Damascus violence could be ‘part and parcel of negotiations strategy’
The US is determined to strengthen the hand of the Syrian rebel forces in advance of any peace talks in order to change the alignment of forces. The recent violence could be part of that strategy, Brian Becker, Director of Answer Coalition, told RT.
RT:From these latest developments, does it seem to you
that the Syrian rebels are still confident they can win the
war?
Brian Becker: Well they have the US and the most powerful
militaries and intelligence agencies behind them but they have
not been winning the battle, they’ve been losing the battle
because the people in Syria don’t want them. They don’t want to
live under their rule. It is a foreign funded civil war. There
has been so much suffering caused by this civil war. So I do not
think they will succeed but the attack in Damascus, the shutdown
of Damascus, the power outage this is a terrorist act.
Right now John Kerry is very happy, Chuck Hagel is very happy,
President Obama is happy – this is what their policy is, to fund,
finance and coordinate through the joint special operations
command and the CIA this kind of terrorist action against the
people of Syria. What the people of Syria need is a settlement, a
political solution, not more terrorism.
RT:Does it appear at this point, in your opinion, that
the rebels will attend the Geneva 2 talks or will they continue
fighting?
BB: They may do both. I think the policy of the rebels, so
called moderate rebels who are the proxies of Western forces are
really dictated by Washington, the CIA and the Pentagon. They are
not an independent force at this point. They are dependent on
money and arms from Western powers and they are taking the cue
from them as well. You can see the terrorist actions that are
taking place in Damascus could be part and parcel of a
negotiations strategy also in Geneva wherever a peace conference
or peace talks might take place. The US government is determined
to strengthen the hand of the rebel forces even in advance of any
peace talks because they want to be able to change the
relationship of forces which right now are under the advantage of
the Assad government and the Syrian government.
RT:What would need to change for these talks to eventually create a way out of this deadlock then?
BB: The real way the talks could be productive is if the Washington administration and the governments in Britain and France were to decide that they cannot militarily defeat the Assad government, that it is an impossible mission, that it was a fantasy to begin with, and that they would put additional pressure on those proxy forces who receive their arms and guns from Western powers to actually come to the negotiation’s table. That would probably be the political premise for some sort of a negotiated settlement. Clearly the Assad government, the Syrian government, the Russian government, those who oppose foreign intervention have said, and they are on the record, that they are for peace talks and some sort of transitional settlement but they are not going to be dictated to by the rebels or by Western powers and told Assad must go. They are not going to do that.
RT:Syria's chemical weapons are in the process of being destroyed. How could this latest blackout and fighting affect these international efforts?
BB: I think they may be partly designed to carry out
disruption of the weapons inspections, because the weapon
inspectors have had all kind of trouble getting onto areas under
rebel control where the chemical weapons munitions seemed to have
been used. There has been a lot of near-misses, mortar attacks,
shelling and other kinds of military disruptions of the weapons
inspector’s program and I think much of it, almost all of it is
coming from the rebel’s side because perhaps they have something
to hide.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.