Syria and the Sham of “Humanitarian Intervention”  				  				By Ajamu Baraka  				  				June  				04, 2013 " Information  				Clearing House - 				I continue to be amazed with the ease with which the  				dividing line is blurred between what is real and what is  				fiction in the reporting on Syria by the Western media.  The  				press in the U.S. continues to dutifully report on the  				“objective diplomacy” by the Obama administration to broker a  				“peaceful” resolution to the conflict in Syria. However, those  				stories of noble and innocent efforts to avert the catastrophic  				human suffering that has eventually engulfed Syria has sanitized  				the bloody complicity of U.S. policy. Diplomacy, for the U.S.,  				has meant calling for regime change from the outset and then  				encouraging Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Israel, their client states  				in the region, to arm, train and provide political support for a  				military campaign with the objective of effectively dismembering  				the Syria State.  
   				 				Two  				years later, with  				  				tens of thousands  				killed,  				millions uprooted and the delicate social fabric of the country  				shredded by sectarian brutality, the next phase in the  				propaganda war leading to more direct intervention by the West  				to finish off the regime is being organized in the form of a 				 				  				peace conference  				scheduled to take place in June.  
   				 				 				Co-sponsored by Russia with a stake in maintaining the integrity  				of the Syria State, the U.S. approach to the conference,  				however, gives the impression that the gathering is a charade  				meant to mollify those elements in the U.S. Congress and public  				still hesitant to support another expensive military adventure.  				 The U.S. demand that a peaceful solution to the conflict is  				predicated on a “transitional government” being established in  				which  				  				Assad should play no  				role,  				means effectively that there will be no serious attempt to  				resolve the conflict short of regime change and the surrendering  				of Syrian sovereignty. The U.S. position also confirms the real  				objective of the conference which is to justify more direct  				military intervention by the U.S. once the conference “fails” to  				bring peace. 
   				 				While  				this is absolutely clear for many people around the world, the  				U.S. public, along with much of what used to be called the  				progressive and/or radical sectors, continue to be hoodwinked by  				some of the most crude and obvious manipulation I have ever  				witnessed. It was precisely the smooth efficiency with which the  				public was being manipulated that motivated me to write  				 				  				an earlier article on  				Syria  				that attempted to offer an explanation for the reasons why U.S.  				State propagandists, and I include the mainstream media in this  				category, have been so successful in confusing the general  				public and dividing the anti-war, anti-imperialist movement. 				
   				 				I  				believe part of their success has been due to the fact that they  				have used the concept of humanitarian intervention as one of  				their main tools. In my article, I made the argument that  				humanitarian intervention, along with the concept of the “right  				to protect” (R2P) has developed into the most effective  				ideological weapon the liberal human rights community provided  				Western imperialism since the fall of the Soviet State.  				 Humanitarian intervention has proven to be an even more  				valuable propaganda tool than the “war on terror,” because as  				the situation in Libya and now Syria has demonstrated, it  				provides a moral justification for imperialist intervention that  				can also accommodate the presence of the same “terrorist” forces  				the U.S. pretends to be opposed to. And of course, in the eyes  				of the U.S. government, tyrannical and dictatorial governments  				that need to be deposed are only those that present an obstacle  				to the realization of U.S. geo/political interests—never those  				paragons of freedom and morality like Saudi Arabia and Israel.   				
   				 				 As I  				said in my earlier article: 
   				 				 				“Humanitarian intervention provided the U.S. State the perfect  				ideological cover and internal rationalization to continue as  				the global “gendarme” of the capitalist order. By providing the  				human rights rationale for the assertion that the “international  				community” had a moral and legal responsibility to protect a  				threatened people, mainstream human rights activists effectuated  				a shift in the discourse on international human rights that  				moved the R2P assertion from a contested legal and moral augment  				to a common-sense assumption. And because of their limited  				perspective, it did not occur to any of these theoreticians that  				what they propagated was a thinly updated version of the “ white  				man’s burden.”  				The NATO intervention in Bosnia and Kosovo, the assault on Iraq  				to “save” the Iraqi people from Saddam Hussein, and most  				recently the NATO attack on Libya that brought to power a  				rag-tag assortment of anti-African racists, have solidified the  				idea among many in the U.S. that humanitarian intervention to  				protect human rights through aggressive war is justifiable. The  				consequence of this for U.S. policy makers and for the likely  				targets of U.S. aggression in the global South is that if  				properly framed, war could be moved back to the center of  				strategic options without much fear of a backlash from the  				American people—a development especially important for a  				declining power that appears to have concluded that it will use  				military means to attempt to maintain its global empire.”  				
   				 				The  				propagandists of the U.S. war strategy have been spectacularly  				successful in inculcating this shift in consciousness in the  				general population and the self-muting of the anti-war and  				anti-imperialist movements in the West, with the exception of a  				few  				  				organizations.  				  The assertion of the right to unilaterally attack any State  				that it deems unfit for sovereignty is not a new articulation of  				White supremacist, imperialist ideology but in this current  				period where there are few constraints on the global exercise of  				“White power,” the internalization of this position by the  				European and U.S. publics, irrespective of ethnicity or race,  				has made the world a much more dangerous place for Black and  				Brown people: 50,000 killed in Libya, 80,000 in Syria, 1,000,000  				in Iraq, and 30,000 in Afghanistan.
   				 				The  				normalization of war as a contemporary expression of the West’s  				responsibility to bring liberal democracy and capitalist freedom  				to the non-White hordes, and the fact that most of the people  				being killed in the process of “being saved” by the West are  				non-European, is a graphic confirmation of the White supremacist  				assumptions of humanitarian intervention. The people being  				“saved” by the West are framed as people who would embrace the  				Western way of life if given a choice.  That is why  				 				  				Madeline Albright  				could say with a straight face that the “price was worth it” in  				response to the 500,000 children that died in Iraq as a result  				of U.S. sanctions.      
   				 				So as  				the U.S. government prepares to  				  				wage war in Syria,  				the imperative for all of us who believe in peace and  				fundamental human rights is to attempt to persuade as many  				people as possible to choose peace instead of the war objectives  				of the 1%. The Syrian government has a significant social base  				that is made up of Alawites, Druze, Christians and significant  				numbers of Sunnis who fear the takeover of the country by  				Islamic fundamentalists. This is a fact that is being hidden  				from the public in the U.S. Those in the U.S. who would like to  				see an end to the bloodshed in Syria, and I believe that is the  				majority of people, should call on their representatives to  				support real initiatives for peace that respect the sovereignty  				of Syria and the desires of all of the people in that country.  
   				 				But  				really what the people of Syria and the world want and many have  				demanded, is for the U.S. and its Western allies – the minority  				who make up 10% of the world but pretend to be the world – to  				intervene into their own societies who are experiencing their  				own humanitarian crisis brought on by a moribund capitalism and  				leave the rest of the  world alone.  |