Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Paul Street: ISIL Is A Frankenstein Created Largely by US Imperialis

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Paul Street: ISIL Is A Frankenstein Created Largely by US Imperialis

    Paul Street: ISIL Is A Frankenstein Created Largely by US Imperialism

    Thu Sep 04, 2014 9:57


    TEHRAN (FNA)- Paul Street, American journalist, believes that the
    Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) is in fact a Frankenstein
    created largely by US imperialism, and that the menace posed by the
    ISIL and the resurgence of Takfiri-Salafi militancy is not limited to
    Syria and Iraq.

    "The peril ISIL poses to what has always been Washington's primary
    concern in the region - the great "strategic prize" of Middle Eastern
    oil - raises the specter of the US having to re-send large military
    deployments to the world's energy heartland. And that is something US
    policymakers do not relish since they know by now that it has strong
    potential to make the situation worse. Smart US planners have learned
    that direct US military intervention fuels "anti-Americanism" and
    strengthens the jihadist movement in the long run. The US prefers to
    dominate the region through proxies (including Saudi Arabia, the Arab
    Emirates, and Israel) and divide-and-rule," said Street in an
    exclusive interview with Fars News Agency.

    He believes that the US, Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan pretty much
    manufactured the global Jihadist network in order to bloody the nose
    of the Soviet Union in the late 1970s and 1980s. The ISIL is of course
    an offshoot of Al-Qaeda, itself largely a product of that US Cold War
    policy.

    Fars News Agency has conducted an interview with Paul Street, an
    independent researcher, journalist, historian, author and speaker
    based in Illinois, in an attempt to study the claim by the US
    authorities that they are combating ISIL and terrorism in the Middle
    East.

    Paul Street is the author of numerous books including "Empire and
    Inequality: America and the World Since 9/11", "Segregated Schools:
    Educational Apartheid in the Post-Civil Rights Era", and "Racial
    Oppression in the Global Metropolis: a Living Black Chicago History".

    Street's essays, articles, reviews, interviews, and commentaries have
    appeared in numerous outlets, including CounterPunch, Truthout, the
    Chicago Tribune, Capital City Times, In These Times, and Chicago
    History.

    Street's writings, research findings, and commentary have been
    featured in a large number and wide variety of media venues, including
    The New York Times, CNN, Al Jazeera, the Chicago Tribune, WGN
    (Chicago/national), WLS (ABC-Chicago), Fox News, and the Chicago Sun
    Times.

    What follows is the text of FNA's interview with Paul Street:

    Q: Would you Kindly explain the role of the US in forming and bringing
    the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) into existence. Is
    this a plot orchestrated by the US and its allies? If so, why?

    A: The ISIL is in fact a Frankenstein created largely by the US
    imperialism. Still, it's too much and far too simple to say that it is
    plot or a conspiracy orchestrated by the US and its allies. To say
    that it is to exaggerate the US power and to unduly deny agency to
    Sunni Islamists. It is also to misconstrue US-imperial aims in the
    Middle East. The menace posed by the ISIL and the resurgence of
    Jihadism is not limited to Syria and Iraq. It also threatens, in the
    words of the incisive US Left commentator Glen Ford, to "consume the
    kings, Emirs and Sultans the US depends on to keep the Empire's oil
    safe." With the rise of the new Caliphate, Ford notes, "The pace of
    (US) imperial decline just got quicker." And, of course, many ISIL
    supporters and fighters see the US as a great Satanic enemy.

    The peril the ISIL poses to what has always been Washington's primary
    concern in the region - the great "strategic prize" of Middle Eastern
    oil - raises the specter of the US having to re-send large military
    deployments to the world's energy heartland. And that is something the
    US policymakers do not relish since they know by now that it has
    strong potential to make the situation worse. Smart US planners have
    learned that direct US military intervention fuels "anti-Americanism"
    and strengthens the jihadist movement in the long run. The US prefers
    to dominate the region through proxies (including Saudi Arabia, the
    Arab Emirates, and Israel) and divide-and-rule. "The problem is," Ford
    notes, "the Pentagon's proxies are evaporating, in flight, or - in the
    case of Arab Iraq - growing ever more dependent on Iran and (who would
    have predicted it?) Russia, which is assisting in reconstituting the
    Iraqi air force."

    Now, to say that the ISIL is not simply a US conspiracy or plot is not
    to deny that it is very much a creation of the US policy. The US,
    Saudi Arabia, and Pakistan pretty much manufactured the global
    Jihadist network in order to bloody the nose of the Soviet Union in
    the late 1970s and 1980s. The ISIL is of course an offshoot of
    Al-Qaeda, itself largely a product of that the US Cold War policy.
    Moving into the current century and millennium, it is highly unlikely
    that the ISIL would have emerged in Iraq if the US had not:

    -Invaded Iraq and broken state power there while directly and
    indirectly killing more than a million Iraqis and displacing millions
    more.

    -Disbanded the Iraqi army.

    -Stood by while Baghdad was looted.

    -Built military bases all over Iraq.

    -Fueled and exploited sectarian and related ethno-religious divisions in Iraq.

    -Created and left behind in Baghdad the world's largest embassy, which
    harbors an army of US military contractors and CIA and other
    "intelligence agents.

    -Continued to function as the dominant military power in Iraq through
    provision of arms, training, and other "support" to Iraq's forces.

    -Insisted on US troops' immunity from prosecution for criminal acts by
    Iraqi authorities.

    At the same time, the US has given significant high-tech weapons and
    training to the ISIL and allied groups fighting the Assad regime in
    Syria. As the incisive US commentator Arun Gupta notes on the Web site
    of teleSur English, the situation is somewhat analogous to US policy
    in Afghanistan during the 1980s:

    "US and Israeli policy toward Syria is a cynical balance of wanting to
    weaken Assad by aiding the armed opposition to his rule but not trying
    to strike a decisive blow as that would bring unknown forces to power
    or resolve the conflict through diplomatic or political means as that
    would leave Assad in power, representing a victory for Hezbollah and
    Iran. Rebel sources in Syria claimed in September 2013 they were
    receiving arms such as anti-tank weapons from the United States that
    were financed by the Saudis. The armed opposition in Syria consists of
    a staggering 1,500 groups, however, and most fighters are with
    Islamist or Jihadi forces such as the ISIL or the recognized Al-Qaeda
    affiliate, the Al-Nusra Front. The ISIL claimed last year that it was
    buying anti-tank and anti-aircraft weapons from rebels that Washington
    is allegedly arming."

    "The situation is similar to the Afghanistan War. There have been
    rumors for decades that the CIA backed Al-Qaeda in the 1980s. There is
    not definitive proof that Osama bin Laden was a CIA asset, but the
    United States did turn the region into a petri dish for violent
    religious fanatics known as the Mujahedeen (Jihadists). Some 12,500
    foreign fighters 'were trained in bomb-making, sabotage and urban
    guerrilla warfare in Afghan camps the CIA helped to set up.' The
    United States paid little concern to its monstrous creation as long as
    it was tangling with the Soviet Union. It's nearly as blasé about
    fundamentalists at war with Assad's Syria. The United States and its
    allies, especially the Saudis, flooded both conflicts with guns and
    cash, guaranteeing Syria would also become a lightning rod for
    Islamist forces....The Saudis want to pummel Assad's regime as a way to
    inflict a blow on Iran, which sees itself as the leader of oppressed
    Shi'a brethren."

    There are, of course, two differences with the Afghan situation near
    the end of the end of the Cold War. First, the Soviet Union is gone,
    leaving the US as the only non-Muslim superpower for jihadists to
    hate, fight, and dream of bringing down. Second, as Gupta notes,
    "unlike Al-Qaeda, which needed a patron in the form of the Taliban,
    the ISIL is building its own state in (an oil-rich) region of utmost
    importance to Empire, not a backwater like Afghanistan."

    This is what Ford rightly calls "the Empire reap(ing) the Jihadist
    whirlwind. It's Frankenstein Returns, Bigger and Badder than Before.

    Of course, here in the US, the "mainstream" (corporate) media just
    blames "sectarianism," paying no attention whatsoever to the critical
    US role in the creation of the monster. The US is portrayed as
    portrayed as a well-intentioned but innocent bystander, a frustrated
    umpire --- at worst bumbling and befuddled.

    Q: The ISIL is equipped with the latest state-of-the-art weaponry.
    This is so extraordinary. The terrorist group emerged out of nowhere
    and now is using modern ammunition without US and NATO satellites
    detecting this. How is this possible?

    A:There's no mystery here. The ISIL has the US weaponry given directly
    to it in Syria and taken from the Iraq government. The region is
    flooded with weapons from the US, the world's leading arms exporter
    and manufacturer of high-tech weaponry. As I hope my first answer
    shows, I don't really think the ISIL "emerged out of nowhere." For
    another example of the same basic thing, look at the basket case that
    US has made out of Libya - another quagmire where a horrific US attack
    broke state power, fueled rampant sectarianism, and left US weapons in
    the hands of both sides, including Jihadists.

    Q: High-ranking US officials have repeatedly claimed that they are
    fighting against the ISIL and that they will uproot them soon. We are
    seeing double-standards again. Now they say "it's not an easy task".
    Is this a bogus claim? What do you think?

    A: They will not really fight the ISIL in Syria, where the US policy
    is to weaken (officially, to topple) the Assad regime, which is if
    course allied with the US enemy Iran. Now overthrowing Assad happens
    to be the declared objective of the ISIL and other Jihadis in Syria.
    As the leading Middle East war reporter Patrick Cockburn notes, "There
    is a pretense in Washington and elsewhere that there exists a
    'moderate' Syrian opposition being helped by the US, Qatar, Turkey,
    and the Saudis. It is, however, weak and getting more so by the day.
    Soon the new caliphate may stretch from the Iranian border to the
    Mediterranean and the only force that can possibly stop this from
    happening is the Syrian army."

    The US and its key ally Saudi Arabia are determined to pound the
    Syrian government as a way to inflict pain on Iran, which stands up
    for oppressed Saudi Shiites who live in dire poverty above spectacular
    oil wealth in the Eastern Province of the Arabian Peninsula.

    The US planners are seriously concerned about the ISIL in oil-rich
    Iraq, however. "The reality of the US policy," Cockburn notes, "is to
    support the government of Iraq, but not Syria, against ISIL." The
    irony, of course, is that one of the reasons that the ISIL has been
    "able to grow so strong in Iraq is that it can draw on its resources
    and fighters in Syria" (Cockburn) - fighters who get material and
    money directly from the US.

    I don't really think this is a "double-standard." It is a
    contradiction in the US imperial policy - one that reflects the single
    standard of imperial divide and rule.

    It will not be at all easy for the US to uproot what Obama calls "the
    cancer" of the ISIL. There's no guarantee of the US success. There's
    much to suggest the likelihood of the US failure in trying to control
    the monster it created. As the late US historian and foreign policy
    critic Gabriel Kolko used to say, "Washington planners' arrogant
    belief that they can neatly manage the world's affairs in the US and
    world interests from the banks of the Potomac has always been a great
    and dangerous illusion, with disastrous consequences at home and
    abroad."

    Interview by Javad Arab Shirazi
    http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13930609001300




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X