In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Archive for the ‘Syria’ Category

India abstains on Syria resolution

Posted by seumasach on May 16, 2013

Explaining India’s decision to abstain on the resolution, the Indian Ambassador to the UN Asoke Kumar Mukerji cautioned the members of the General Assembly that unilateral action of any kind would not resolve the crisis.

“It will only exacerbate the problem and cause greater instability and violence even beyond Syria’s borders,” he said.

“Whether a group, any group, is the legitimate representative of the Syrian people or not can only be determined by the Syrian people, not this Assembly,” Mukerji stressed.

“Therefore certain provisions of this resolution can be interpreted as effecting regime change by sleight of hand. This is a dangerous precedent which we cannot acquiesce in.

“We would once again reiterate our position that the leadership of Syria is a matter for Syrians to decide themselves,” said the Indian Ambassador.

India abstains from voting on Syria resolution

Hindu

16th May, 2013

UNITED NATIONS, MAY 16:

India abstained from voting on the Arab-backed, US supported resolution on Syria in the UN General Assembly, which called for a political transition.

Posted in Syria | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Syria endgame approaching fast

Posted by seumasach on May 15, 2013

Shamus Cooke

Counterpunch

13th May, 2013

The tempo of events in Syria has accelerated in recent weeks. The government forces have scored significant battlefield victories over the rebels, and this has provoked a mixture of war provocations and peace offers from the U.S. and its anti-Assad allies.

Read more

Posted in Syria | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Austria opposes UK on Syria

Posted by seumasach on May 15, 2013

Austria says UK push to arm Syrian rebels would violate international law

Guardian

14th May, 2013

“Die Briten sind not amused,” is how Die Presse reported it today. “The Brits are not amused.” The Austrian foreign ministry circulated a discussion paper (known in Brussels jargon as a non-paper) among the EU member states yesterday forcefully rebutting British and French arguments for amending the European embargo on Syria to allow weapons shipments to the rebels.

Read more

Posted in Syria | Leave a Comment »

British press point finger at Saudi

Posted by seumasach on May 13, 2013

The mood music of the Salafist, regime change in Syria groove has stopped but the Saudis are still standing- an appropriate moment to suddenly remember “9/11 hijacker” Mohamed Atta after all those years

Saudi Arabia – ally of the UK and US – is inciting Syria’s civil war

Nabila Ramdani

Evening Standard

13th May, 2013

As massacre follows massacre in Syria, the civil war there will be a central focus for David Cameron as he meets President Obama in Washington today. Not only have 70,000 died since the start of the fighting in 2011 but the conflict now threatens the stability of the Middle East and the wider world. Yet while concentrating on Assad’s Syria, Cameron and Obama should not underestimate the destructive potential of a country to which they are diplomatically far closer: Saudi Arabia.

Posted in Syria | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Cameron’s conversion on the road to Damascus

Posted by seumasach on May 13, 2013

Cailean Bochanan

13th May, 2013

The Russian position on Syria remains exactly what it always has been but our prime minister, David Cameron is suddenly “heartened” by it.

“British sources say a great deal of work remains to be done and that Russia is far from abandoning support for the Al Assad regime. But the prime minister has high hopes for the peace conference which is designed to involve Syrian rebels and representatives of the Al Assad government.”

Cameron has had a lightening conversion to the idea of talks with the Al Assad government , the same one he has strenuously been trying to overthrow for some time now. We should rejoice that he has seen the light or, rather, seen that there is no light at the end of the tunnel of the unipolar world project. Having sought to surround himself with Churchillian aura at the funeral of Margaret Thatcher he can now demonstrate his understanding of the Churchillian maxim that “politics is the art of the possible”. In doing so he follows in the wake of Obama who has already grasped that the regime change project in Syria, to say nothing of Iran, Russia and China, has no mileage. And for a while Britain, uncharacteristically, seemed to be intent on going it alone with many inept and hot-headed comments emanating from the foreign secretary, William Hague. but now we have, as I say, seen the light and are singing off the same hymn-sheet as the Americans.
This is not just any old policy change but a fundamental and historic shift and as such is fraught with dangers. Certain lobbies, certain elements within the deep and dark recesses of the imperial state will react to an outbreak of peace which could undermine their interests and normal modus operandi. We saw a similar dynamic during the Irish peace process in the nineties when the Irish republican movement was brought in from the cold. Here it is the legitimate government of Syria and behind them Russia who are to be embraced. Russia has truly emerged as a central pillar of the new multipolar world order and it is welcome to see that we are entering into a warm and collaborative relationship with them.
The Syrian peace conference represents the chance of a new beginning, of a multilevel peace process, opening up the possibility of resolving the Palestinian question and , ultimately, a global peace process. This process is both the end of empire and the emergence of the new structures of governance of the post-imperial world. It will, if the Irish process is anything to go by,  be long and torturous. In abandoning our hegemonic pretensions we will seek a series of quid pro quos which will alleviate our distressed economic position and facilitate a relatively soft-landing. Cameron has already begun this by obtaining concessions for British oil interests while negotiating away our support for the Syrian “rebels”. In fact, Cameron with his effortless double-speak and impeccable City of London credentials may be the ideal man to shore up the home front while he “sells out” to the Russians, Chinese et al.
We must prepare for an entirely new political dynamic to emerge. The post-Cold War, post Wolfowitz memorandum saw the burdgeoning power of the unnaccountable state: the think tanks, the lobbies, the Murdoch state within a state- the deep state. In the post-unipolar world we can expect the sovereign state to come to the fore. Already, in the whole period from the Benghazi bombings we have seen the return of the FBI and the federal government whilst Homeland Security is nowhere in sight. This will be strangely unfamilar in the Anglo-Saxon world where democracy is defined as a movement within civil society, against the state, as epitomised in the leftist world-view, rather than as a sovereignist movement. Syria is showing the way here too where precisely such a sovereignist popular movement has defeated our own machinations to create a “state of nature” anarchy.
A new political dynamic means new opportunities for those who have long striven, largely in vain, against a corporate agenda which is in the end inextricably linked to the imperial one. As the imperialists retreat on the Syrian front they will also retreat on their various sinister domestic and environmental agendas. Democracy may become a reality and the term “activist” may shed its defunct ideological, even CIA connotations acquired in the recent period and return to signify the engaged citizen.

Posted in Syria | 3 Comments »

Britain salvages Syria parleys

Posted by seumasach on May 12, 2013

M.K.Bhadrakumar

Indian Punchline

12th May, 2013

The British prime minister David Cameron’s weekend visit to Sochi and his meeting with President Vladimir Putin evidently injects new vitality into the Russian-American diplomacy over Syria earlier in the week when the US secretary of state John Kerry paid a “working visit” to Moscow.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Syria | Leave a Comment »

Syria: the ugly choice ahead

Posted by seumasach on May 11, 2013

Given the leading role that the Guardian played in the anti-Assad campaign this article is of enormous significance and it lays down the outlines of a new policy which brings London into line with Washington. At the heart of this policy shift is the recognition that Assad stepping down is no longer a pre-condition for talks.On the other hand, the need to starve the “rebels” of support is a pre-condition for talks. Not that the “rebels” are going to participate in those talks. They will be entirely correct to see themselves as having been sold-out by their Western backers. They are to left to their fate: after all, they may be OK for fighting a dirty war but one wouldn’t expect the likes of the Al-Nusra front to turn up at an international peace conference. Naturally, there will be a token presence of the one-time Western backed Coalition but the real opposition inside Syria opposed the armed struggle from the start and it is they who will enter negotiations with Assad. Yes, climbing down is “ugly” but realism dictates and with the co-operation of all concerned the skeletons of a failed attempt to repeat the Libyan scenario can be hidden deep in obscure cupboards.

Guardian

10th May, 2013

This week the civil war in Syria revealed its full potential for destabilising the Middle East as a whole. After the Israeli air strikes, Hezbollahacknowledged its forces were fighting alongside those of Syria’s president Bashar al-Assad and suggested Syria would respond by fully arming Hezbollah fighters.

Read more

Posted in Syria | Leave a Comment »

Barclays in US probe over links to Saudi prince

Posted by seumasach on May 11, 2013

Once again City of London activities are coming under US scrutiny. The City-Saudi connection gains heightened relevance given the US initiated Syrian peace process and its reining-in of those parties continuing to support the “rebels”

CNBC

11th May, 2013

Source-FT

A prominent member of the Saudi royal family is at the heart of a US criminal probe into whether Barclays made improper payments in the kingdom, with investigators scrutinising two separate incidents linked to a son of King Abdullah.

Posted in Syria | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Cameron backs down over Syria

Posted by seumasach on May 11, 2013

We’ve now seen the Syrian national army enjoying some significant success in the last few weeks in taking back rebel-held areas of the country. I think this has produced panic, actually, in Washington, London and Paris, which is why David Cameron has been so keen to fly to Russia to meet with Vladimir Putin.”

Well, at least panic in London and Paris, to say nothing of Doha and Riyadh.Yes, this is prudent of Cameron to jump onboard the peace process already initiated by Obama and Putin- better late than never. For appearances he continues to stress “that there was “no secret” that the two sides still had “differing views on how best to handle this situation.”” However, the “Assad must go” mantra which we have heard ad infititum over the last two years is being dropped and governance in Syria is being seen as the prerogative of the Syrian people rather than Washington, Paris and London. It’s good to see the West embracing democracy for a change- Hilary must be turning in her political grave.

Russia, UK both interested in ending Syrian violence – Putin

RT

19th May, 2013

Despite having a different approach to Syria, Russia and UK share an interest in preserving the country’s territorial integrity and sovereignty, Vladimir Putin said after talks with British Prime Minister David Cameron in Sochi.

Read more

Posted in Syria | Tagged: , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Hezbollah-style resistance movement forms in Syria

Posted by seumasach on May 11, 2013

PressTV

11th May, 2013

Chief of Staff of Iran’s Armed Forces Major General Hassan Firouzabadi says a Hezbollah-style resistance movement has emerged in Syria.

Read more

 

Posted in Syria | Leave a Comment »

Saudis, Qatar fire UN torpedo at Syrian peace

Posted by seumasach on May 10, 2013

Kaveh Afrasiabi

Asia Times

10th May, 2013

 

UNITED NATIONS – It is a popular term at the United Nations. “Multilevel peace process” is used often to refer to complementary efforts in conflict-prevention, and the UN’s history is rich with countless such examples. Yet, somehow, the UN has misdirected its energy in the case of Syria, by entertaining a General Assembly resolution that, if adopted, will likely act as a disservice – call it negative input – with respect to the US-Russian peace conference planned for the end of May.

Read more

Posted in Syria | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »