Morning Star.png

 

 

Sleepwalking into another Bloody, Pointless War

 

Isis and its demented ambitions can only be uprooted by forces with
recognised legitimacy. Unrepentant colonial powers do not fit the bill.

 

 

Andrew Murray, The Morning Star, London, 28 November 2015

 

Britain is once more on the brink of war. David Cameron has launched his
long-expected push to secure support for bombing Syria, setting out the case
publicly on Thursday.

 

His present rationalisation for war - the need to confront Islamic State
(Isis), which controls considerable territory across Syria and Iraq - is the
exact reverse of his case for bombing that country two years ago.

 

Then it was a matter of taking on the government of Bashar al-Assad - whose
army constitutes the main opposition on the ground to Isis in the region,
other than Kurdish forces.

 

Had the House of Commons backed his proposal then - its blocking stands to
Ed Miliband's credit - Isis today would only be stronger. It is only one
sign of many of utter incoherence in the formulation of British policy.

 

If there is an underlying rationale for the latest drive for war, it is the
desire of the British government and military to be seen as a major power
player in the region.

 



Jeremy Corbyn, opposition leader

 

Since Syria is already taking daily delivery of bombs from Russia, the US,
Turkey and France - ostensibly directed against Isis - it strains credulity
to imagine that British intervention will add anything consequential.

 

In fact, it can only increase the dangers of a great-power clash over Syrian
skies, something dramatically highlighted by the Turkish shooting down of a
Russian fighter this week.

 

This move was most likely prompted by Turkish fears that their own client
anti-Assad groups were taking a beating from Russian air power.

 

In turn, this reveals that for all the anti-Isis rhetoric of the last two
years - reaching an understandable crescendo after the Paris atrocities -
none of the major powers actually have the destruction of the self-styled
"caliphate" as their priority.

 

Hitherto, the priority for the US government has been regime change in
Damascus, removing the Assad government with little thought as to what sort
of regime might succeed it and how a sectarian bloodbath might be averted.

 

Its attacks on Isis, while having had some impact, have been carefully
calibrated not to prejudice that overarching aim.

 

The Russian priority is more or less the reverse - defeating the various
armed groups challenging Assad, of which Isis is only one. And the Turkish
state - riddled with Isis allies in any case - is focused on stopping the
spread of Kurdish authority in Syria and Iraq alike.

 

Cameron's planned intervention is not only purposeless and dangerous. It
would also of course be illegal. The United Nations resolution does not
cover this point.

 

UN Logo.png

 

Of all the above mentioned powers, only Russia is intervening at the request
of the recognised Syrian government.

 

That is not on its own a decisive consideration. The same would apply to the
present British bombing in Iraq, requested by the Baghdad government. And
Stop the War has made clear its opposition to all foreign military
intervention in the Middle East, including Vladimir Putin's.

 

Nevertheless, a further lawless war would only add to Britain's reputation
as a power operating entirely outside international norms of conduct.

 

It is clear that no amount of bombing is going to dislodge Isis from much of
the territory it holds. That can only be ultimately be done by ground forces
deployed by states and peoples within the region.

 

The brutal depredations of Isis must surely have alienated most Syrians and
Iraqis unfortunate enough to live under its control.

 

However, the idea that Arabs will welcome liberation brought by imperialist
bombers, or Russian jets engaged in what the Patriarch of the Russian
Orthodox Church unhelpfully described as a "holy war," is a folly refuted by
history at every turn.

 

A lasting peace can only rest on self-determination and come through the
agency of the Syrian and Iraqi peoples, of all nationalities and beliefs,
themselves.

 

That is one of the central lessons of the last 14 years of war. No country
attacked under the rubric of the "war on terror" - Afghanistan, Iraq and
Libya - can be described today as at peace, or anything near it.

 

These imperial interventions have sparked unending conflict at a cost of
millions of lives. Each war has merely prepared the ground for the next.

 

The current Western-backed Saudi aggression against Yemen will lead to no
better outcomes, merely adding another shattered state to the panorama of
ruins across the region. This is a "liberation" no-one needs and no-one is
asking for.

 

Isis and its demented ambitions can only be uprooted - from such hearts and
minds as it holds, as well as territorially - by forces, political as well
as military, with recognised legitimacy. Unrepentant colonial powers do not
fit the bill.

 



 

Cameron's plan addresses exactly none of these issues. Worse than that, it
cuts across the first steps towards a resolution of the disastrous conflict
in Syria, the talks which have begun in Vienna.

 

Those talks inevitably involve all those international parties which have
interested themselves in the Syrian question, including Iran and Saudi
Arabia as well as the intervening powers from outside the region.

 

So be it - there will be no peace without addressing the interests of those
actors, that much is clear. But any political solution, including who should
or should not be in the Syrian government, must ultimately be a matter for
the Syrians alone through some democratic procedure.

 

Adding British bombers to those already engaged will do nothing to assist
the Vienna talks, particularly as British diplomacy has long been associated
with setting anti-Assad preconditions for any peace process, a calamitous
position which has helped prolong the conflict by years.

 

If events - mainly the Russian intervention as well as the horror in Paris -
are forcing a grudging reorientation away from such preconditions, then
joining, uninvited, the bombing party will not assist such limited progress
as has been made.

 

Instead, it can only add to civilian casualties and maximise the number of
refugees fleeing their homeland amidst misery and suffering.

 

StopTheWar2.png

 

Despite all this, Cameron's war pitch has apparently found some converts
among Labour MPs. A few are doubtless addicted warmongers of the Blair
school, determined to impose universal neoliberalism at the point of a
bayonet.

 

Others are seeking any opportunity to undermine the leadership of Jeremy
Corbyn - these are not mutually exclusive positions of course. Some may
merely be confused as to the realities in Syria and are clinging,
post-Paris, to the idea that "something must be done," however
counterproductive it is likely to prove in practice.

 

They should recall that Labour is only just recovering from the trauma of
its support for George Bush's Iraq war. A further illegal intervention in
the Middle East risks a repeat.

 

All Labour MPs should join the SNP and others, including some sceptical
Tories, in voting to keep Britain out of the Syrian conflict.

 

And they should go further and take the steps really needed to help bring
peace to the region and undermine the basis of support for depraved
movements like Isis - stop supporting the aggressive and reactionary Saudi
regime, halt all Western interventions in the Middle East and force Israel
to concede justice for the Palestinian people.

 

The alternative is to acquiesce in an ever-widening war embroiling one power
after another in clashes which will only end in a major war surpassing in
scope and intensity even those conflicts which have already scarred this
century.

 

.    Andrew Murray is chair of the Stop the War Coalition

 

 

From:
<http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-3be9-Sleepwalking-into-Another-Bloody,
-Pointless-War#.Vlkt53YrK00>
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-3be9-Sleepwalking-into-Another-Bloody,-
Pointless-War#.Vlkt53YrK00

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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