Monday, June 15, 2020

Scorched Earth in Syria - Washington's New Policy

While the world focuses on the battle with the SARS-CoV-2 virus, the situation in Syria grinds on with the United States playing the role of spoiler.

Let's start with this excerpt from a recent Hudson Institute livestream event entitled "Maximum Pressure on the Assad Regime For its Chemical Weapons Use and Other Atrocities".  In attendance, was Ambassador James Jeffery, Special Representative for Syria Engagement and Special Enjoy for the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS. When asked the following about Syria and America's role in the nation:

But the place itself, we have no interest in it. I mean, we have no major economic interests, right? The Assad regime does not pose a direct threat to the United States and so on, but it’s at the crossroads of all these other issues. So it’s hard to get the level of commitment right. Because to a lot of people, it just doesn’t seem to make sense.

...here is what Jeffrey had to say in response:

"...that’s why we are pursuing what we think is a smart policy, a very limited American military presence for a very specific goal, to go after ISIS. Supporting military operations of other countries, in various ways, Turkey, Israel, in focusing on economic and diplomatic pressure. Our military presence, while small is important to this whole overall calculation. So we urge the Congress, the American people, the president to keep these forces on. But again, this isn’t Afghanistan. This isn’t Vietnam. This isn’t a quagmire. My job is to make it a quagmire for the Russians. 

Let's look at one of the key issues affecting Syrians, a shortage of food.  According to the Food Security Information Network's 2020 Global Report on Food Crises, we find the following information about Syria's food insecurity:


Here is a map of Syria showing the geographic distribution of people in need of food security and agricultural assistance in 2019:


Acute malnutrition among children affected around 91,800 children with another 865,300 experiencing micronutrient deficiencies.  Some regions were worse than others; in the governorates of Aleppo, Idlib and Hama, 31.9 percent of children between the ages of 6 months and 23 months received a minimum acceptable diet.

This chronic food shortage has led the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations to assist Syria's farmers to grow food as shown here:


Obviously, it is very clear that Syrians are suffering even as the nine-year-long civil war winds down.

Now, let's look at two news items that didn't get widespread coverage in the West:






According to SANA, an American convoy was recently intercepted in Hasaka by the Syrian Arab Army and local men, the same part of the country where the recent crop fires took place:


The fact that Washington's Special Representative for Syrian Engagement, James Jeffrey, has made it very clear that his goal in Syria is to create a "Vietnam" for Russia suggests that the recent reports from SANA regarding the burning of cereal crops is quite likely based on fact and that American forces could well have been behind the burning of much needed food.  Washington seems incapable of admitting that its nine year effort to rid the world of Bashar al-Assad has been a colossal failure. 

3 comments:

  1. Thanks for the tidbit of information. Really puts things in perspective. And the soldiers are just following orders, eh?!

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  2. So protect the poppy fields in Afghanistan but burn the wheat fields in Syria? And the US wants to declare Russia a State Sponsor of Terrorism. The Terrorist State has lots of gall...

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  3. By reassuring and almost encouraging the people of Syria to rise up and overthrow their brutal leader Obama started a series of events that has taken countless lives and destroyed millions of others. Three of the most damaging developments flowing from this are the development of ISIS, the flow of millions of refugees into Europe, and the bombing and destruction of cities and innocent civilians.

    Currently, around a million Syrians have their backs against the wall in the northern Syrian province of Idlib. These civilians are trapped, they are caught under the bombs of a three-way war. The article below explores the nightmare we have created.

    https://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2020/02/syria-stands-as-mega-embarrassment-for.html

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