Abbott has now taken Australia to (yet another) illegal war on Syria. We should be implacably opposed to this.
We must counter the dominant narrative
The dominant narrative on Syria depicts the conflict as a ‘civil war’ sparked by a brutal dictator cracking down on a popular movement. While it is true that there was, from the beginning, anti-government protests and calls for reform, the evidence suggest, as Tim Anderson has persuasively argued, the military conflict in Syria was/is "between a pluralist and popularly supported state, against armed sectarian islamists, backed by western and regional powers."
But if ‘we’ do ‘nothing,’ what about ISIS?
It’s a myth that the western governments have done "nothing" for the last 4 years. In fact they have been heavily implicated in the war on Syria. The anti-war movement should demand that Western governments (including Australia):
1. cease arming, financing, training the so-called 'moderate' opposition, most of whom share the same or similar Islamist ideology to ISIS, and many of whom end up fighting alongside them.
2. cease all military bombings and no fly zones?.
3. assist Syria/Iraq etc to secure the Syrian borders to prevent the aformentioned groups entering Syria, often ending up assisting ISIS et al
4. end sanctions on Syria, so they are better able to deal with these terrorist groups.
All the above will enable the (popularly supported) Syrian Arab Army, in coalition with its own allies, to successfully fight off the unpopular foreign backed Islamist militants.
What if the Syrian people want to replace their authoritarian state (though see over page for myths about Syria!) and institute a new socialist/democratic order?
1. We must always remember a basic libertarian principle: it is only the Syrian people who can determine their own domestic and international policies.
2. Although it is true that states are not sacred, and social liberation is impossible unless peoples live in free confederations of their own communities securing the equal distribution of political and economic power among all citizens, still, national liberation is a precondition for any social liberation.
3. Neither national nor social liberation can ever be achieved with the help of the very elites against whom both types of struggle are fought. This is why any direct or indirect cooperation of the struggling peoples (and the Left in general) with the transnational elite and its client regimes, in order to overthrow a domestic authoritarian regime, is inconceivable.
4. It is always up to the peoples themselves to fight for their own liberation, and the only international help they can ever count on is the solidarity of other peoples (never their elites!), which could be expressed, for example, through the formation of international brigades of volunteers to help the suppressed peoples (as in the classic example of the Spanish Civil War).
5. Therefore, siding with the Syrian “revolutionaries” (who are voluntarily financed, armed and militarily supported by the transnational elite and their client regimes) against the Assad regime (like Gaddafi before it), as suggested by most of the “Left” today, is a blatant betrayal of the above principles.
Debunking the myths about Syria & Assad ….
Myth 1: Bashar Assad presides over a ‘brutal’ dictatorship.
Fact: In response to popular pressure Assad initiated a constitutional referendum which removed the Baath Party’s monopoly and, for the first time, established competitive elections. These were held in June 2014.
Bashar won with 88% of the vote. Moreover the election was legitimate. The world media recognised the massive turnout, both in Syria and from refugees in Lebanon (77.4%). Election observers came from India, Brazil, Russia, China, South Africa, Iran and Latin America, along with non-official observers from the USA and Canada (KNN 2014). The participation rate in Syria’s 2014 wartime election (73.4%) was far higher than any presidential election in the USA(between 52% and 60%)
Myth 2: Bashar Al Assad leads a sectarian ‘Alawi regime’, where a 12% minority represses a Sunni Muslim majority
Fact: The Syrian government is the only secular government in the Middle East. It has guaranteed religious freedom in what remains to this day a Muslim-majority country. Syria is a common home to many ethnicities and 23 different religious groups, and has always been a place where all were free to believe and live out their creed, all relationships were characterized by mutual respect. More than half the Syrian government's army is Sunni.
Myth 3: Bashar Assad has no popular support.
Fact: The Syrian state is indeed deeply authoritarian. Many want change, because of poverty, rising inequality, corruption and the political police. But evidence suggests the many Syrians also liked Assad and support the secular state. Certainly most support the Syrian Arab Army in its struggle against what most see as foreign backed terrorists. As Assad himself points out, how could he have maintained power for over four years, if he did not have a substantial base of popular support? Evidence from several sources suggests he does:
• A poll in late 2011 by Qatar showed that a 51% majority of Syrians wanted Assad to stay
• Three Free Syrian Army leaders (all of whom collaborated with al Qaeda groups) in Aleppo, said the Syrian President had at least “70 percent” support in that city
• An internal NATO study in 2013 estimated that 70% of Syrians supported the President, 20% were neutral and 10% supported the “rebels”
Sources:
Comments
Sheila Newman
Sat, 2015-09-12 00:17
Permalink
Russia ready to accept Syrian refugees - ombudsman
Original source of this article was http://www.rt.com/politics/314809-russia-ready-to-accept-syrian/The Russian Federation can host a great number of refugees from Syria, just as it has accepted a record number of people who fled the war in Ukraine, claims the presidential advocate for children’s rights, Pavel Astakhov.
“Our territory, our culture and our history, even our social situation are actually capable of withstanding this,” the ombudsman told the RSN radio when asked if Russia could open the doors for refugees from Syria.
“After the beginning of the Donbass conflict we were ready to accept all Ukrainian orphans and there were about 90,500 of them at that moment,” Astakhov added. “We were ready to accept them all, we have resources and potential for this.”
The official also emphasized that refugees in Russia must not forever remain dependent from social programs, but must become responsible members of the society.
“Today we have a different category of refugees, they are not desperate, starving, poor and unemployed people. No, they are mostly people with average income who primarily seek peace. They need conditions for work and education and European governments must apply effort to this,” Astakhov told journalists. “We also could carry out such program or render help if there is a desire for this,” he added.
READ MORE: Russia accepted over 1mn Ukrainian refugees forced out of homes by Donbass war
The head of the Federal Migration Service, Konstantin Romodanovsky, told TASS on Wednesday that Russia is ready to accept refugees from Syria on condition that they violate no laws.
He added that Russian authorities were studying asylum applications from Syrian citizens and rendered help to these people, but noted that “historically European countries are more appropriate as refuge for Syrians than the Russian Federation.”
According to Romodanovsky, 182 Syrian citizens used Russia as a transit zone when they traveled to Europe in 2015. “They observed all the rules and we have no claims against these people,” he noted.
LISTEN MORE:
According to UN reports the number of refugees who moved to Europe from Syria in 2015 reached over 366,000 and specialists forecast that by the end of 2016 the total number of migrants from the Middle East and Africa in Europe can reach 850,000.
READ MORE: ‘West creates refugees by destroying Islamic nations’ – Chechen leader
In late August, the head of Russia’s Federal Migration Service told reporters that over 1 million people arrived to the country from southeast Ukraine since the beginning of the armed conflict and about 600,000 of them decided never to return home. Of this number 114,000 took part in the government program of resettlement and received material aid and a short track in getting Russian citizenship.
In mid-June this year the UN High Commissioner for Refugees said that in 2014 the influx of Ukrainian citizens seeking refuge on Russian territory put the Russian Federation in first place in the world by number of asylum applications.
The report also stated that in 2014 Ukraine surpassed the previous years’ leader, Syria, by number of people who wanted to flee their homeland.
admin
Sat, 2015-09-12 02:15
Permalink
America’s Phony War on the ISIS.
America's Phony War on the ISIS. Washington Recruits, Arms, Funds, Trains and Directs the "Islamic State" Terrorists (11/9/15) by Stephen Lendman | Global Research
On September 10, 2014, Obama lied claiming his intent “to degrade and ultimately destroy the terrorist group known as ISIL" – adding "these terrorists could pose a growing threat beyond that region, including to the United States."
He willfully misled the US public saying he “ordered our military to take targeted action against ISIL to stop its advances…These strikes…helped save the lives of thousands of innocent men, women and children."
Washington recruits, arms, funds, trains, and directs them the same way it used Mujahideen fighters in the 1980s against Soviet Russia in Afghanistan, as well as Al Qaeda and other likeminded takfiri groups today.
They serve US imperial interests, used against independent governments Washington wants toppled – replaced by subservient puppet regimes. Terror bombing Iraqi and Syrian targets has nothing to do with degrading and defeating them – everything to do with destroying vital infrastructure in both countries, balkanizing them for easier control and ousting Assad.
...
Anonymous (not verified)
Sat, 2015-09-12 10:53
Permalink
Another biased interview on ABC re Syria
Sheila Newman
Sat, 2015-09-12 12:46
Permalink
Journalists advocating Assad's removal need to account
Having just read David Macilwain's remarks on and transcript of this interview, published here: "With 'friends' like ABC's Liz Jackson, Syria does not need enemies to keep those refugees flowing". Whilst Liz Jackson is not the only party in the ABC who is guilty of not interviewing the other side of which representatives here and overseas are not lacking (e.g. try interviewing Bashar al-Assad or people in Syria or Australians for Reconciliation in Syria, who, at least, were interviewed recently on Golburn Regional ABC), she, along with all the others who promote US wars with such enthusiasm, should be held to account by the Australian public.
The most notable question to ask such irresponsible interviewers is, What gives you the right to deny Syrians their elected representative? If the world ever succeeds in establishing an effective war crimes tribunal, there will be a lot of Australian journalists called to explain themselves. See "Why do even some of those opposed to war with Syria repeat media lies against its democratically elected President?".
anonymous (not verified)
Sat, 2015-09-12 03:29
Permalink
Stronghold in Syria
quark
Sat, 2015-09-12 09:17
Permalink
The children seem to be in charge
Sheila Newman
Sat, 2015-09-12 10:25
Permalink
'Children' as in Lord of the Flies
Parallax View (not verified)
Sun, 2015-09-27 22:51
Permalink
Sydney: PM urged to resettle Muslim refugees in eastern suburbs
Add comment