2017: A Year of Change... and No Change
9/1/18
The Arrival of Trump
One year ago, expectations for 2017 were running high.
Donald Trump was about to take office, and predictions ranged from a new era of
US policy pursuing peace and international partnership, to the US becoming a
puppet of Russia, and even World War III. Of course, none of these happened,
and such forecasts now seem as fanciful as they probably should have at the
time.
On the day of his
inauguration, I suggested that Trump’s evident ignorance of foreign
and security issues, combined with his lack of loyal allies within Washington’s
political establishment, would make him vulnerable to the pressure and
influence of the politicians, officials, think tanks, lobbyists, advisors and
journalists representing the same special interest groups that had long driven
US foreign policy. Within weeks, Trump confirmed senior officials with largely the same
hostility for example towards Russia
and/or Iran
that might have been expected of Hillary Clinton.
eeing him as a threat to
the established order, elements within what might be called the Deep State targeted Trump in a relentless
campaign to undermine his credibility and threaten his removal from office.
Perhaps fearing international isolation if Trump delivered on his campaign
promises to restore good relations with Russia
and end US support for the war in Syria,
the intelligence services of the UK appear to have been a key driver of this.
Regardless, UK PM Theresa
May rushed to be the first leader to pay homage to the new US president,
while Trump left no doubt as to US priorities by making Saudi Arabia and Israel his first overseas visits – coinciding
with a massive Saudi arms deal and planned increase in US military aid to Israel.
For the Washington
lobbyists and US
foreign policy establishment, this was business as usual. Yet it was in respect
of Syria
a month earlier that Trump learned how he was expected to behave.
Syria, Iraq and the Middle East
In response to an alleged
chemical attack at Khan Sheikhun in April, Trump without waiting for
any investigation launched cruise missiles at Syrian forces – reversing his and
the previous Obama administration’s stated policy of non-overt intervention in Syria. In doing
so, he immediately gained the (albeit short lived) approval of the same US politicians and media who for
months had remorselessly condemned him.
Trump’s missile attack
was largely symbolic however, causing little damage to Syria’s
military capability and having no impact upon the largely successful prosecution
of the war against Islamic State,
Al-Qaeda and other rebel groups that over the last year has arguably brought
the country now closer to a restoration of peace than at any time since 2011.
This was helped not only by the military support of Russia
and Iran, by also by their
cooperation with Turkey in
attempting to forge a realistic peace
process, with the long and destructive ‘Assad must go’ mantra of the US and its
allies now rendered irrelevant.
2017 was particularly a
year of relative tranquility for the people of Syria’s
largest city Aleppo,
which until its retaking by Syrian forces in December 2016 had for years been
largely occupied by US UK backed, Islamist dominated
rebels.
US UK politicians and media had for months daily
warned that massacres would
be perpetrated by the Syrian government“if Aleppo fell,” but these didn’t occur – just as they
also hadn’t occurred in other recaptured cities, such as Homs. Meanwhile, throughout 2017 displaced
civilians began returning in large numbers to their homes –
suggesting that US UK claims that it had been Assad they’d been fleeing from,
rather than war or the rebels the US and UK had backed, were likely wrong.
While perhaps forced to
do so by the reality of the battlefield, Trump did honor his pledge to stop US
funding and arming of Syria’s
rebels. With it largely at an end, the massive scale of the arming program was
at last publicly revealed, laying
to rest the long US UK media-propagated myth of US UK policy in Syria having
been one of non-intervention.
Not only did the arming
of Syria’s rebels fuel and prolong a war that has killed some 400,000 people,
but also many of the arms supplied by the US and its allies
ended up in the “wrong hands” of the same Islamic State and Al-Qaeda terrorists the US and its allies
were purporting to fight.
This of course was
exactly as many had long
predicted – and indeed was so
predictable that some suggest so-called ‘moderate’ rebels were supplied with
often sophisticated weapons in the knowledge they would be passed to extremists
who, from the war’s outset, comprised the most effective fighting force against
Assad.
Such a scenario would not
be a surprise. After all, the US
and its allies have long regarded Islamist forces as a useful foreign policy tool, regardless of their
disdain of democracy, human rights or other claimed ‘US values.’
Even three years after
its air campaign to “degrade” IS began, evidence continued to emerge over the
last year to suggest the US and its allies still see IS as much as an asset as
an enemy to be destroyed. In December 2016 for example, despite intensive US surveillance, IS forces were able to cross
open desert to attack Palmyra, just at the time US backed rebels were under
intense military pressure in Aleppo.
Similarly, the US
reportedly facilitated the escape
of IS fighters from Raqqa, and
appeared to strike a deal with IS fighters to allow the US’ SDF proxies an
unopposed advance in their race to seize Deir ez-Zor oilfields, thereby
preventing their retaking by forces loyal to Assad. This illustrates how even
now, the uninvited and hence unlawful US
presence in Syria
continues.
As in Syria, 2017 also saw IS largely defeated in Iraq. US-led
airstrikes undoubtedly played a role in this – but at great civilian loss of
life that barely featured in US UK media, unlike the daily
coverage of alleged mass civilian casualties when Syria and Russia were, for
example, carrying out operations in Aleppo. Indeed, only now is the extent of
US-led killing of civilians in, for example, Raqqa
and Mosul starting to receive prominent coverage in US UK media.
The same applies to the
Saudi air campaign and blockade against Yemen which, using US and UK supplied
weapons, continued throughout the year at catastrophic civilian cost, yet which receives only
infrequent and mainly uncritical coverage in a US UK media that mostly would
rather parrot US and Israeli claims that Iran is
the source of the region’s instability.
Terrorism
Predictably, IS losing
their physical ‘caliphate’ didn’t end terrorist attacks elsewhere. In April, an
attack on the St. Petersburg Metro killed 15, and 8 died in Manhattan.
Attacks in Syria, Afghanistan, Libya,
Somalia, Egypt and
elsewhere killed very many more.
The UK suffered its worst incidents since 2005,
including 22 killed in Manchester in what
appears to be one of the clearest examples of blowback resulting from the policies of the UK government and its intelligence services in facilitating the destabilization of states such as Libya.
Russia, Russia, Russia
2017 was the year Russia was
blamed by Western politicians and media for everything. Notably, this wasn’t
only the usual ‘Russia
threat’ stories of aircraft and ships that turn out to
be entirely routine, in international waters and airspace, and which when the
same activities are carried out by NATO forces are instead described as ‘a
response’ or ‘reassurance.’
Russia was also blamed for
cyber-attacks, despite little evidence being offered, and despite that in some
cases the blame for the attack seemed to shift according to which ‘enemy’ state
was most in need of vilification at the time. For example, a hacking of emails
of UK parliamentarians was
first blamed on Russia but
later on Iran, whereas another attack was blamed first on Russia,
then on North Korea.
In reality,
accurate attribution in
cyber-attacks is notoriously difficult – particularly given that the CIA and
doubtless others have developed
tools specifically designed to
blame attacks on those innocent of them.
Throughout 2017, it was
also repeatedly reported that Russia
is interfering in other countries’ elections and referendums. These claims are
often reported as fact yet, despite long running and intensive investigations,
the hard evidence to support such allegations remains almost entirely absent –
for example in Germany, France,
the US and the UK.
US Decline?
The recent UN votes
against Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, and for example
the US position on climate change and Iran,
show a US arguably more isolated from world opinion, including even its close
allies, than at any time in recent history.
Yet rather than work to
cultivate partnerships to deal with common issues such as Korea or terrorism,
the US continues to publicly designate potential allies as enemies, as for
example in its recent security strategy document
– and to seek confrontation rather than cooperation, as arguably in its
decision to send arms to Ukraine.
The US
remains the world’s most powerful nation. But unless it can learn to carry its
immense power more softly and responsibly, to act in the interests of peace,
stability, of its own people and the wider world rather than in the narrow
interests of those that often appear to be driving its policies, its influence
in an increasingly multipolar world will likely decline. If 2017 is any guide,
it seems perhaps even less likely now that Trump will prevent this than it did
a year ago.
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