Wednesday 8 February 2012

Syria - Russia takes the initiative

Look at the video from RT.  Those crowds don't look to me as if they've been forced to be there by the regime and carry Russian flags.





Russian FM Sergei Lavrov was received in Damascus yesterday like the Pope. The arrival of a Russian delegation marks the finality with which Russia has effectively precluded any attempt at regime change in Syria. The violence that followed the recent withdrawal of an Arab League observer mission has been utterly predictable.

Over the last year, CIA, MI6 and Mossad have been recruiting, arming and supporting rebel groups whilst also engaging in fierce propaganda to inflame tensions in the country that have been existing for decades (And are now much worse). A substantial number of arms and other logistical support was provided to pro-Western rebels who now find that they are cut off and with no state sponsor. Bashar al-Assad has predictably moved quickly to eliminate any armed opposition behind his lines.

CIA arming and setting loose insurgent groups  to pursue a political agenda is an age-old pattern. Almost always, those who the west promises "freedom" and a new government in their country are left twisting in the breeze. Ask the Hmong in Vietnam, the Kurds, and a few others. -- MCR


Russia raps West, sends mission to Syria




7 February, 2012

A meeting scheduled for Tuesday between top Russian officials and Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad is being portrayed by the Russian government as an attempt to bring about “the swiftest stabilization of the situation in Syria” in response to the growing conflict.

The move is an effort to seize the initiative on Syria from the Western powers – and from the United States, in particular – and to prevent an international intervention.

Before he left for Damascus, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton traded barbs over a tough United Nations resolution on Syria, proposed by the Arab League, that Russia and China vetoed Saturday.

“Certain Western states are trying to obscure the developments with hysterical statements on Russia’s veto of the Syria resolution,” Lavrov said Monday. “To put the Syria resolution to a vote despite our request to wait for Russia’s report after its visit to Damascus is disrespectful.”
Clinton denounced the vetoes as a “travesty.”

“Those countries that refuse to support the Arab League plan bear full responsibly for protecting the brutal regime in Damascus,” Clinton said Sunday at a news conference in Sofia, Bulgaria.

And in an apparent swipe at Russian arms shipments to Syria, Clinton said, “We will work to expose those who are still funding the regime and sending it weapons that are used against defenseless Syrians, including women and children.”

Lavrov will be accompanied by the head of Russian foreign intelligence, Mikhail Fradkov.
Russia maintains that it is not siding with Assad but trying to prevent a foreign intervention that it fears would be bloody and sow chaos in one of the few Middle Eastern countries with which Russia has good relations. Moscow worries about a repeat of what happened in Libya, where it believes Western forces took advantage of a U.N. resolution to conduct a far wider action than promised.

At the same time, a foreign ministry statement said Russian President Dmitry Medvedev ordered the mission to Damascus because Russia “firmly intends to seek the swiftest stabilization of the situation in Syria on the basis of the swiftest implementation of democratic reforms whose time has come.”

Syria is an important customer for Russian arms sales and hosts a naval supply base, but analysts agree that alarm in Moscow over popular uprisings is the main driver of Russian policy. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who is running for president, sees Western interference behind nearly every mass protest — including in his own country.

But several experts argue that Syria presents another wrinkle: A long-held Russian antipathy toward Saudi Arabia is once again coming to the fore, as Moscow believes the Saudis seek to bolster their Sunni counterparts in Syria.

“The Russian establishment and public opinion don’t buy the picture of a peaceful pro-democracy movement suppressed by dictatorship,” wrote Fyodor Lukyanov, a leading foreign policy expert, for the Russia Today Web site. “Well-trained and heavily-armed rebel groups have support from the outside, primarily from Saudi Arabia and Qatar.”

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