The US-backed proxy war aimed at ousting Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad is entering a new and dangerous phase. The possibility of a
major international war, with incalculable consequences for the world’s
population, is very real.
Yesterday, Lebanon’s Al Manar television quoted Assad as saying that
Syria had “received the first shipment of Russian anti-aircraft S-300
rockets. All our agreements with Russia will be implemented, and parts
of them have already been implemented.” These missiles, which Russia has
pledged to deliver to defend Syria from possible US air strikes, have
provoked an international crisis. Israeli officials have declared they
will attack missile shipments.
If Israel acted on such a threat, Russian lives were lost, and Russia
carried out retaliatory strikes on Israeli targets, the world would
rapidly face a military confrontation between Russia and the United
States—a situation that has not existed for more than a half century,
since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis.
Assad has also announced major victories in southern Syria after the
intervention of the Lebanese Shia-based militia Hezbollah—together with
Iranian forces, according to some reports—in support of the Syrian army.
These forces have rapidly defeated the US-backed Sunni Islamist
opposition, exposing the lack of popular support for the Al Qaeda-linked
elements that make up the bulk of the opposition.
As terror bombings and fighting between US-backed Sunni forces and
Iranian-backed Shia forces spread from Syria to Lebanon and Iraq, the
Syrian war is emerging as the center of a broad sectarian war. The Obama
administration and its allies are using the most reactionary forces to
restructure the entire Middle East. The resulting conflict is becoming
ever more bloody and dangerous, as the imperialist powers move to shore
up the faltering position of the opposition by escalating their own
intervention.
In a New York Times comment, “In Syria, Go Big or Stay
Home,” Ray Takeyh of the US Council on Foreign Relations expressed the
thinking of significant sections of the American ruling class: “The sort
of intervention needed to bring about a decisive rebel victory would
require more than no-fly zones and arms. It would mean disabling Mr.
Assad’s air power and putting boots on the ground … Moreover, rather
than intimidating Iran, a less-than-decisive American intervention would
do the opposite: convince Iran’s leaders that America doesn’t have an
appetite for fighting a major war in the region.”
Takeyh’s comment spells out the implications of the policy—shared by
Washington and its major European allies—of constantly threatening Iran,
Syria, and other Middle Eastern regimes that every option, including
war, is “on the table.” Desperate to control an oil-rich,
geo-strategically critical region torn by decades of US wars and
interventions, the imperialist powers are driven to ever more reckless
threats and wars.
Sections of the ruling class in the United States and Europe are
actively considering options to massively increase their troop levels.
Another New York Times comment, “Americans and their Military,
Drifting Apart,” advocates restarting a draft lottery—a move aiming to
conscript cannon fodder for the wars the United States is planning in
the Middle East and beyond.
Russia and China, the major powers against whom Washington and Europe
aim to seize and hold the Middle East, can themselves be targeted for
war and regime change. The same methods—provocations based on stoking
ethnic and sectarian conflicts in Chechnya in Russia, Tibet in China,
and so on—could easily be turned against the governments of these
countries or any other power whose interests come into conflict with
those of Washington and its allies.
It would be deeply complacent to downplay the immense dangers facing
the international working class. The social interests that dictate
policy in the centers of imperialism are, if anything, even more
rapacious and reckless than their counterparts a hundred years ago who
set off two world wars that killed tens of millions of people.
The fight against imperialism depends on the independent mobilization
of the working class in opposition to all the forces of bourgeois
politics. The political establishment in North America and Europe has
proven completely impervious to the mass popular disaffection and
opposition towards war that has only grown since the 2003 US invasion of
Iraq.
A critical component of the pro-war political bloc are the
pseudo-left organizations. The International Socialist Organization in
the US, the New Anti-capitalist Party in France, and similar groups
internationally have promoted the war in Syria as a “revolution.” These
parties, speaking on behalf of privileged sections of the upper middle
class, have worked quite consciously to block opposition to war, while
functioning as mouthpieces of imperialist intelligence agencies.
They supported the 2011 NATO war in Libya, which served as a trial
run for the US-led intervention in Syria. When the NATO powers
intervened to support opposition Islamist militias fighting Colonel
Muammar Gaddafi’s regime, the pseudo-left parties demanded that the
imperialist powers arm the opposition.
They supported the destruction of the Gaddafi regime—through the
seizure of Libya’s oil industry, the confiscation of its oil revenues,
the carpet-bombing of major Libyan cities such as Tripoli and Sirte, and
finally the murder of Gaddafi. They then promoted similar Islamist
forces in Syria as the NATO powers turned their gun sights on Assad.
In its most recent statements, the ISO praises the escalating
imperialist intervention in Syria as a “people’s revolution for freedom
and dignity.”
The evolution of these forces underscores that the basic social force
capable of opposing war is the working class—in the United States,
Europe and around the world. Nearly five years after the crash of 2008,
the growing crisis of world capitalism is immensely exacerbating
international tensions.
The ruling class, led by the US, is once again bringing the world to
the brink of catastrophe. To prevent this requires the building of an
international socialist movement against imperialism and war.
Source: WSWS
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