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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Next Moves in Syria Will Show Whether Trump-Putin Cooperation is Real "It remains to be seen if Mattis and Pompeo can control the forces their agencies have unleashed in Syria." The crucifixion of the Syrian people, many of them Christians, at the hands of the US media and the neocons is a moral outrage The immediate prospect for significant improvement in U.S.-Russia relations now depends on something tangible: Will the forces that sabotaged previous ceasefire agreements in Syria succeed in doing so again, all the better to keep alive the regime change dreams of the neoconservatives and liberal interventionists? Or will President Trump succeed where President Obama failed by bringing the U.S. military and intelligence bureaucracies into line behind a cease-fire rather than allowing insubordination to win out? These are truly life-or-death questions for the Syrian people and could have profound repercussions across Europe, which has been destabilized by the flood of refugees fleeing the horrific violence in the six-year proxy war that has ripped Syria apart. advertisement But you would have little inkling of this important priority from the large page-one headlines Saturday morning in the U.S. mainstream media, which continued its long obsession with the more ephemeral question of whether Russian President Vladimir Putin would confess to the sin of interference in the 2016 U.S. election and promise to repent. Thus, the headlines: Trump, Putin talk election interference (Washington Post) and Trump asks Putin About Meddling During Election (New York Times). There was also the expected harrumphing from commentators on CNN and MSNBC when Putin dared to deny that Russia had interfered. In both the big newspapers and on cable news shows, the potential for a ceasefire in southern Syria set to go into effect on Sunday got decidedly second billing. Yet, the key to Putins assessment of Donald Trump is whether the U.S. President is strong enough to make the mutually agreed-upon ceasefire stick. As Putin is well aware, to do so Trump will have to take on the same deep-state forces that cheerily scuttled similar agreements in the past. In other words, the actuarial tables for this cease-fire are not good; long life for the agreement will take something just short of a miracle. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson will have to face down hardliners in both the Pentagon and CIA. Tillerson probably expects that Defense Secretary James Mad-Dog Mattis and CIA Director Mike Pompeo will cooperate by ordering their troops and operatives inside Syria to restrain the U.S.-backed moderate rebels. advertisement But it remains to be seen if Mattis and Pompeo can control the forces their agencies have unleashed in Syria. If recent history is any guide, it would be folly to rule out another accidental U.S. bombing of Syrian government troops or a well-publicized chemical attack or some other senseless war crime that social media and mainstream media will immediately blame on President Bashar al-Assad. Bitter Experience Last falls limited ceasefire in Syria, painstakingly worked out over 11 months by Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and approved personally by Presidents Obama and Putin, lasted only five days (from Sept. 12-17) before it was scuttled by coalition air strikes on well-known, fixed Syrian army positions, which killed between 64 and 84 Syrian troops and wounded about 100 others. In public remarks bordering on the insubordinate, senior Pentagon officials a few days before the air attack on Sept. 17, showed unusually open skepticism regarding key aspects of the Kerry-Lavrov agreement like sharing intelligence with the Russians (an important provision of the deal approved by both Obama and Putin). The Pentagons resistance and the accidental bombing of Syrian troops brought these uncharacteristically blunt words from Foreign Minister Lavrov on Russian TV on Sept. 26: My good friend John Kerry
is under fierce criticism from the U.S. military machine. Despite the fact that, as always, [they] made assurances that the U.S. Commander in Chief, President Barack Obama, supported him in his contacts with Russia
apparently the military does not really listen to the Commander in Chief. Lavrov specifically criticized Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman, Gen. Joseph Dunford for telling Congress that he opposed sharing intelligence with Russia despite the fact, as Lavrov put it, the agreements concluded on direct orders of Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Barack Obama [who] stipulated that they would share intelligence. Noting this resistance inside the U.S. military bureaucracy, Lavrov added, It is difficult to work with such partners. Putin picked up on the theme of insubordination in an Oct. 27 speech at the Valdai International Discussion Club, in which he openly lamented: My personal agreements with the President of the United States have not produced results.
people in Washington are ready to do everything possible to prevent these agreements from being implemented in practice. On Syria, Putin decried the lack of a common front against terrorism after such lengthy negotiations, enormous effort, and difficult compromises. Lavrovs Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, meanwhile, even expressed sympathy for Kerrys quixotic effort, giving him an A for effort.after then-Defense Secretary Ashton Carter dispatched U.S. warplanes to provide an early death to the cease-fire so painstakingly worked out by Kerry and Lavrov for almost a year. For his part, Kerry expressed regret in words reflecting the hapless hubris befitting the chief envoy of the worlds only indispensible country conceding that he had been unable to align all the forces in play. With the ceasefire in tatters, Kerry publicly complained on Sept. 29, 2016: Syria is as complicated as anything Ive ever seen in public life, in the sense that there are probably about six wars or so going on at the same time Kurd against Kurd, Kurd against Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Sunni, Shia, everybody against ISIL, people against Assad, Nusra [Al Qaedas Syrian affiliate]. This is as mixed-up sectarian and civil war and strategic and proxies, so its very, very difficult to be able to align forces. Admitting Deep-State Pre-eminence Only in December 2016, in an interview with Matt Viser of the Boston Globe, did Kerry admit that his efforts to deal with the Russians had been thwarted by then-Defense Secretary Ashton Carter as well as all those forces he found so difficult to align. Unfortunately we had divisions within our own ranks that made the implementation [of the ceasefire agreement] extremely hard to accomplish, Kerry said. But it
could have worked.
The fact is we had an agreement with Russia
a joint cooperative effort. Now we had people in our government who were bitterly opposed to doing that, he said. I regret that. I think that was a mistake. I think youd have a different situation there conceivably now if wed been able to do that. The Globes Viser described Kerry as frustrated. Indeed, it was a tough way for Kerry to end nearly 34 years in public office. After Fridays discussions with President Trump, Kremlin eyes will be focused on Secretary of State Tillerson, watching to see if he has better luck than Kerry did in getting Ashton Carters successor, James Mad Dog Mattis and CIAs latest captive-director Pompeo into line behind what President Trump wants to do. As the new U.S.-Russia agreed-upon ceasefire goes into effect on Sunday, Putin will be eager to see if this time Trump, unlike Obama, can make a ceasefire in Syria stick; or whether, like Obama, Trump will be unable to prevent it from being sabotaged by Washingtons deep-state actors. The proof will be in the pudding and, clearly, much depends on what happens in the next few weeks. At this point, it will take a leap of faith on Putins part to have much confidence that the ceasefire will hold. Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, a publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in inner-city Washington. As a CIA analyst for 27 years, he led the Soviet Foreign Policy Branch and, during President Ronald Reagans first term, conducted the early morning briefings with the Presidents Daily Brief. He now serves on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS). Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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