Objectives Behind the Looming Great War

[The following report is excellent work, in the sense that Mr. Burbaki seems to have a unique understanding of the great events which are about to overtake the world.  Perhaps that comes from looking at the problems facing us from the Russian point of view.  I agree with all of the statements he makes in the following report and his previous posting here (SEE:  Why the US Needs a Major War).]

Upcoming G8 Forum and the Objectives Behind the Looming Great War

By Viktor BURBAKI (Russia)

Upcoming G8 Forum and the Objectives Behind the Looming Great War

THE DYNAMICS UNRAVELING WITHIN THE WORLD SYSTEM AND DRIVING DEEP TRANSFORMATIONS OF THE EXISTING CENTER – SEMI-PERIPHERY – PERIPHERY LAYOUT IS PRONE WITH A PROLIFERATION OF SERIOUS ARMED CONFLICTS. THE WORLD IS ENTERING A TRANSITION EPOCH DURING WHICH A BIG WAR OVER NATURAL RESOURCES AND SPHERES OF INFLUENCE, ALONG WITH A SERIES OF PRECEDING REGIONAL CONFLICTS, BECOME A VIRTUALLY INESCAPABLE SCENARIO.

THIS BIG WAR IS LOOMING ON THE HORIZON AS THE US IS READYING THE SCENE FOR IT IN THE MIDDLE EAST. FAR TOO MANY FORCES SEEM CONVINCED THAT THE WAR HAS TO BE THE SOLUTION OF CHOICE TO THE LINGERING GLOBAL CRISIS.

IN THE MEANTIME, WATCHERS ARE TRYING TO DISCERN THE OBJECTIVES BEHIND THE BREWING CONFLICT. THE FIRST PART OF THE AGENDA IS NOT DEEPLY HIDDEN – THE WAR SHOULD

• help switch the attention of the Western population from the crisis to the fight against a “global enemy”;
• create conditions for writing off the sky-high sovereign debts;

• stop the US slide towards a new great depression, revitalize the country’s economy and give it a fresh start;

• re-institute the US leadership within the world system;

• perpetuate the existing financial order based on the broadly interpreted Washington consensus and the status of the US Federal Reserve as the global money-printing factory.

The same agenda, however, includes a taboo part – the plan is supposed to guarantee the survival of Israel which retains the occupied Palestinian territories and can only exist in the settings of permanent confrontation with its neighbors, provided that the West unwaveringly supports it and the Israeli military superiority in the region continues into the future. So far, Israel has had a potential to crash practically any coalition of Arab countries, while its regional nuclear-arms monopoly serves Tel Aviv both as a means of containment and a safeguard in case an armed conflict does erupt and takes an unexpected turn. Israel absent the enemies surrounding it – a small state with no natural resources on premises – is a picture impossible to imagine. The reason why these days Israel desperately needs a great war are:

• a military triumph would confirm Israel’s high global status;

• the outbreak of war would make it impossible for the crisis-ridden West, especially for the US, the country accounting for 22% of Israel’s foreign trade and known to pour an extra $3.71b into it in direct aid, to terminate or to considerably reduce support for Israel. It is worth mentioning in the context that Germany paid the last portion of compensations to Israel for World War II crimes in 2011. Under normal conditions, propping up Israel alone may seem too heavy a burden for the US;

• the war would put an end to Iran’s nuclear program and spare Israel any potential regional rivalry in the nuclear arms sphere.

The third and, arguably, the top secret part of the big war agenda is the rebuilding of the global colonial system.

Classic colonialism dominated the world for over five centuries and was partially pushed off the global stage only in the second half of the XX century when the USSR established itself as a world power. At the moment, one gets an impression that, due to the logic of the Western economic development, the brief post-colonial interregnum is nearing the end. Under pressure from competitors, the Western economic system is sustainable only as long as it can draw additional resources from the outside. It’s stability takes the existence of a subordinate periphery supplying the world system core at affordable costs.

The recent developments – from the seizure of Iraq and Afghanistan to the rape of Libya and the spill of the Arab Spring – leave no doubt that the world system periphery faces a new round of colonial conquests. The geopolitical process is likely imminent since a power capable of mounting serious opposition to it is completely missing in today’s world, and the only aspect of the situation that currently remains unclear is whether the revival of colonialism will follow a bipolar pattern, with the US and the EU securing a grip on the rest of the world, or some sort of an alternative colonization model is going to emerge.

The world subject to a new wave of colonization will see a sweeping re-codification of the international law and a full scale-demise of its former Yalta-Potsdam framework. The transformation will include a definitive departure from the underlying principles of the UN charter, the elimination, on an institutional level, of the permanent UN Security Council membership, and radical adjustments to the notion that sovereign countries should be treated as equal partners in international politics. In a not-so-distant future, occupation and colonization – if perpetrated in the confines of “recognized” spheres of influence – will be legitimized as substitutes for self-determination and sovereign nations’ rights to stay insulated from meddling. The West is already restoring the two-level format of the international relations which allows complete sovereignty exclusively to the countries belonging to the world system core and leaving the periphery with strictly the amount of decision-making freedom transnational corporations can painlessly tolerate.

Z. Brzezinski expressed with utmost clarity the view that the pillars of the new (colonial) order should be the Greater West (the US and the EU) and the Greater East (Japan, India, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia), meaning that no role is awarded to Russia in the future global politics. Even at present, for example, open talk about imposing international control on Siberia is no cause for embarrassment, and it will take little time before the concept surfaces that the contemporary Russia is the successor to the Russian empire which, in 1884, signed the convention which called for the “efficient occupation” of countries evidently unprepared to handle their own assets. It may happen sooner than anyone can expect that the “efficient occupation” gets a line in the adopted international code of conduct and Russia is confronted with the threat of seeing its right to its natural riches revoked.

NATO is an existing and successfully tested instrument of the new colonization. The alliance’s fresh strategic concept sealed in Lisbon in 2010 states in a thinly veiled form that maintaining the structure of the world system comprising the core and the periphery as necessary for the Western world’s well-being must be a part of the NATO mission. The above is the quintessential aspect of the new vision for NATO: the group of Western heavyweights is bracing for new crusades which have always been economically motivated, and the world’s regions supplying commodities will imminently come under military pressure.

At the moment, the West cannot coexist with countries combining ownership of extensive natural resources with geopolitical might. The West may go on pretending to be unaware of the nuclear arsenals of Israel or Pakistan, a country with chronically poor governance that can’t or doesn’t try too hard to throw out the Talibs, but the spotlight sticks to the energy-rich Iran with its claims to regional leadership, even though the country is a signatory to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. By all means, Iran’s nuclear program is nothing more than a casus belli – even with no trace of interest in nuclear technologies, the country would still be in big trouble. Moscow should, in the meantime, keep in mind that it is destined to be the next target after Tehran as the same Brzezinski said that in the XXI century the US would develop against Russia, at the expense of Russia, and on the ruins of Russia.

Among other objectives, the big war planners obviously hope to prevent the rise of the Eurasian union. It is clear that their global design implies distributing the resources contained in the post-Soviet space among the Great West and the Great East, and the point of the current projects like Europe from the Atlantic Ocean to the Urals is to integrate Russia into the Western world while amputating its Siberian part. Russia will have to endure plenty of arm-twisting at the upcoming G8 forum in Camp David supposed to coerce it into giving up the support for Syria and Iran and the Eurasian initiatives, as well as to make Moscow subject its tactic nuclear weapons stockpile to deep cuts. Russia will be offered some perks in return, but cannot rely on China’s standing by it, since the Russian comeback exposes China to unwelcome competition in Eurasia.

The lesson stemming from the entire history of the relations between Russia and the West is that Moscow’s beliefs in the possibility of a partnership with it eventually prove to be illusions. Similarly, the history of big wars convincingly demonstrates that the benefits are typically ripped by the countries which are the last to step in. The approach clearly guarantees the wise a place in the ranks of winners. B. Borisov was absolutely right when he wrote in 2009 in his Damned World: “The creation of a geopolitical configuration akin to the Eurasian Union that would make it possible – thanks to the aggregation of coalition might to the formation of buffer zones – to delay Russia’s direct entry into the war (which will not necessarily span the metropolitan territory) should be regarded as a priority in Moscow. Essentially, Russia’s dilemma is to choose between putting together a bloc right now, while there’s still some freedom of maneuver, or doing the same under the pressing circumstances of combat. It must be taken into account immediately that the opportunities to reshape the political landscape on the territories and adjacent to the Russian borders – as it was done in the wake of the recent conflict with Georgia – are evaporating day by day”.

Speaking of the reasons why Russia must not slash its tactical nuclear weapons, one can overlook the fact that for the country, which risks to be the weak side in the coming war, those may be an efficient instrument of damping that conflict at its early phase. Lacking the tactic component of the nuclear warfare, Russia will have to either capitulate or opt for an all-out nuclear nightmare.

RUSSIA IS BEING DELIBERATELY AND PERSISTENTLY GUIDED TOWARDS A BIG WAR. BY THE END OF IT, RUSSIA WILL BE IRREVERSIBLY ERASED FROM HISTORY. WHATEVER DECISIONS ARE BEING MADE BY THE RUSSIAN ADMINISTRATION, THE PERTINENT QUESTION SHOULD BE HOW THEY ARE TO HELP THE COUNTRY MAKE IT THROUGH THE COMING BIG WAR AND GAIN A DECENT POSITION IN THE WORLD AFTER IT. ABOVE ALL, RUSSIA SHOULD BE MINDFUL OF THE SIMPLE TRUTH THAT ITS STRATEGIC AND TACTICAL NUCLEAR ARSENALS ARE THE ONLY FORCES IT CAN AWAYS RELY ON.

Anti and Pro-Syrian Neighborhoods Exchange Fire In Tripoli

Clashes Renew, Army Deploys after 3 Die in Rival Tripoli Districts Fighting

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية

by Naharnet Newsdesk

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W460

 

Three people, including a Lebanese soldier, were killed and at least nine injured on Sunday in a gunfight between the residents of rival neighborhoods in the northern port city of Tripoli as the area witnessed intermittent clashes, the army and media reports said.

Army troops, mainly from the Commando Regiment, began deploying in the afternoon in Tripoli’s Syria Street and the areas that witnessed clashes at dawn, state-run National News Agency said.

MTV said a clash erupted between the army and gunmen in Bab al-Tabbaneh after troops entered one of its neighborhoods.

NNA reported later that citizens Mustafa Ali Mustafa and Rami Saad Harrouq were wounded by gunfire in Syria Street.

A number of residents blocked the al-Mallouleh roundabout and Syria Street’s Abu Ali roundabout to protest the wounding of the two, said NNA.

Meanwhile, LBC television reported that “Islamists have refused to end their sit-in at the Abdul Hamid Karami Square in Tripoli,” as MTV reported “the sound of heavy gunfire coming from Al-Nour Square.”

The fighting erupted at 2:00 am after an Inerga-type rocket fell in the area of al-Qobbeh, a largely Sunni district hostile to the Syrian regime, killing a man identified as Issa Ali, the National News Agency reported.

The rocket attack was followed by a gunbattle between the mainly Sunni residents of Qobbeh and Bab al-Tabbaneh, and the Alawites of Jabal Mohsen, who support Syrian President Bashar Assad.

The fighting with Inerga rockets and Rocket Propelled Grenades lasted from 4:00 am till 7:00 am, NNA said, adding that sporadic bursts of rockets machineguns were heard afterwards.

Lebanese soldier Faisal Hussein Abdullah was killed by sniper fire at the Mallouleh roundabout of Tripoli as he was heading to his work from the Bekaa to his hometown in Akkar, the military command said in a communique.

Eighteen-year-old Mahmoud al-Duhaibi’s body was also found on the side of a road at the northern entrance of the city, NNA said.

The gunbattles and sniper attacks left at least nine people injured, including a child and two soldiers.

Lebanese army commandoes began deploying in Syria street to stop the fighting which came against the backdrop of the General Security Department’s arrest on Saturday of Shadi al-Mawlawi for allegedly contacting a terrorist organization.

His seizure drew the condemnation of Islamists who blocked the northern and southern roads into Tripoli and set up camp at the city’s southern entrance.

The army communique said the military conducted patrols and set up roadblocks in Tripoli and vowed to “deal firmly with those who tamper with the city’s security and stability no matter to which side they belong to.”

While conducting patrols in the area of the fighting, two soldiers were injured in a sniper attack, the army said.

Security sources told LBC TV network on Sunday that the General Security Department handed al-Mawlawi to the judiciary, which will release him if no evidence was found of his link to any terrorist organization.

But judicial sources denied the report in remarks to Voice of Lebanon radio (100.5).

President Michel Suleiman called for an emergency meeting for the Higher Defense Council on Sunday afternoon.

SOCOM Peddles Its “Wet Dream” of Creating Global Web Under SOF Control

[Claims that the US SOCOM will mostly be imparting skill training to these foreign units should make no one easy, considering the SOF record to date in being the primary mover and trainer in military mistake after mistake, mostly done via “US Advisers.”  Posted below are some photos from US military’s “hall of shame,” paramilitary soldiers trained by American Green Berets and Navy Seals, over the years.  None of this documents the repercussions of US training of “Islamist” leaders, who went-on to found countless Asian terrorist groups, neither does it shine a light upon all of the CIA-led Special Forces death squads who have been running around the jungles of Central and S. America for decades, as well as those seeking targets all over Asia and Africa.]

Carlos Castano, right, the leader of a  right-wing paramilitary group with some of his men in northern Colombia in 2001

Carlos Castano, right, with some of his men in northern Colombia in 2001 Photo: AP

1984 Bracamonte Batalion from El Salvador – School of the Americas: School of Assassins

contras-resized.jpg

Contras

US-trained Guatemalan Zetas

zetas

US SOF-trained Mexican Zetas

Members of the Kyrgyz “Scorpion” special forces (some are on trial for sniper shooting during 2010 riots)

U.S. Seeks Global Spec Ops Network

1st ‘Node’ to Stand Up in 2013

By BARBARA OPALL-ROME

AMMAN, Jordan — U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM) wants to establish a worldwide network linking special operations forces (SOF) of allied and partner nations to combat terrorism.

Championed by SOCOM commander Adm. Bill McRaven and Deputy Director of Operations Brig. Gen. Sean Mulholland, the network would comprise regional security coordination centers, organized and structured similarly to NATO SOF Headquarters in Mons, Belgium.

“Imagine the power a confederation of SOF interests could have. It could collectively increase its influence and operational reach around the globe,” Mulholland told participants at a May 7 Middle East Special Operations Commanders Conference here.

Insisting that the U.S. lacks manpower, resources and in many cases the political will to meet mounting threats alone, Mulholland said a global network “of like-minded entities” was needed to address “mutual security concerns.” These centers would not be command-and-control nodes but rather centers for education, networking and coordination to gain regional solutions for regional problems.

He noted that NATO SOF Headquarters — after only six years of operations — has managed to standardize SOF practices across Europe, with a resulting fivefold increase in the number of operators deployed to Afghanistan.

“Operationally speaking, the increase in SOF capacity in Afghani-stan has directly supported the burden sharing,” Mulholland said. “It has allowed [the International Security Assistance Force] to optimize SOF roles across the country.”

In a follow-up interview, Mulholland estimated it would cost less than $30 million a year to operate and maintain each regional node. SOCOM plans to stand up the first one in Miami-based U.S. Southern Command later in 2013, with Mulholland tapped to command integrated SOF in Central and South America.

As for plans to extend the network into Africa, the Pacific and here in the divisive and rapidly changing Central Command, Mulholland said, “Some might see this as an unreachable goal. I believe it can be done.”

As evidence of the cooperation that exists among SOF in this region, Mulholland cited a massive, three-week exercise taking place here through the end of May. Eager Lion 2012 involves some 10,000 air, land and maritime operators from 17 countries, all operating under a joint task force.

Maj. Gen. Ken Tovo, commander of SOF in Central Command, is commanding the exercise with his Jordanian counterpart, Brig. Gen. Mohammed Jeridad, director of Jordan’s Training and Doctrine Command.

Mulholland said the global SOF network would support another SOCOM objective of increasing the effectiveness of theater special operations commanders (TSOC) working for combatant commanders.

Expanding the regionally restricted TSOC structure into a global network would augment the situational awareness of operators working for combatant commanders, he said.

“Let me be clear: We don’t want them to work for us [SOCOM] … but we can help them obtain a greater understanding of the intelligence picture outside of their regional [area of responsibility],” Mulholland said. Furthermore, the immediate needs for forces and resources can be addressed more efficiently by collaboration between SOCOM and combatant commanders.

“This, in my opinion, is one of the most important aspects of what SOCOM can do as it can illuminate the threat around the seams of a [geographic area of responsibility]. … SOCOM’s global perspective gives it the ability to understand how the threat operates across the [combatant commands], and not just within one space.”

Commanders here were skeptical about the prospects of standing up a SOF headquarters within Central Command, whose area includes 20 countries spanning Central Asia and the Middle East.

In a region wracked by instability, clashing cultures, strategic competition and mistrust, it is practically impossible, leaders here say, to reach consensus on common threats. When one nation’s freedom fighters are condemned by neighbors as terrorists, they said, it is unreasonable to expect a regional SOF headquarters to operate as it does in NATO.

Lebanese Brig. Gen. Chamel Roukoz, special operations forces commander in a nation whose government includes Hezbollah — a U.S.-designated terrorist group — acknowledged varying assessments of the terrorist threat. “We have different opinions about this, but we view it as those trying to spread instability and fear and whose victims must be unarmed civilians,” he said.

Addressing the May 7 conference here, Roukoz insisted “resistance is not terrorism.” He urged additional U.S. and international cooperation in combating terrorism “starting with that caused by Israel,” Washington’s longtime strategic ally.

As for Jordan, a neighbor at peace with Lebanon’s enemy, officers did not embrace the SOCOM plan. “It’s a bit premature for now,” said Brig. Gen. Omer Al Khaldi, chief of strategic planning for the Royal Jordanian Armed Forces.

Al Khaldi cited joint training and other existing forms of cooperation that the kingdom has with the U.S. and others in the region. He warned, however, that the establishment of a physical headquarters should not interfere with domestic efforts to preserve “internal peace and security.”

When asked about near-term prospects for the regional headquarters, Tovo, the U.S. SOF commander in Central Command, acknowledged challenges given shifting friendships and lack of consensus, starting with where to establish the physical headquarters.

Tovo noted that NATO SOF headquarters was a special case that may not easily be replicated here. “They had an existing structure and an existing alliance, so NATO had a framework to work from.”

He added, “It’s going to be a bit more challenging to stand up a regional SOF coordination center here. So we’re going to kind of step back and let SOUTHCOM do it first and see what we can learn from that.”

AL-QAEDA LADIES’ CHOIR STRUTS ITS STUFF IN REBEL SYRIA

AL-QAEDA LADIES’ CHOIR STRUTS ITS STUFF IN REBEL SYRIA

by JOHN ROSENTHAL

Back in mid-February, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper warned that al-Qaeda had “infiltrated” the Syrian opposition. At roughly the same time, videos began emerging on the internet that clearly revealed just what an understatement–to put it mildly–Clapper’s observation represented. The videos show Syrian rebel brigades proudly posing with the al-Qaeda flag and protestors holding it high. (See “Al-Qaeda in Rebel Syria”here.) This was not a matter of “infiltration,” with the word’s connotations of stealth and cunning, but rather of an openly publicized affiliation.

In the meanwhile, an even more revealing video has come to light. It shows demonstrators in a public square in Syria holding up the al-Qaeda flag and chanting “Allahu Akbar!” What is particularly notable about this video, however, is that the demonstrators are women. The women are fully veiled from head to foot, with black niqabs or facial veils covering all but their eyes. In addition to displaying al-Qaeda’s distinctive black flag, some of them wave the green-white-and-black flag of the Syrian rebellion. Others wear scarves featuring the colors of the rebellion.

Both a sign in the midst of the demonstrators and a piece of paper held up to the camera at the end of the clip identify the location as Hraytan, a suburb of the northern Syrian city of Aleppo. Aleppo was the target of al-Qaeda style suicide bombings in both February and March. The written message held up to the camera at the end of the clip gives the date of the Hraytan demonstration as last January 21.

Asked about the video, the French Syria specialist Frédéric Pichon identified the location as Hraytan based on the aforementioned elements. Pichon noted that while the setting indeed looks like a Syrian city, “the style [of the demonstration and the female demonstrators] is much more Saudi – which is to say, Wahhabi.” Wahhabism is the purist, ultra-conservative form of Islam that predominates in Saudi Arabia. Pichon added that after forty years of secular Baathist rule, facial veils of the sort seen in the video are not typical of Syria.

Saudi Arabia and fellow Gulf oil monarchy Qatar are the leading Arab members of the international coalition aiming to oust the Assad regime. It is not clear if the appearance of Wahhabi-style dress in Syria today is a by-product of the anti-Assad rebellion or the result of earlier Saudi-financed efforts at “re-islamization” of Syrian society.

Although it was largely ignored by the Western media, the Bosnian civil war of the early 1990s saw a major influx of foreign mujahideen, including al-Qaeda-linked elements, into Bosnia and the setting up of Wahhabi communities on Bosnian soil. The recent Bosnian filmNa Putu (“On the Path”) depicts life in one such Wahhabi community. One of the foreign mujahideen who is known to have fought in Bosnia was none other than Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who would go on to be the principal al-Qaeda coordinator and alleged “mastermind” of the 9/11 attacks.

Another al-Qaeda-linked veteran of the Bosnian war is Reda Seyam: the presumptive financier of the 2002 Bali bombings. In a pseudonymous memoir published in German, Seyam’s ex-wife Regina Kreis describes witnessing a firing squad of mujahideen wives executing a Serb prisoner. According to Kreis, the German-based 9/11 facilitator Ramzi Binalshibh was also present in Bosnia during the war. Both Muhammad and Binalshibh are presently on trial at Guantánamo Bay.

A copy of the Hraytan demonstration video can be viewed below on Breitbart TV. The copy was recently posted by the “pro-regime” Syrian Truth website. I have used the “Syrian Truth” copy, since it is likely to remain available. It should be noted, however, that the video was originally posted on January 21st, the very day of the demonstration, by an apparent supporter of the rebellion. That the original audience of the video was favorably disposed to the demonstrators and their message can be easily gauged from the corresponding YouTube page, of which I provide a screen cap. Note that, as of this writing, the video has attracted 73 “likes” and only 3 “dislikes.”

A more telling example of what Andrew McCarthy has termed “willful blindness” could hardly be imagined: Opponents of Assad can flaunt their adherence to the most retrograde current in Islam – displaying the al-Qaeda flag in broad daylight and even po

sting a video of the gesture on the internet – and still the American government and the American news media refuse to see the reality of Islamic extremism that is right in front of their eyes. The attitude of the media is perhaps more important in the present context, since it is the “willful blindness” of the American media that risks condemning the American public to involuntary ignorance of the truth about the Syrian opposition.

As American policy-makers and editors continue to hold their eyes wide shut, bombs continue to go off in Damascus and other Syrian cities, tearing apart civilians in attacks that have all the hallmarks of the al-Qaeda attacks that America only a few short years ago used to condemn and combat in Iraq. By supporting a Syrian “opposition” that flies the same banner as al-Qaeda in Iraq and employs the same savage methods, America has lost all credibility in what used to be known as the “war on terror."

John Rosenthal writes on European politics and transatlantic security issues. You can follow his work at www.trans-int.com or on Facebook.

ON BREITBART TV

Al-Qaeda Ladies Choir Struts Stuff in Rebel Syria