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Vol. 80/No. 38 October 10, 2016
(front page)
Moscow, Assad bomb Aleppo as Washington seeks
new deal
BY NAOMI CRAINE
Working people in Aleppo, Syria, have been pummeled since Sept. 22 in
bombings by the government of Bashar al-Assad and by Moscow, which backs
the regime, after a brief truce put together by Washington and Moscow
came apart.
Syrian army troops, joined by Iranian forces, Hezbollah troops from
Lebanon and Shiite militias from Iraq, began a ground assault Sept. 27,
attacking a number of entrances to the neighborhoods of Aleppo
controlled by opponents of Assad’s regime.
The imperialist rulers of the United States, France and the United
Kingdom shrilly denounced the Syrian government and Moscow in a Sept. 25
meeting of the United Nations Security Council they demanded. They
insisted the Russian government agree to some sort of new deal along the
lines of the cease-fire that just collapsed.
“There are no prospects for political solutions,” Hezbollah leader
Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah told a Lebanese newspaper. “The final word is
for the battlefield.”
Hundreds of civilians have been killed in the bombings over the last
several days. The airstrikes have included incendiary weapons and
“bunker-buster” bombs designed to pulverize concrete. Ammar al-Salmo,
head of the Aleppo branch of the volunteer Syria Civil Defense, said
three of the rescue group’s centers were bombed and emergency vehicles
destroyed.
On Sept. 23 the attacks damaged the pumping station that provides water
to some 250,000 residents left in eastern Aleppo where rebels have
control. In retaliation, government opponents shut off a pumping station
that supplies 1.5 million people in the rest of the city. The population
now has to rely on well water, which is most likely contaminated,
according to UNICEF.
Aleppo, which was Syria’s largest city and the main commercial and
industrial center, has been fiercely contested since the civil war began
in 2011, after the Assad regime crushed mass protests for democratic
rights. The strongest forces among government opponents there are
jihadist militias loosely allied with the Army of Conquest, led by
Syria’s former al-Qaeda branch. The Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD)
controls the city’s northern Kurdish Sheikh Maqsoud district.
As the assault on Aleppo continues, Turkish troops and some Syrian
militias allied with them continue to push into the area north of the
city, seeking to prevent the PYD from unifying Syria’s Kurdish areas to
the east and west.
Conflicting national interests among Washington, Moscow, Tehran, Ankara
and other Mideast capitalist regimes keep scuttling all efforts to reach
a deal. Washington — whose power and influence has been weakened by its
unending wars from Iraq to Afghanistan — sees a bloc with Moscow as the
only road to achieve some variant of stability to preserve its
imperialist interests there.
At the U.N. Security Council meeting, U.S. Ambassador Samantha Power
said Moscow was engaged in “barbarism” in Syria. The French and British
ambassadors joined Power in walking out when the Syrian ambassador
addressed the council.
Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin argued that Damascus has shown
“enviable restraint.” He pointed out that groups Washington has backed
in Syria, including in Aleppo, fight alongside al-Qaeda-linked forces,
which the U.S. government agrees are “terrorists.”
The truce came apart after U.S. bombers hit government troops in eastern
Syria Sept. 17, a move Washington said was a “mistake,” and after Moscow
denied considerable evidence it was responsible for an attack that
destroyed a U.N.-organized convoy of humanitarian aid headed for
besieged rebel areas near Aleppo.
At a Sept. 22 congressional hearing, Defense Secretary Ashton Carter
reiterated that Secretary of State John Kerry is “trying to get the
Russians to move … toward putting an end to the civil war.”
More U.S. troops headed to Iraq
Testifying with him, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chair Gen. Joseph Dunford
stressed that the U.S. priority in Syria is to destroy Islamic State,
saying, “I do not have a military objective to remove Assad.”
Washington is moving to increase its ground troops in Iraq by 500 — to
6,400 — in an effort to hasten an assault against Islamic State in Mosul
in concert with Iraqi army units.
The U.S. rulers also plan to launch a major offensive against Islamic
State’s self-proclaimed capital in Raqqa, Syria. But these efforts have
been complicated by the sharp conflict between the Turkish government
and Kurdish forces that would need to be centrally involved.
The battle for Mosul has the potential to ratchet up sectarian divisions
among the Sunni Arab tribes, who are the majority of the population in
that area; the Shiite-led Iraqi government; and the Kurdish autonomous
region in northeast Iraq. Kurdistan Regional Government President Masoud
Barzani has reportedly suggested the partition of Nineveh province, of
which Mosul is the capital, into Sunni, Shia and Kurdish sections, and
that Kurds be allowed to vote on whether to join Iraqi Kurdistan.
An estimated 2 million people remain in Mosul. Kurdish regional
officials say they’ve begun building refugee camps to house 500,000
civilians who might flee the fighting, but don’t have the resources to
finish them. The KRG interior ministry says it’s already “overstretched”
as 1.8 million people displaced by the fighting in Iraq and Syria have
already taken refuge in the Kurdish region.
Related articles:
Ankara escalates attacks on Kurds in Turkey, Syria
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