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Thursday, 6 June 2013

Syria and chemical weapons: can we really get fooled again after the Iraq WMD fiasco?

No doubt as the war escalates we will be told that there should be more intervention in order to end the war, but at every stage such intervention has only escalated it.



By Lindsey German Stop the War Coalition 5 June 2013


UK foreign secretary William Hague: itching to escalate the war
The certainty with which the French and British governments  have announced proof of the use of chemical weapons in the Syrian conflict  presages an escalation of western intervention there.
The samples tested at  Porton Down (yes, Britain’s own chemical warfare research unit) have proved  positive although even the government’s certainty cannot be assured beyond  doubt.

As a ‘senior British official’ told the Guardian ‘Are we  confident in our means of collection, and are we confident that it points to  the regime's use of sarin? Yes. Can we prove it with 100% certainty? Probably  not.’

Following on almost immediately from the EU decision to end  its arms embargo to Syria, which will enable Britain and France to ship arms to  the opposition from August, the revelations about chemical weapons could not  come at a more convenient time for William Hague. The foreign secretary is  following up his bombing of Libya in 2011 (casualties at least 30,000 dead)  with another attempt at regime change in the Middle East.

Aided and abetted by his counterpart in France, Hague is  trying to escalate an already deadly war. This is despite protests from aid  agencies that have argued that this development will only worsen the war.
A new report by the UN Human Rights Commission echoes this  point. It covers the period early this year and carries out interviews with  those affected by the war. It describes a worsening situation in Syria, with  war crimes on both sides, although the majority from the government side. It  also makes it very clear that proposals like the lifting of the arms embargo  can only have the effect of worsening the conflict and therefore the human  suffering.

‘War crimes and crimes against humanity have become  a daily reality in Syria where the harrowing accounts of victims have seared  themselves on our conscience. There is a human cost to the increased  availability of weapons. Transfers of arms heighten the risk of violations  leading to more civilian deaths and injuries. A diplomatic surge is the only  path to a political settlement. Negotiations must be inclusive, and must represent all facets of Syria’s cultural mosaic.’

This is a message that the Western powers and their  followers seem not to want to hear. Instead, whatever their differences about  the exact nature and timing of intervention, they fear that their goal of  regime change is looking more remote. They worry that the Assad government and  its allies is regaining the initiative in the war. They also fear that the  proposed peace conference in Geneva will hinder them in this goal.

Meanwhile the situation in the Middle East is fast running  out of control, most recently with fighting in Lebanon and Iraq spreading from  Syria. Turkey’s Prime Minister Erdogan, facing huge protests across the  country, is deeply unpopular over his role in the Syrian war.

None of this appears to bother the British government, which  has backed various forms of financial, military and surveillance intervention  for two years now, often carried out by reactionary governments such as Saudi  Arabia and Qatar. No doubt as the war escalates we will be told that there  should be more intervention in order to end the war. The problem is, at every  stage such intervention has helped escalate it. So perhaps a change in policy  might be a solution.

That’s certainly the approach that many people in Britain  would like its government to take. A recent poll in the Observer showed less  than a quarter of those polled favoured military intervention. This is because  there is a widespread sense that what happened in Afghanistan and Iraq was  wrong and that those wars have only brought further war, dispossession and  terrorism. The same poll showed that nearly three quarters (72%) believe that  the UK can no longer afford to act as a major military power.

In other words, Britain should stop intervening in other  people’s countries and stop waging wars in regions that it wants to control.  Its government should also stop lying about its real aims in the region, which  have everything to do with power and control, and nothing to do with bringing  peace.

Syria Protest US Embassy 15 June No Lifting of Arms Embargo No Western Intervention

Only 24% of the UK public think the government should send arms to Syria. Join the protest to say no to yet more war. More details...

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