately be forced to send ground troops to combat.

US President Barack Obama has ruled out American boots on the ground in a combat role, a promise many experts say might soon be broken.

AHT/HRJ

 

 

We hate beheadings, love drone killings

The answer lies in human psychology. And probably like the old observation about history, people who refuse to understand human psychology are doomed to be victims of psychological manipulation. How is it that even members of peace groups have now come to support US bombing? One lady framed the issue like this: “I request that we discuss and examine why the videotaped beheading of a human being is understood to be more egregious than the explosion (almost totally invisible to the public) of a human being by a missile or bomb fired from a drone.”

There are at least four main reasons that explain why Americans care far more about the beheadings (thus far) of two Americans and one U.K citizen, than they care — here’s the polling — about the thousands of foreign victims of US drone bombing. Here’s how people are likely being manipulated into believing that more US bombing is the answer to such terroristic killings even when almost all military experts have admitted that it won’t work and “there’s no military solution”:

1) “Us versus them” mentality, the group bonding also known as tribalism, nationalism, group elitism, etc. seems partially learned behavior but also hard-wired into humans (like other animals) to enable group survival. The worst, most excessive forms of group bonding are also known as racism. Yet it’s an innate part of human psychological makeup to identify most closely with those whom we are close to and with whom we share group affinity, so Americans are always going to care more about Americans/Westerners as opposed to more distant foreigners;

2) The gruesome beheadings were deliberately and dramatically videotaped to ensure that US media brought the scenes into all US living rooms whereas the drone bombings of citizens of foreign countries are almost never filmed nor covered at all by US media. Thus to the majority of Americans, drone killings seem sterile, sanitized and surgical even though drone pilots who see the results up close know differently and some are even committing suicide.

3) It’s apparent that even a large segment of the “peace” community does not understand that US wars and US-orchestrated regime changes indirectly created ISIL (and other Al Qaeda type terrorist groups) and that US drone (and other aerial) bombing is giving rise to MORE terrorism, rather than working to reduce it. These two articles “How the West Created the Islamic State” and “How ISIS Is Using Us to Get What It Wants” describe the dynamic.

As in all wars, the leaders of both sides are opportunistically using each other to empower each other. Robert Greenwald’s video puts it most succinctly: “How Perpetual War Fuels Terrorism.” (But the opposite is also true: terrorism fuels war). This is well-known by Western intelligence analysts and foreign policy experts, and it’s garden variety war manipulation for everyone except the duped US public. (Borowitz isn’t really joking when he reports: “Americans Who Have Not Read a Single Article About Syria Strongly Support Bombing It.”) It’s depressing otherwise to learn how many uninformed people there are that still think “bombing the village to save it” somehow can work. Such “war on terror” propaganda is actually effective on the liberal-minded who are more vulnerable to having their emotional buttons — fear, hate, greed, false pride and blind loyalty — pressed than it is on more pragmatic, cool-headed realists. It’s being reported that a number of US journalists who should know better have even fallen for hyped terror threats used to justify the launching of bombing upon Syria.

4) A fourth reason why most Americans now go happily along with perpetual war in a kind of blissful stupor, cheering on their favorite war hawk politician comes from the lessons learned so well from the Vietnam War. Getting rid of the military draft and putting the trillions of dollars of mounting war costs on the ever-expanding and perfectly elastic national debt card was a stroke of genius on the part of the military industrial complex to wipe away any remaining “Vietnam Syndrome.” The new “poverty draft” that we’re left with constitutes another layer of “us versus them” type manipulation geared to getting the liberal, intellectual middle class on board as they perceive little or no costs and only benefits to perpetual war. Even when not directly profiting by working for military or national security contractors, many Americans have come to believe war creates jobs and ensures they are supplied with cheap gas and other resources.

Anyway, I may be flat wrong but there has to be some explanation and I would welcome others’ opinions. Without the witty humor of a Borowitz or Jon Stewart, people may also resent being told how they are constantly duped into this perpetual war that makes them less and less safe. But hopefully, more people will wise up to this psychological manipulation.

AHT/HRJ