The Myth

There has been a ridiculous notion amongst numerous left groups and those
opposed to the Syrian government, that the Israeli regime does not want to see
Assad fall. As self-professed “anti-zionists”, many in these groups are content
to delude themselves into believing that both
their enemies are on the
same side. In the case of several socialist groups, they believe that this
forcing of the Syrian crisis into their blanket “anti-authoritarian” narrative
(regardless of the state in which they are applying that narrative to) enables
them to maintain a façade of anti-imperialism.
London based socialist
newspaper
The
Socialist Review writes: “Israel, although hostile to Syria, could
depend on the Baathist regime to keep the frontier quiet. Thus criticism of
Bashar is more muted in Tel Aviv.”
The notion that ordinary Syrians struggling to change their country are the
pawns of a ‘Western plot’ is absurd…In fact the Arab League is attempting to
throw the regime a lifeline.
Israel believes that it would be safer under Assad regime than the new
government whose credentials are unknown or the new Islamic extremist regime
that would open a new war front with the Jewish state.
Israeli state media has actively fueled this manipulation, as it has been
beneficial to the Israeli state to both discredit the Syrian government in the
eyes of Syrians and Arabs amongst whom cooperation with Israel has historically
been a red line. Therefore the goal of these reports has been to create the
false perception that Israel is uninvolved in the insurgency against the Syrian
government. Similarly to how the NATO powers were keen to portray the Libyan
insurgency as a “home-grown revolution”.
In this early 2011
Haaretz
article entitled ‘Israel’s favourite dictator’, great lengths are taken
to paint the Syrian president as a weak stooge of the Israeli state. The article
regurgitates common Syrian criticisms and sources of frustration about the
Syrian government’s failure to take back the Golan Heights. It even goes as far
as to chastise Assad for not attacking Israel. The irony that an Israeli paper
would be critical of a president’s failure to attack Israel is apparently lost
on many. All the more incredible that these anti-zionist groups have chosen to
believe the spin of Israeli state media.
The Turkish based Syrian
opposition, the Syrian National Council (SNC), also jumped on this bandwagon.
The now deposed leader of the SNC,
Burghan
Ghallion told Israeli paper Ynetnews “We are convinced that the Syrian
regime’s strongest ally is Israel”.
Debunking the Myth
However the following facts expose all of the above as merely a part of the
psychological warfare machinery directed from Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Israel and
the NATO countries, which is an essential part of the overall aggression against
Syria, and that such leftists have willingly become a part of:
- Israel’s most important ally, the US, has been amongst its other allies
repeatedly calling for regime change in Syria
- Israel’s strongest ally
the United
States has been pushing for regime change in Syria since before the first
signs of insurrection began. Most famously in 2007, General Wesley Clarke, who
served as NATO’s Supreme Allied Commander between 1997 and 2000 said he had
received a memo from the US Secretary of Defense’s Office which read that the
Syrian Government would be one of the seven governments the US would destroy in
the subsequent five years.
The Guardian’s recent headline
“Saudi Arabia plans to fund Syria rebel
army” is in the typical style of the liberal media based in the NATO
countries a malignant manipulation. The text of that article is specifically
about plans by the US’ and by extension Israel’s most important regional allies,
Qatar and Saudi Arabia, to pay the salaries of insurgents. But buried further
down the very same article also reports that such support began months before. A
less misleading headline therefore would replace “plans to fund” with “increases
support for”, however a truthful headline would suggest external control over
Syria’s insurgency has existed since its onset.
Indeed both Qatar and Saudi Arabia have a long history of hostility to the
Syrian Ba’ath Party and Syrian foreign policy, a fact which is reflected in both
of their leading medias (Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya respectively) severely
distorted coverage of events in Syria from the outset.
But to highlight this context would give too much weight to the Syrian
government’s consistent analysis that the crisis within its borders is
externally created. A fact which leftist groups also fall over themselves trying
to downplay or dismiss with the result of boosting the opposing narrative which
imperialism has made dominant through its media machinery.
It shouldn’t have to be explained to anti-Zionists that US and Israeli
foreign policy is one and the same.
Axis of Resistance
Syria is a member of the
Axis of Resistance, which is the only effective military resistance to Israel
left. It is made up of Syria, Iran and the resistance inside Lebanon with
Hizbullah at the helm. Far from being a ‘safe’ option for Israel,
as
Al Akhbar writer Amal Saad-Ghorayeb sets out in her three part
critique of the third-way position that has seized much of the western left,
Syria has consistently put itself on the frontline, risking its own survival,
and has been involved in every Arab-Israeli conflict since they took power.
Syria has been the strongest supporter of the Lebanese resistance movements
against Israeli occupation; Hizbullah has repeatedly unequivocally attributed
its ability to effectively win the 2006 war against Israeli invasion of Lebanon
to its support from Syria and Iran.
A year since the beginning
of the insurrection in Syria, the ridiculous notion that Israel was not pursuing
regime change in Syria began to crumble. Israeli Intelligence Minister, Dan
Meridor
was quoted on Israeli
radio, pointing out what was obvious all along: Regime change in Syria would
break the Iran-Syria mutual defence pact thereby isolating Iran and cutting the
supply of arms to Hezbollah. Finally, Israel’s greatest adversary, Syria, would
be crippled.
This was not reported in
Israeli mass media, which ensured that the lid was kept on the obvious, clearly
in the knowledge that it would make the position of the insurgent’s
self-professed anti-zionist cheerleaders in the west and Arab world more
untenable. Yet those cheerleaders who maintain that Assad is good for Israel
have been unable to reconcile then why
Israel
relentlessly beats the war drums against one of Syria’s most important allies,
Iran.
Aside from wanting to get
rid of Assad to secure military hegemony of the region, Israel also has an
economic interest in scarpering the Syria, Iran, Iraq oil pipeline which would
rival both
Israel’s BTC
pipeline and the eternally fledgling plans for Europe’s
Nabucco
pipeline.
Pro-Israel Opposition
With increasing momentum, the already tenuous facade of being pro-Assad in
the Israeli media began to crumble and increasingly, voices within the Syrian
opposition have been crossing the red line of sounding friendly towards
Israel.
MK Yitzhak Herzog, who has
previously held ministerial posts in Israeli parliament, said that Syrian
opposition leaders
have
told him they want peace with Israel after Syrian President Bashar al Assad
falls.
Another SNC member, Ammar
Abdulhamid declared his support for friendly relations between Israel and Syria
in an interview with
Israeli news
paper Ynetnews.
Earlier this year a telephone conversation between the SNC’s Radwan Ziyade
and Mouhammad Abdallah emerged where they begged Israeli Defense Minister Ehud
Barack for more support.
Outside the SNC the
children of former leadership figures now in opposition have joined the
pro-Israel rat race. Ribal al-Assad, the son of Bashar Assad’s uncle and exiled
former vice-president Rifaat al-Asaad
welcomed
the possibility of Syria making peace with Israel. And son of former Syrian
prime minister Nofal Al-Dawalibi,
said
in an interview on Israeli radio that the Syrian people want peace with
Israel. Dawalibi formed the “Free Syrian Transitional National Government”,
another external opposition group rivaling the SNC for power in a situation
where the Syrian government falls. This sectarian infighting and disunity, that
is a mirror of post-Gaddafi Libya, is now threatening to plague the Syria.
Lower down the opposition hierarchy, pro-Israel voices are still to be
found.
And
in an
interview with Israel’s Channel 2, Sheikh Abdullah Tamimi, an exiled Imam
from the Syrian city of Homs, said that the Syrian Opposition does not have any
enmity towards Israel. Tamimi proceeded to request monetary and military support
for Sunnis in Syria and Lebanon.
Anti-Assad Zionists and Israeli Leaders
Socialists chosen to be blind to the fact that prominent Zionists have been
backing the Syrian insurgency since its inception.
More recently voices within the Israeli government have been more vocal and
demanding in their desire to see the Syrian government’s replacement with a more
friendly puppet regime.
Israeli President Shimon
Peres, upon receiving the ‘Medal of Freedom’ from US President Barack Obama,
said
that
the world had to get rid of Assad. That he was receiving such a medal
requires its own article dedicated to psychoanalyzing such an event, but that he
could also claim, while being part of a system that is responsible for some of
the gravest abuses to humankind in history, that from a “human” point of view
Assad must go, should really get so-called anti-Zionists thinking.
Finally, Israeli Deputy
Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon accused the ‘world’ of wrong doing
for failing to act against the
Syrian government. Then offered Israel offered ‘assistance’ for Syrian
‘refugees’. Thinly euphemism for arming insurgents on the border.
Conclusion
In spite of the overt desire of the US government for regime change in Syria,
which they have made clear time and time again, Israel has obvious economic and
military interests Israel has for pursuing regime change in Syria, most notably
the the break up of the Axis of Resistance and the destruction of plans for
rival oil pipelines. Despite numerous public statements by Syrian opposition
members that they are pro-israel and the multitude of Israeli government
officials calling for the fall of the Syrian government as well as zionist
lobbyists and key zionist figures like Bernard Henri-Levy backing the
insurgency, so called ‘anti-zionist’ Socialists and Islamic groups persist in
their claim that Israel has no stake in regime change in Syria and that the
insurgency inside Syria is from the grass roots. Though all information contrary
to this delusion is in clear sight, it seems that the socialist and Islamic
groups are willingly blind.
This position becomes increasingly untenable however, most recently in light
of the murder of Syria’s Deputy Defence Minister Asef Shawkat, which along with
the simultaneous murder of Defence Minister Raoud Dajiha and Assistant to the
Vice President Hassan Turkomani, which the Syrian government laid the
responsibility for squarely at the doors of Israel, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, as
new information has come to light as revealed by
Al Akhbar
editor-in-chief Ibrahim al-Amin.
In an
article published today, Amin writes of Shawkat, that in spite of the
incessant attempts by the US, Israel et al to demonise him, he in fact,
played a major role in resisting Israeli occupation in and around Palestine.
Right to the end, he took practical charge of meeting the needs of the
resistance forces in Palestine and Lebanon, and of their members and cadres in
Syria. He oversaw everything from their accommodation and transportation, to
their training camps and provisions, and arranging for cadres from inside
Palestine to come to the country secretly for training.
For the resistance in Lebanon, Shawkat was a true partner, providing whatever
assistance was needed without needing orders or approval from the leadership. He
was a central player in the June 2006 war. He spent the entire time in the
central operations room that was set up in line with a directive by Assad to
supply the resistance with whatever weapons it wanted, notably missiles, from
Syrian army stocks. Shawkat and other officers and men of the Syrian army –
including Muhammad Suleiman who was assassinated by the Mossad on the Syrian
coast in 2008 – spent weeks coordinating the supply operation which helped the
resistance achieve the successes that led to the defeat of
Israel.
Despite the accusations levelled against Asef Shawkat regarding security,
political or other matters, for Imad Mughniyeh, the assassinated military leader
of Hezbollah, he was just another comrade, a modest man who would bow when
shaking hands with Hassan Nasrallah, and liked to hear the news from Palestine
last thing at night.
However anti-zionist one proclaims to be, there are few in this world that
can claim to have done as much as the above for the Palestinian Resistance to
the zionist entity. But having proven to wilfully ignore all of the facts and
history of Syria’s long history of resistance to Israel, it is a great tragedy
that those who cling on to the argument dealt with in this essay, would only
perhaps be able to let go of it should Syria fall and then the reality of
Palestine’s total military abandonment would be all to devastatingly clear to
see.
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