Victorious warriors win first and then go to war,
while defeated warriors go to war first and then seek to win. ~ Sun Tzu
The US plan for the Balkanization of Syria is now
laid bare for all to see. The events of the past few weeks have removed any
rose-colored glasses from all but the most blind American hegemony apologists.
The shooting down of Syrian pilot Captain Ali Fahed’s plane was like a period
at the end of a criminal confession.
Simply put, the phony US anti-terrorism coalition
wants to push as much of the remaining ISIS forces out of
Raqqa into combat with the Syrian-Arab Army (SAA) and replace the
“liberated” territories with a new occupier. Who could that possibly be?
Well of course, it is the good old USA and its
New Kurdish Army who are showing they never planned to push ISIS out of just
their own Kurdish part of Syria, but to grab as much of the
historically Arab populated areas as possible, particularly those with economic
resources like water, agriculture and oil.
We have reports of a US 50-truck convoy crossing
into Kurdish territory last week filled with more arms than were brought in to
take Raqqa. Someone is planning a stage two that will be bigger than the
Raqqa campaign, and in non-Kurdish areas. Who gave them permission to do that?
Exposure of this plan was spotlighted with the
F-18 Hornet shoot-down of Captain Fahed’s aged SU-22 in a
bushwhack manner, similar to the Turks’ shooting down the of Russian plane
in NE Syria – attacking it after a bombing run from behind with an
air-to-air missile. Veterans Today’s analysis concludes that the US triggered
this event in an attempt to establish an occupier type red-line
Twisting words to disguise intent
The official Pentagon report states that the
Syrian plane dropped bombs “near” Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces, (SDF).
Earlier reports had mentioned wounded, but no dead. The word “near” is
critical, as it admits no proof of actual intent to strike SDF Kurdish forces.
All military professionals understand that a
fast-moving battle campaign, which the Tiger Forces have been engaged in
while clearing eastern Aleppo and then moving into South Raqqa, makes
keeping track of battle lines difficult. There have been some
behind-the-scenes de-confliction lines between the SDF and the Tiger Forces,
but those seemed to be challenged now.
When Captain Fahed was exiting the
strike area back toward Damascus, he was no longer a threat with empty bomb
pods, yet the Navy F-18 was ordered to shoot him down under the guise
of force protection. The proper response would have been to use the
hotline to report the event, especially when there had been no strike “on” SDF
forces. Whether he was bombing near the SDF as a warning to not impede the
Syrian advance to Resafa, we do not know at this time. But remember that
in southeast Syria a few weeks ago the US shot up a Syrian convoy 40 kms from
al-Tanf.
So we have the US appointing itself the final
judge of using air-power against the Syrian anti-terrorism coalition to protect
its proxy forces, even while the US is operating inside Syria without
permission and in violation of international law or UN precedent, and planning
to take over much more of Syria. Does anyone see anything wrong with that?
The US replaces ISIS with the SDF to take Syrian territory
The US is establishing a new forward base
in Tabqa city, an Arab town. Raqqa itself is not Kurdish territory,
but has been Arabic for ages. Yet the US and the Kurds are openly challenging
Syria for possession of its own territory. Calling the US actions an
anti-terror campaign is one in name only. Syria is being carved up like a
Christmas turkey.
The huge new arms shipment coming in when the
battle for Raqqa is a forgone conclusion, coupled with the new US base
at Tabqa, can mean only one thing. The US is planning a major move to
grab the oil fields with the SDF forces and push east so as to take control of
all those key natural assets of Syria. These will be addes to the planned
Kurdish state, which will become totally dependent on US military power
and Saudi cash as part of the de facto Balkanization that was
originally planned for Syria.
Western media has completely air-brushed the
South Raqqa oil fields economic issue from the war reporting, despite the
Kurds pushing south in their attempt to block the Tiger Forces from
capturing the strategic Resafa crossroads, which would block an
important escape route for ISIS forces fleeing Raqqa.
Liberating Resafa also secures the
important major supply road, the Ithyria highway, for
the SAA advance into the remaining South Raqqa oil
fields. SAA forces in Hama are attacking east along the highway to trap
ISIS units to the north and cut off their supply lines, where they will then
have a limited combat capability. Only Southfront has been
publishing its daily combat maps of the battlefield showing the location
of the oil fields.
As Syria clears these rear areas of ISIS units,
that releases those SAA static defensive troops for the big offensive
push to Deir-Ezzor. The Syrian coalition has to block the US coalition
from advancing wherever it wishes. This is hardly aggression on the Syria’s
part, but a duty to the Syrian people. That is why the US gambled on this SU-22
shoot down, which so far has backfired.
Missed in the initial reporting was that Russia
had air cover in the vicinity of the shoot down, but did not fire on the F-18
as a “force protection” reaction. The Russians never bite on a quick trigger
provocation, and the Navy pilot is still alive because of this. What Moscow has
done, is effectively made the area west of the Euphrates a no-fly zone for the
US Coalition, and the US has already re-positioned its air assets.
“Force protection” is a game two, or three, can play
The Russian Defense Ministry was quite blunt in
its announcement. “Repeated combat actions by U.S. aviation under the
cover of counterterrorism against lawful armed forces of a country that is a
member of the U.N. are a massive violation of international law and de facto a
military aggression against the Syrian Arab Republic,” the Russian Defense
Ministry said.
The US has pulled back before. After the
knee-jerk Trump missile strike after an alleged gas attack
in Idlib that had not even been investigated, the US switched to
only using drone attacks for Raqqa combat support missions and flew only F-35s
as air cover, due to their enhanced stealth capability.
The New York Times agrees with my analysis, “The
collision of the disparate forces has, in effect, created a war within a war.
The latest escalation comes as competing forces converge on ungoverned swaths
of Syria amid the country’s six-year civil war.”
If I were the Syrian coalition, I would extend
the no-fly zone into a “no go” zone for the SDF, that it will be attacked if it
advances any further into Syrian Arab territory, period. The Pentagon would
have to back down, as the American people will not support the occupation of
Syria under the guise of removing ISIS. Congress will, but not the people.
The big question now is, will Iraq play a key
role in releasing a division or two of the Popular Militias to attack ISIS from
the rear, up the Euphrates from the al-Bakumal crossing? ISIS would then
have a major two-front war on its hands and the Syrians could advance much
quicker from Palmyra to relieve their long-surrounded garrison
at Deir-Ezzor. More important, ISIS would have no escape route
where it could live to fight another day.
It is time to let the US coalition know
that if it wants a war in Syria, all it has to do is try to take
more Syrian territory using the SDF and their proxy forces, or impede the
Syrian coalition from its liberation work. The US is not needed to defeat ISIS
now. In a coalition, Syria, Russia, Iran and Iraq can defeat ISIS.
If they stand together, they can build some
long-term security for themselves by fully controlling their borders and not
allowing freedom of action by the US coalition, which with its proxies would
just be replacing ISIS as the mortal threat to Syria and others.
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