Obama Ignores Russian Terror Victims
President Obama has displayed a stunning lack of sympathy for the
Russian civilians killed in an ISIS plane bombing in Egypt and for
two Russian military men slain as victims of U.S. weapons systems in
Syria, putting insults toward President Putin ahead of human
decency.By Robert Parry
December 04, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortium
News" -
Normally, when a country is hit by an act of
terrorism, there is universal sympathy even if the country has
engaged in actions that may have made it a target of the terrorists.
After 9/11, for instance, any discussion of whether U.S. violent
meddling in the Middle East may have precipitated the attack was
ruled out of the public debate.
Similarly, the 7/7 attacks against London’s
Underground in 2005 were not excused because the United Kingdom had
joined in President George W. Bush’s aggressive war in Iraq. The
same with the more recent terror strikes in Paris. No respectable
politician or pundit gloated about the French getting what they
deserved for their long history of imperialism in the Muslim world.
But a different set of rules apply to Russia.
Along with other prominent Americans, President Barack Obama and New
York Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman have expressed smug
satisfaction over the murder of 224 people aboard a Russian charter
flight blown up over the Sinai and in the slaying of a Russian pilot
who had been shot down by a Turkish warplane and the killing of a
Russian marine on a rescue mission.
Apparently, the political imperative to display
disdain for Russian President Vladimir Putin trumps any normal sense
of humanity. Both Obama on Tuesday and Friedman on Wednesday treated
those Russian deaths at the hands of the Islamic State or other
jihadists as Putin’s comeuppance for intervening against
terrorist/jihadist gains in Syria.
At
a news conference in Paris, Obama expressed his lack of
sympathy as part of a bizarre comment in which he faulted Putin for
somehow not turning around the Syrian conflict during the past month
– when Obama and his allies have been floundering in their “war”
against the Islamic State and its parent, Al Qaeda, for years, if
not decades.
“The Russians now have been there for several
weeks, over a month, and I think fair-minded reporters who looked at
the situation would say that the situation hasn’t changed
significantly,” Obama said. “In the interim, Russia has lost a
commercial passenger jet. You’ve seen another jet shot down. There
have been losses in terms of Russian personnel. And I think Mr.
Putin understands that, with Afghanistan fresh in the memory, for
him to simply get bogged down in a inconclusive and paralyzing civil
conflict is not the outcome that he’s looking for.”
In examining that one paragraph, a “fair-minded”
reporter could find a great deal to dispute. Indeed, the comments
suggest that President Obama has crossed some line into either
believing his own propaganda or thinking that everyone who listens
to him is an idiot and will believe whatever he says.
But what was perhaps most disturbing was Obama’s
graceless manner of discussing the tragedy of the Sinai bombing,
followed by his seeming pleasure over Turkey shooting down a Russian
SU-24 last week, leading to the killing of two Russian military men,
one the pilot who was targeted while parachuting to the ground and
the other a marine after his search-and-rescue helicopter was downed
by a TOW missile.
Even more troubling, the key weapon systems used –
the Turkish F-16 fighter jet and the TOW missile – were
U.S.-manufactured and apparently U.S. supplied, in the case of the
TOW missile either directly or indirectly to Sunni jihadists deemed
“moderate” by the Obama administration.
The Ever-Smug Friedman
Columnist Friedman was equally unfeeling about the
Russian deaths. In a
column entitled “Putin’s Great Syrian Adventure,”
Friedman offered a mocking assessment of Russia’s intervention
against Sunni jihadists and terrorists seeking to take control of
Syria.
While ridiculing anyone who praised Putin’s
initiative or who just thought the Russian president was “crazy like
a fox,” Friedman wrote: “Some of us thought he was just crazy.
“Well, two months later, let’s do the math: So
far, Putin’s Syrian adventure has resulted in a Russian civilian
airliner carrying 224 people being blown up, apparently by pro-ISIS
militants in Sinai. Turkey shot down a Russian bomber after it
strayed into Turkish territory. And then Syrian rebels killed one of
the pilots as he parachuted to earth and one of the Russian marines
sent to rescue him.”
Ha-ha, very funny! And, by the way, it has not
been established that the Russian SU-24 did stray into Turkish air
space but if it did, according to the Turkish account, it passed
over a sliver of Turkish territory for all of 17 seconds.
The evidence is quite clear that the SU-24 was
ambushed in a reckless act by Turkey’s autocratic President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan who has been collaborating with Syrian and
foreign jihadists for the past four years to overthrow Syria’s
secular government. And the murder of the pilot after he bailed out
of the plane is not some reason to smirk; it is a war crime.
Even uglier is the lack of any sympathy or outrage
over the terrorist bombing that killed 224 innocent people, mostly
tourists, aboard a Russian charter flight in Egypt. If the victims
had been American and a similar callous reaction had come from
President Putin and a columnist for a major Russian newspaper, one
can only imagine the outrage. However, in Official Washington, any
recognition of a common humanity with Russians makes you a “Moscow
stooge.”
The other wacky part of both Obama’s comments and
Friedman’s echoes of the same themes is this quick assessment that
the Russian intervention in support of the Syrian government has
been some abject failure – as if the U.S.-led coalition has been
doing so wonderfully.
First, as a “fair-minded” reporter, I would say
that it appears the Russian-backed Syrian offensive has at least
stopped the advances of the Islamic State, Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front
and its jihadist allies, including Ahrar al-Sham (which technically
separates itself from Al Qaeda and thus qualifies for U.S.-supplied
weaponry even though it fights side-by-side with Nusra in the
Saudi-backed Army of Conquest).
The Afghan Memories
Obama’s reference to Afghanistan was also
startling. He was suggesting that Putin should have learned a lesson
from Moscow’s intervention in the 1980s in support of a secular,
pro-Soviet regime in Kabul, which came under attack by
CIA-organized-and-armed Islamic jihadists known then as mujahedeen.
Wielding sophisticated surface-to-air missiles and
benefiting from $1 billion a year in Saudi-U.S.-supplied weapons,
the Afghan fundamentalist mujahedeen and their allies, including
Saudi Osama bin Laden, eventually drove Soviet troops out in 1989
and – several years later behind the Taliban – completed the
reversion of Afghanistan back to the Seventh Century. Women in Kabul
went from dressing any way they liked in public, including wearing
mini-skirts, to being covered in chadors and kept at home.
Obama’s bringing up Afghanistan in the Syrian
context and Putin’s supposed one-month Syrian failure was ironic in
another way. After Al Qaeda’s 9/11 attacks, the United States
invaded Afghanistan in pursuit of bin Laden and has been bogged down
in a quagmire there for 14 years, including nearly seven years under
Obama.
So, Obama may not be on the firmest ground when he
suggests that Putin recall Moscow’s experience in Afghanistan a few
decades ago. After all, Obama has many more recent memories.
Further, what is different about Putin’s Syrian
strategy – compared with Obama’s – is that the Russians are
targeting all the terrorists and jihadists, not just the Islamic
State (also known as ISIS, ISIL or Daesh). While U.S. propaganda
tries to present the non-ISIS jihadists as “moderates” (somehow
pretending that Al Qaeda is no longer a terrorist organization),
there is, in reality, very little distinction between ISIS and the
alliance of Nusra/Ahrar al-Sham.
And, as for Official Washington’s new “group
think” about the Syrian government’s lack of progress in the war,
there is the discordant news that the last of rebel forces have
agreed to abandon the central city of Homs, which had been dubbed
the “capital of the revolution.” The Associated Press reported on
Tuesday that “thousands of insurgents will leave the last
opposition-held neighborhood in” Homs, with the withdrawal beginning
next week.
Al-Jazeera
added the additional fact that the remaining 4,000
insurgents are “from al-Nusra Front, Ahrar al-Sham and the Free
Syrian Army.” In other words, the “moderate” Free Syrian Army was
operating in collusion with Al Qaeda’s affiliate and its major
jihadist partner.
While it’s hard to get reliable up-to-date
information from inside Syria, one intelligence source familiar with
the military situation told me that the Syrian government offensive,
backed by Iranian troops and Russian air power, had been
surprisingly successful in putting the jihadists, including ISIS and
Nusra, on the defensive, with additional gains around the key city
of Aleppo.
The Belated Oil Bombings
Also, in the past week, Putin shamed Obama into
joining in a bombing operation to destroy hundreds of trucks
carrying ISIS oil to Turkey. Why that valuable business was allowed
to continue during the U.S.-led war on ISIS since summer 2014 has
not been adequately explained. It apparently was being protected by
Turkish President Erdogan.
Another irony of Obama’s (and Friedman’s) critical
assessment of Putin’s one-month military campaign came in Obama’s
recounting of his meeting during the Paris climate summit with
Erdogan. Obama said he was still appealing to Erdogan to close the
Turkish-Syrian border although radical jihadists have been crossing
it since the start of the Syrian civil war in 2011.
“With respect to Turkey, I have had repeated
conversations with President Erdogan about the need to close the
border between Turkey and Syria,” Obama said. “We’ve seen some
serious progress on that front, but there are still some gaps. In
particular, there’s about 98 kilometers that are still used as a
transit point for foreign fighters, ISIL shipping out fuel for sale
that helps finance their terrorist activities.”
In other words, all these years into the conflict
– and about 1½ years since Obama specifically targeted ISIS – Turkey
has not closed its borders to prevent ISIS from reinforcing itself
with foreign fighters and trafficking in illicit oil sales to fund
its terror operations. One might suspect that Erdogan has no
intention of really stopping the Sunni jihadists from ravaging
Syria.
Erdogan still seems set on violent “regime change”
in Syria after allowing his intelligence services to provide
extensive help to ISIS, Al Qaeda’s Nusra and other extremists. The
Russians claim that politically well-connected Turkish businessmen
also have been profiting off the ISIS oil sales.
But Obama’s acknowledgement that he has not even
been able to get NATO “ally” Turkey to seal its border and that ISIS
still remains a potent fighting force makes a mockery of his mocking
Putin for not “significantly” changing the situation on the ground
in Syria in one month.
Obama also slid into propaganda speak when he
blamed Assad for all the deaths that have occurred during the Syrian
conflict. “I consider somebody who kills hundreds of thousands of
his own people illegitimate,” Obama said.
But again Obama is applying double standards. For
instance, he would not blame President George W. Bush for the
hundreds of thousands (possibly more than a million) dead Iraqis,
yet Bush was arguably more responsible for those deaths by launching
an unprovoked invasion of Iraq than Assad was in battling a
jihadist-led insurgency.
Plus, the death toll of Syrians, estimated to
exceed a quarter million, includes many soldiers and police as well
as armed jihadists. That does not excuse Assad or his regime for
excessively heavy-handed tactics that have inflicted civilian
casualties, but Obama and his predecessor both have plenty of
innocent blood on their hands, too.
After watching Obama’s news conference, one
perhaps can hope that he is just speaking out of multiple sides of
his mouth as he is wont to do. Maybe, he’s playing his usual game of
“above-the-table/below-the-table,” praising Erdogan above the table
while chastising him below the table and disparaging Putin in public
while cooperating with the Russian president in private.
Or maybe President Obama has simply lost touch
with reality – and with common human decency.
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,
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