| 
			  
			  
			
			
  by Brandon Turbeville
 September 11, 2015
 
			from
			
			BrandonTurbeville Website
 
 
 
				
					
						| 
						Brandon Turbeville 
						is an author out of  
						Florence, South 
						Carolina.  
						He has a Bachelor's 
						Degree from Francis Marion University and is the author 
						of several books.  
						Turbeville has 
						published over 500 articles dealing on a wide variety of 
						subjects including health, economics, government 
						corruption, and civil liberties.  
						Brandon 
						Turbeville's podcast Truth on The Tracks can be found 
						every Monday night 9 pm EST at
						
						UCYTV. He is available 
						for radio and TV interviews.  |  
			  
			  
			  
			In his new book, 
			
			The Wikileak Files, 
			Julian Assange
			
			confirms what myself and others such as, 
				
					
					
					Webster Tarpley
					
					Ziad Fadel
					
					Tony Cartalucci
					
					Mimi al-Laham
					
					Eric Draitser,  
			...have 
			been stating for some time - that not only was there a 
			coordinated Western attempt to destabilize and ultimately
			
			destroy Syria and the secular government of Bashar 
			al-Assad, but that such an attempt was devised much earlier than 
			2011, when the "Arab Spring" color revolution protests began in 
			earnest.
 In his book, Assange reveals that the Syrian destabilization plan 
			goes back as far as 2006:
       
			Assange on 'US Empire', Assad govt overthrow 
			plans 
			and new book 'The WikiLeaks Files'          
			He references a 2006 diplomatic cable 
			from US Ambassador to Syria, William Roebuck where the 
			official discussed plans to create a situation where the Syrian 
			government would be enticed to "overreact" to false or manufactured 
			threats posed by "radical jihadists" crossing back and forth between 
			Iraq and Syria.    
			The plan would have portrayed the Syrian 
			government as weak in the eyes of the Syrian people, presumably 
			encouraging protests and social unrest while, at the same time, 
			causing the Assad government to crack down and jump the gun on its 
			reaction to the perceived threat.
 In an interview (above video) with Going Underground, Assange stated,
 
				
				"...That plan was to use a number of 
				different factors to create paranoia within the Syrian 
				government; to push it to overreact, to make it fear there's a 
				coup... so in theory it says, 
					
					'We have a problem with Islamic 
					extremists crossing over the border with Iraq, and we're 
					taking actions against them to take this information and 
					make the Syrian government look weak, the fact that it is 
					dealing with Islamic extremists at all'." 
			In addition, he suggested that a major 
			part of the Western plan was to, 
				
				foster tensions between Shiites and 
				Sunnis.  
				  
				In particular, to take rumors that are known to be 
				false... or exaggerations and promote them - that Iran is trying 
				to convert poor Sunnis, and to work with Saudi and Egypt to 
				foster that perception in order to make it harder for Iran to 
				have influence, and also harder for the government to have 
				influence in the population." 
			Assange's revelations are yet more 
			confirmation of what informed observers have already known for quite 
			some time.    
			For instance, Seymour Hersh 
			writing for the New Yorker in his article "The 
			Redirection,"  
				
				To undermine Iran, which is 
				predominantly Shiite, the
				
				Bush Administration has 
				decided, in effect, to reconfigure its priorities in the 
				Middle East.    
				In Lebanon, the Administration has 
				cooperated with Saudi Arabia's government, which is Sunni, in 
				clandestine operations that are intended to weaken Hezbollah, 
				the Shiite organization that is backed by Iran.    
				The U.S. has also taken part in 
				clandestine operations aimed at Iran and its ally Syria. A 
				by-product of these activities has been the bolstering of Sunni 
				extremist groups that espouse a militant vision of Islam and are 
				hostile to America and sympathetic to Al Qaeda. 
			Even earlier, an article written by 
			Michael Hirsh and John Barry of Newsweek entitled "The 
			Salvador Option," in 2005 revealed a different plan.
			   
			Hirsh and Barry wrote,  
				
				Following that model, one Pentagon 
				proposal would send Special Forces teams to advise, support and 
				possibly train Iraqi squads, most likely hand-picked Kurdish 
				Peshmerga fighters and Shiite militiamen, to target Sunni 
				insurgents and their sympathizers, even across the border into 
				Syria, according to military insiders familiar with the 
				discussions.   
				It remains unclear, however, whether 
				this would be a policy of assassination or so-called "snatch" 
				operations, in which the targets are sent to secret facilities 
				for interrogation.    
				The current thinking is that while 
				U.S. Special Forces would lead operations in, say, Syria, 
				activities inside Iraq itself would be carried out by Iraqi 
				paramilitaries, officials tell NEWSWEEK. 
			Obviously, the plan detailed by Hirsh 
			and Barry is different from the one detailed by Seymour Hersh.
			   
			It is also different from the one 
			revealed in the Assange cable revelation.  
			  
			However, both the theme 
			and the ultimate goal are identical - use radicalized sectarian 
			fighters inside Syria for the purposes of destabilizing and 
			destroying the secular government of Bashar al-Assad.
 In the end, blaming "American foreign policy failure" for the 
			successful march of ISIS across Iraq only serves to obfuscate and 
			cover up the true nature of terrorism as well as its historical and 
			recent roots.
   
			Indeed, it is not foreign policy failure 
			that is responsible for the growth and preponderance of terrorism in 
			Iraq and Syria, it is foreign policy success.   
			The CIA's arming, funding, training, and 
			directing of al-Qaeda, ISIS, and other so-called "moderate" 
			terrorists is the only reason these organizations even exist in Iraq 
			and Syria at all, much less the reason that these organizations have 
			become so powerful so as to have the ability to launch full-scale 
			war.
 The way out, of course, is simple.
 
				
				Peace in Syria does not require 
				reinvading Iraq and it most certainly does not involve invading 
				Syria. Nor does it involve continuing to arm the Syrian death 
				squads.    
				It merely requires the United 
				States, NATO, and the GCC to stop funding and directing ISIS as 
				well as the other terrorist organizations under their purview 
				and allow the Assad government, the Kurds, and other rational 
				actors to finish the rest.   |