Ramifications of disintegration of
Iraq and Syria
Asif
Haroon Raja
Commotion
in the Middle East from 2003 onwards didn’t occur accidently but it up surged
systematically in line with the US-Israeli-Western plan of splitting powerful
Arab and North African States into small quasi-States, changing the boundaries
of Middle East and then paving the way for establishment of Greater Israel
stretching from River Nile to Euphrates and in total control of oil, gas and
other mineral resources of the region. Similar plans had been hatched for
Afghanistan and Pakistan as was evident from issuance of independent
Balochistan and Greater Pakhtunistan. Seizure of Central Asia’s resources was
also part of the master plan. The word ‘terrorism’ was coined to destroy
radical Muslim States defined as axis of evil. The tools employed for the
materialization of grand plan of neo-colonizing the Muslim world were,
pre-emptive massive military strikes to destroy terrorists and their abettors;
stoking ethnic and sectarian tensions.
Invasion
and occupation of Iraq by US led forces in 2003 led to Shia-Sunni conflict and
growth of Al-Qaeda in Iraq. Invasion of Lebanon by Israel in 2006 gave birth to
Iran backed Hezbollah and shaped up Iran-Syria-Hezbollah alliance. Shia regime
in Iraq led by Nuri al-Maliki also tilted towards this nexus. Sudden appearance
of Arab Spring at the start of 2011 gave rise to speculations that it was the
doing of CIA-Mosad combine with ulterior objectives. Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen,
Libya, Syria, Morocco, Algeria, Jordon, Saudi Arabia and Gulf States were
affected. Within no time, Zain al-Abedin regime in Tunisia and Hosni Mubarak
regime in Egypt crashed, while Qaddafi regime in Libya was forcibly toppled by
NATO. Simultaneously, US-Saudi backed insurgency by Syrian Sunni rebels against
Bashar al-Assad regime erupted in Syria. By that time, sectarian war in Iraq
had heightened after the exit of occupying troops in December 2011. Yemen also
underwent a regime change but it is still engulfed in turmoil. Uprisings in
various States enabled Al-Qaeda to spread its tentacles in Arabian Peninsula
and beyond and also rejuvenated Muslim Brotherhood (MB) that had been crushed
by successive military rulers in Egypt.
In
Egypt, Morsi and his MB regime democratically elected in June 2012 was booted
out by US-Saudi backed Gen Fattah al Sisi in July 2013 and since then the
country is in a state of flux due to protests/insurgency launched by MB
activists. The MB has been banned and its members are being ruthlessly
persecuted. In Libya, large numbers of Islamic militant groups have cropped up
and have posed a serious challenge to the government setup by NATO. In 2012,
the US Consulate in Benghazi was attack by militants killing the ambassador.
Renegade former army General Khalifa Haftar, declaring the central government
to be too weak, assembled a force of his loyalists and launched an offensive on
June 1, 2014 to clear Benghazi of the presence of Islamic militants belonging
to Ansar al-Sharia group, declared as a terrorist group by USA. A fighter jet
was used to bomb the locations of the militants. The group has accused the US
of backing Haftar. The latter survived a suicide bombing attack on June 4 but
his three of his bodyguards died. The leaderless country is rived in turmoil.
In
Syria, CIA’s monkey tricks have also backfired. The US plan to militarily
intervene in August 2013 in support of Syrian rebels fell flat in the face of
Vladimir Putin’s superior diplomatic manoeuvre. It’s backtracking in Syria and
hobnobbing with Iran made Washington-Riyadh relations frosty. Crisis in Syria
deepened as a result of infighting among al-Qaeda, Al-Nusra Front and Islamic
State of Iraq & Levant (ISIL). Entry of thousands of foreign fighters from
Europe, Caucasus and other parts of the globe became a cause of worry for
European leaders. Syrian civil war has also changed outlook of the two allies,
Hamas and Hezbollah, with former backing Syrian Sunni rebels and the latter
supporting Alawite regime.
In
Iraq where sectarian war is taking a heavy toll, entry of ISIL has added a new
chapter in the ongoing conflict between Nuri al-Maliki’s Shia heavy security
forces and Sunni militant forces wanting their political and economic
grievances to be addressed. The ISIL under Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi consisting of
10,000 to 12,000 militants after capturing Dier Ezzor, Ar-Raqa and parts of
Aleppo in Syria, entered Iraq like a hurricane on June 9, 2014 and within no
time overwhelmed Nineveh and Anbar provinces as well as sizeable parts of three
other provinces in northwestern and western Iraq including second biggest city
of Mosul and the biggest oil refinery at the outskirts of Baghdad.
In
the process the ISIL has taken control over very large quantity of war munitions
including choppers, guns, vehicles and aircraft. It has also substantially
enriched its treasure chest. On June 29, Abu Bakr was named ‘Caliph Ibrahim’
and the name ISIL changed to Islamic Caliphate (IS). The IS has published
a map of its future Islamic Caliphate which includes Iraq, Syria, Jordon, Saudi
Arabia, Afghanistan, Pakistan and India. The Iraqi National Army (INA) trained
at a very heavy expense proved too fragile to stem the gushing lava and it ran
away in utter confusion. It is now trying to recapture Tikrit where battle is
raging.
The US response to the
IS threat is lukewarm. Unlike in the past when its rapid deployment force would
rush to any trouble spot of its interest in any part of the globe, it is
helplessly watching the unraveling of Nuri’s regime which it had installed in
2006. So far it has rushed in about 500 soldiers belonging to Special Forces to
guard its Embassy in Baghdad to avert Tehran-like hostage episode. In addition,
it has dispatched 300 military advisers to guide the down in the mouth INA.
Obama is so far non-committal over Nuri’s request for air and drone strikes.
US tepid response has
given rise to conjectures that there is more than what is seen with a naked
eye. Analysts in the west are floating ideas that ISIL is CIA created and
sponsored. They
say that Western Special Forces are operating within rebel ranks of Al-Nusrah
and ISIL and the two outfits are the foot-soldiers of the Western military
alliance, which oversees and controls the recruitment and training of paramilitary
forces.
The
US after consistently accusing Iran as a vigorous abettor of terrorism and
supportive of Al-Qaeda is now trying to convince Tehran to come to the aid of
Iraq. The turnabout came in the aftermath of interim nuclear deal in Vienna in November
2011. On one hand Iran is being pressed to roll back its nuclear program as
desired by Israel, and on the other it is being presented as a partner of US
led coalition to fight al-Qaeda and its off-shoots like ISIL. The purpose is to
depose Nuri who has fallen from US grace, and find a better replacement
acceptable to other Iraqi communities. Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iraq’s Ayatollah
Sistani too want Nuri to bow out.
Turmoil
in Libya, Egypt and Yemen, and now destabilization of Iraq and Syria as nation
States and ensnaring Iran into a vicious regional sectarian conflict correspond
with Odid Yinon plan conceived by him in 1984 and later pursued by the US
neo-cons and Tony Blair to neo-colonize Middle East and lay the foundation of
Greater Israel as conceived by Zionist Theodore Heizi. Ever widening sectarian
war in Syria and Iraq will sooner than later engulf several other regional
countries like Lebanon, Jordon, Saudi Arabia, Gulf States, Iran, Turkey and
possibly Pakistan. Possible disintegration of Syria and Iraq on ethnic lines
will have devastating ramifications for the entire Middle East.
|