Boy, Is This Stupid or What?
Did the US allow ISIS to escape to keep the fighting going?
Philip Giraldi • November 21, 2017
Americans
have been living in a country that has not known peace since 9/11, when
President George W. Bush and his posse of neoconservatives delivered
the message to the world that “you are either
with us or against us.”
The threat was coupled with flurry of hastily conceived legislation that
opened the door to the unconstitutional “war on terror” carried out at
the whim of the Chief Executive, a conflict which was from the start
conceived of as a global military engagement without end.
Bush
and his handlers might not have realized it at the time but they were
initiating a completely new type of warfare. To be sure, there would be
fighting on the ground worldwide against an ideologically driven enemy
somewhat reminiscent of communism, but there would also be included
“regime change” of governments in countries that were not completely on
board with the direction coming out of Washington. Instead of invading
and occupying a country in the old-fashioned way, so the thinking went,
far better to just knock off the top levels and let the natives sort
things out while acting under direction from the pros in Washington.
Even
though “regime change” in Iraq and Afghanistan did not work out very
well, Bush saw himself as a triumphant war leader with his vainglorious
“Mission Accomplished,” and he later dubbed himself the “decider.” He
insisted that his reelection in 2004 when running against a weak John
Kerry was a validation of his policies by the American people, but one
has to wonder how many voters really understood that they were signing
on for perpetual war that would of necessity also diminish their most
cherished liberties.
Nobel
Peace Prize winner and U.S. President Barack Obama followed Bush and
made it clear that there would be no stepping back from a policy of
proactively “protecting” the American people. Obama and his Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton destroyed Libya, a disaster that is still playing
out, increased involvement in Syria, and introduced death by drone for
both American citizens who have transgressed and random foreigners who
fit a profile. And to eliminate any pushback to what he was doing, Obama
relied on invoking the state secrets privilege to block legal
challenges more times than all his predecessors in office combined.
And
now we have President Donald Trump, whose foreign policy is
particularly unarticulated, though in many ways similar to that of his
predecessors. The United States is increasing its involvement in
Afghanistan, where it has been engaged for longer than in any previous
war, is threatening both Iran and North Korea with annihilation, and is
hopelessly entangled in Trump’s pledge to completely eliminate ISIS.
Indeed, destroying ISIS (and al-Qaeda) has been the one clearly
articulated part of the Trump foreign policy, though there are also
occasional assertions that it should be accompanied by yet one more try
at regime change in Damascus.
And the grand tradition of using military might to back up diplomacy has certainly found little favor, so much so that it is certainly clear
even to the supine American public and a risk averse congress that
there is something wrong in Foggy Bottom. It is astonishing to note the
mainstream media, which reviled George W. Bush when he was in office,
describing him currently as a voice of moderation and restraint due to
his recent criticism of the White House. You can’t go wrong if you pile
on Trump.
Even
the U.S. media has been reluctantly reporting that ISIS has been rolled
back in Syria by the joint efforts of the Syrian Army and the Russian
air force with the United States and its allies playing very much
secondary roles in the conflict. The Russians have, in fact, complained
that Washington seemed just a tad disinterested in actually cooperating
to destroy the last remnants of ISIS in the few areas that the group
still controls, citing most recently an alleged incident
during the Syrian government liberation of the town of Abu Kamal in
which U.S. air assets on site appear to have allowed ISIS fighters to
escape.
The
shambles of American policy as it applies to the Middle East was
highlighted by yet another similar and particularly bizarre episode that
was revealed
initially by the BBC on Monday of last week. In early October, when the
Syrians and Russians were closing in from the west on Raqqa, the
“capital” of the ISIS caliphate while the U.S supported Syrian
Democratic Forces (SDF), which predominantly consists of the Kurdish
militias, was closing in from the east, a deal was reportedly struck to
permit an evacuation of the remaining ISIS fighters and their families.
According to the BBC investigative report,
the SDF and Kurds were wary of clearing out the remaining fighters from
the ruins of the city and so negotiated an agreement whereby the ISIS
fighters from Syria and Iraq and their families would be able to leave
and be allowed to either go home and face the consequences or proceed to
ISIS controlled areas about one hundred miles away. The objective was
to avoid a final assault from the air and using artillery that would
have produced a bloodbath killing thousands, including large numbers of
civilians. The agreement stipulated that only ISIS fighters who were
local would be allowed to leave. Others, referred to as “foreigners,”
from Europe, Africa or Asia would have to surrender in order to avoid
their going free and getting involved in new terrorist activity after
returning home.
U.S.
and British military advisers who were with the SDF and Kurds reported,
somewhat improbably, that they had not been party to the negotiations,
that it was “all-locals,” though they later admitted that there had been
some involvement on their part. In the event, trucks and busses were
assembled on October 14th, formed into a convoy, and were
loaded with more than 4,000 fighters and families. More than 100
ISIS-owned vehicles also were allowed to leave and there were ten trucks
filled with weapons. The convoy stretched for more than four miles and
film footage shows trucks pulling trailers filled with militants
brandishing their weapons. The fighters were not allowed to display
flags or banners but they were not forced to disarm and in fact loaded
all the vehicles with as many weapons as they could carry, so much so
that one truck broke its axle from the weight. The BBC reported that
“This wasn’t so much an evacuation – it was the exodus of so-called
Islamic State.”
The
drivers reported that they were abused by the ISIS fighters, many of
whom were wearing explosive belts, and they also claimed that there was a
large percentage of foreigners among those escaping. Various drivers
told the BBC that there were French, Turkish, Azerbaijani, Pakistani,
Yemeni, Saudi, Chinese, Tunisian and Egyptian nationals among their
passengers. The evacuees made it safely to ISIS controlled territory and
presumably will be ready, willing and able to fight again.
The
escape of the Islamic State from Raqqa is, to put it mildly, bizarre.
One might accept that avoiding the carnage that would have been part and
parcel of an assault on the shattered city should have weighed heavily
on the decision making by the attacking forces, but allowing hardened
fighters to escape with their weapons would hardly seem a good way to
end the conflict. In May, U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis said on
television that the war against ISIS was one of “…annihilation. Our
intention is that the foreign fighters do not survive the fight to
return home to north Africa, to Europe, to America, to Asia, to Africa.
We are not going to allow them to do so.”
Well,
Mattis was possibly lying back then, or at least saying what he thought
would play well on television and in the newspapers. On November 14th, the day after the BBC story about Raqqa broke, he lied again, saying that
the United States is in Syria under a U.N. authorization to fight ISIS,
which is not true. The Russians have been invited into the country by
its legitimate government but the U.S. is not there legally. The Turks
are claiming that there are 13 U.S. military bases already in Syria,
some of which are permanent.
Mattis added to his bit of fiction by stating,
somewhat ominously, that while the first phase of the ISIS war is
coming to an end “Basically we can go after ISIS. And we’re there to
take them out. But that doesn’t mean we just walk away and let ISIS 2.0
pop back around. The enemy hasn’t declared they’re done with the war
yet. So, we’ll keep fighting them as long as they want to fight.”
A
waggish friend of mine suggested that Mattis might be deliberately
selectively releasing ISIS fighters so the U.S. will never have to leave
Syria, but my own theory is somewhat different. I think that
Washington, which has done so little to defeat ISIS, wants some threat
to continue so it can keep its own “resistance forces” in place and
active to give it a seat at the table and a voice at the upcoming Geneva
discussions for a political settlement in Syria. Otherwise Washington
will be outside looking in. The unspeakable Nikki Haley at the U.N.
appears to endorse that line of thinking by asserting that Washington will continue “to fight for justice” in Syria no matter what the rest of the world decides to do.
Does
this mean that we can expect considerable fumbling and a game with no
exit strategy, something like a replay of Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya?
You betcha.
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