edit: snipe
i was concerned there for a second
88888 posted:oh no
edit: snipe
five eights, can you explain the connotation of 'snipe' on the boards? I've seen it around and I don't get it.
According to his older brother, Jaber explained his trip to Syria earlier this year by saying that he wanted to volunteer with the White Helmets: “He went to Turkey seven months ago and spent two months in Syria. He called us and told us 'I'm volunteering with the White Helmets (emergency teams) in Idlib'.”
Jaber also mentioned that he was with Ahrar al-Sham in Idlib and doing "humanitarian aid work."
...
Al-Nusra was until recently the official Syrian branch of al-Qaeda and is still considered a terrorist organization by the United States and the United Nations. Ahrar al-Sham, on the other hand, enjoys the support of the U.S. and its allies and is being protected from the terrorist label despite its close ties to al-Qaeda and other designated terrorist organizations.
In March 2015, the military alliance “Jaish al-Fatah” (“Army of Conquest”), led by al-Nusra and Ahrar al-Sham, seized Idlib city from government forces. Idlib was only the second provincial capital to be captured from the government since the start of the conflict, the other one being Raqqa.
The attack on Idlib city had been planned for months. In November 2014, NATO member Turkey and close U.S. ally Qatar began providing increased logistical and military support to Ahrar al-Sham and several other factions active in northwestern Syria, thereby enabling Jaish al-Fatah’s series of victories in spring 2015.
...
“Schools have been segregated, women forced to wear veils, and posters of Osama bin Laden hung on the walls. Government offices were looted, and a more effective government has yet to take shape. With the Talibanization of Idlib, the 100-plus Christian families of the city fled. The few Druze villages that remained have been forced to denounce their religion and embrace Islam; some of their shrines have been blown up. No religious minorities remain in rebel-held Syria, in Idlib, or elsewhere.”
http://www.boilingfrogspost.com/2016/10/17/the-jaber-al-bakr-story-how-a-white-helmets-volunteer-almost-blew-up-berlin-airport/
a bunch of translated short videos of the leader of “Jaish al-Fatah”/“Army of Conquest”
"Plans to send heavier weapons to CIA-backed rebels in Syria stall amid White House skepticism"
Gibbonstrength posted:Now he's starting to slip in the feeling that, hmm, maybe this isn't a stupid strategy if all you want is a whirlwind of endless chaos and war in Syria...
This is a noob materialist question, I'm sure, but what specifically does the U.S. stand to gain by destabilizing Syria? Relatedly, what did they gain from toppling Gaddafi?
Belphegor posted:Gibbonstrength posted:Now he's starting to slip in the feeling that, hmm, maybe this isn't a stupid strategy if all you want is a whirlwind of endless chaos and war in Syria...
This is a noob materialist question, I'm sure, but what specifically does the U.S. stand to gain by destabilizing Syria? Relatedly, what did they gain from toppling Gaddafi?
Sovereign, stable, self reliant countries are nice if you like that sort of thing, but fractured bantustans full of craters and starving peasants are easier to turn into fully dependent slave states. Bomb the shit out of them until you get a collaborator government in place, then offer to help reconstruct. All they have to do is sign these oil/mineral leases that they have no negotiating leverage to contest because if they say no they're terrorists and we'll keep bombing. Once the bombing stops, thanks to USAID, all the reconstruction work will be done by US corporations.
We'll take their wealth, we'll sell them back their own water and electricity, we'll put the population to work making cheap plastic shit for a quarter an hour, and we'll murder anyone that doesn't like it. And we'll even try to make them pay for the bombs too.
Gssh posted:https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/plans-to-send-heavier-weapons-to-cia-backed-rebels-in-syria-stall-amid-white-house-skepticism/2016/10/23/f166ddac-96ee-11e6-bb29-bf2701dbe0a3_story.html"Plans to send heavier weapons to CIA-backed rebels in Syria stall amid White House skepticism"
hillary takes office january 20
https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2016/10/21/how-to-survive-in-aleppo
the media is just straight up publishing chain emails
all in all this seems much more efficient than trying to prop up a strong man in any locale, because the west never has to defend anyone it installs, it just needs to keep the same flow of money through the same channels to the young, naive and opportunistic and a state actor never arises that could hope to project its power past the suburbs of any large community in the region, much less align itself with iran in a way that could challenge israel as a western client state.
xipe posted:https://yallalabarra.wordpress.com/2016/08/10/video-portrait-abdallah-al-muhaysni-the-man-who-heads-the-us-backed-aleppo-offensive/a bunch of translated short videos of the leader of “Jaish al-Fatah”/“Army of Conquest”
good shit
MarxUltor posted:Belphegor posted:Gibbonstrength posted:Now he's starting to slip in the feeling that, hmm, maybe this isn't a stupid strategy if all you want is a whirlwind of endless chaos and war in Syria...
This is a noob materialist question, I'm sure, but what specifically does the U.S. stand to gain by destabilizing Syria? Relatedly, what did they gain from toppling Gaddafi?
Sovereign, stable, self reliant countries are nice if you like that sort of thing, but fractured bantustans full of craters and starving peasants are easier to turn into fully dependent slave states. Bomb the shit out of them until you get a collaborator government in place, then offer to help reconstruct. All they have to do is sign these oil/mineral leases that they have no negotiating leverage to contest because if they say no they're terrorists and we'll keep bombing. Once the bombing stops, thanks to USAID, all the reconstruction work will be done by US corporations.
We'll take their wealth, we'll sell them back their own water and electricity, we'll put the population to work making cheap plastic shit for a quarter an hour, and we'll murder anyone that doesn't like it. And we'll even try to make them pay for the bombs too.
its worth noting that this has a history going back to the reconstruction after world war 2. i wouldnt be surprised if it were possible to tie the results of this activity (e.g. europe, japan and south korea got more infrastructure and industry out of the deal than anyone since) to the economic shifts happening in the 70s
also lol at first I was like "wait doesn't france use the euro, is this some kind of poorly faked bullshit" but then a little extra wikipediaing revealed that there is a "post"-colonial currency union (issuing francs pegged to the euro) over most of west africa
Edited by thirdplace ()
Belphegor posted:This is a noob materialist question, I'm sure, but what specifically does the U.S. stand to gain by destabilizing Syria? Relatedly, what did they gain from toppling Gaddafi?
Death and destruction, fire and blood, the wails and screams of a thousand thousand souls, the final breaths of a million starved children offered up to the dark gods,
tears posted:Belphegor posted:
This is a noob materialist question, I'm sure, but what specifically does the U.S. stand to gain by destabilizing Syria? Relatedly, what did they gain from toppling Gaddafi?
Death and destruction, fire and blood, the wails and screams of a thousand thousand souls, the final breaths of a million starved children offered up to the dark gods,
ya taht's what I thought
Belphegor posted:This is a noob materialist question, I'm sure, but what specifically does the U.S. stand to gain by destabilizing Syria? Relatedly, what did they gain from toppling Gaddafi?
colddays, marxultor and tears answered correctly
for more specifics see, e.g., the rush to feed on libya's still-warm corpse after the structures regulating foreign distributors & contracts were removed
Max Forte, Slouching Towards Sirte posted:Fast forward to 2011: just as the Libyan government began to crumble after six months of continuous NATO bombings of its troops and civilian brigades, the U.S. immediately rushed in to secure business opportunities, especially the kinds from which they had been blocked before. As battles raged in Sirte in late September 2011, U.S. Ambassador Gene Cretz returned to Tripoli just a week after those loyal to the Al-Fateh Revolution were beaten back, and he immediately “participated in a State Department conference call with about 150 American companies hoping to do business with Libya.” Which kinds of business opportunities most occupied Cretz? Infrastructure. As he told the media, “even in Qaddafi’s time they were starting from A to Z in terms of building infrastructure.” Cretz added: “If we can get American companies here on a fairly big scale, which we will try to do everything we can to do that, then this will redound to improve the situation in the United States with respect to our own jobs.” While “oil is the jewel in the crown of Libyan natural resources,” Cretz stated that it was never the “predominant reason” for U.S. intervention— indeed, to say so would neglect all of the other economic, strategic, and military reasons. The New York Times’ correspondent observed that Cretz’s remarks were “a rare nod to the tacit economic stakes in the Libyan conflict for the United States and other Western countries,” and that his comments “underlined the American eagerness for a cut of any potential profits” (Kirkpatrick, 2011/9/22).
As the fighting ravaged Sirte, Tayyip Erdogan, Prime Minister of Turkey and a NATO member, also visited Tripoli, “hoping to reap political and economic dividends from Libya’s new rulers.” Turkey had contracts totalling around$15 billion U.S. in Libya. As for other leading NATO members that actively led in the attack on Libya, France and the UK were told by Libya’s NTC that “their support may be repaid in business contracts” (Logan & Farge, 2011/9/16).
As early as a week before Muammar Gaddafi was murdered in Sirte on October 20, a delegation of 80 French companies arrived in Tripoli to meet with the new NTC regime and the new British defence minister, Philip Hammond, urged British companies to “pack their suitcases” and head to Tripoli. Western security, construction and infrastructure companies turned the NTC’s dependency on and support for NATO into a competitive advantage, as they spotted profit-making opportunities in Libya. Such opportunities were just starting to diminish in Afghanistan and Iraq: “entrepreneurs are abuzz about the business potential of a country with huge needs and the oil to pay for them.” “Whilst speculation continues regarding Qaddafi’s killing,” Trango Special Projects said on its Web site, “are you and your business ready to return to Libya?” (Shane, 2011/10/28).
Finally, Mahmoud Jibril’s comments deserve mention. Jibril served first with the National Economic Development Board under Gaddafi from 2007 to 2011, and then joined the NTC and toured as its “Head of International Affairs” before serving as an interim Prime Minister under the NTC. He later resigned from the NTC altogether and made some stunning declarations that few seemed to want to discuss. In one interview, Jibril stated quite plainly: “every foreign power you can think of is trying to look after its own interests in Libya. No one is excluded. This is the name of the game. This is politics. Countries have interests in Libya and everybody is looking out for their own” (Campell, 2011). Far from being a humanitarian mission to save lives, deeper interests were at work, according to Jibril himself, someone with intimate familiarity with a wide range of deals that were struck behind closed doors as NATO bombed Libya.
also, i think i've linked this before but
In connection with Syria impeding the achievement of US goals in the Middle East, the Congressional Research Service made the following points in 2005 about the Syrian economy: It is “largely state-controlled;” it is “dominated by…(the) public sector, which employs 73% of the labour force;” and it is “still based largely on Soviet models.”
that's a whole lot of labor-power to free up by toppling the state. primitive accumulation, baby.
www.bbc.com/news/business-37716463
re: reason to overthrow assad, here is some background into him rejecting the qatari pipeline option and going for iran/russia pipeline in 2009
http://www.counterpunch.org/2016/09/15/assads-death-warrant/[
here is a french politician saying the same from the french side of things
getfiscal posted:Notably that report came out before Assad agreed in 2005 to a broad neoliberal reform package which was aimed at ending consumer subsidies and encouraging foreign direct investment. (Although Assad being a right-wing leader isn't a good reason to support 'regime change', obviously.)
https://gowans.wordpress.com/2016/10/22/the-revolutionary-distemper-in-syria-that-wasnt/
this recent article counters the 'common knowledge' on the western left that bashar is a tyrant with no legitimacy using liberal western media's own reporting... but also disputes that he was right wing...
Finally, the Ba’athist leader included in his updated constitution a provision that had been introduced by his father in 1973, a step toward real, genuine democracy—a provision which decision-makers in Washington, with their myriad connections to the banking and corporate worlds, could hardly tolerate. The constitution would require that at minimum half the members of the People’s Assembly be drawn from the ranks of peasants and workers.
If Assad was a neo-liberal, he certainly was one of the world’s oddest devotees of the ideology.
also, to what extent did the 2011-2012 reforms counteract them? thinking in particular of this:
April 4th 2011
Mr Assad raises wages and pensions and lowers tax rates
On March 24th Mr Assad issued three decrees conferring significant financial benefits on public-sector employees and on low-wage earners in general, together with a fourth decree amending sections of a 2004 law covering the sale of land in border areas. The package of measures was clearly aimed at garnering popular support in the wake of the protests that had started in mid-March and which had been particularly intense in Deraa, a town near the border with Jordan. The measures were as follows:
- Decree 40. All public-sector wages will be increased by S£1,500 (US$32) per month with effect from April 1st. The Ministry of Finance has specified that this will entail consolidating the heating and cost-of-living living allowances into the monthly salary. An additional increase of 30% of the new consolidated salary will be awarded for all employees earning less than S£10,000 per month, and workers earning more than this will get a 20% raise. The minimum wage for all workers in both the public sector and the private sector will increase to S£9,765.
- Decree 41. The basic state pension will be increased by S£1,500 per month, again through consolidating heating and cost-of-living allowances. There will also be a 25% increase in the consolidated pension, and the minimum level for a state pension will be raised to S£9,390 from S£6,010.
- Decree 42. The personal income tax bands will change, based on raising the initial threshold to S£10,000 per month, from S£6,010. The rate for the first band, for earnings up to S£15,000, is 5%, rising to 7% for earning up to S£20,000, 9% up to S£25,000, 11% up to S£30,000 and 13% for earnings of S£38,000, corresponding to the top grade in the public sector. The highest rate of income tax will remain at 22% and will be levied on earnings over S£75,000 per month.
- Decree 43. Several articles in Law 41 of 2004 relating to the exploitation of land in border areas have been amended so as to tighten the condition for the purchase and development of such land. There have been complaints in many border regions that the law had enabled well-connected business groups to set up highly profitable commercial ventures in such areas, including Deraa, which had damaged the interests of local people.
Aspie_Muslim_Economist_ posted:Nothing short of abject subservience to US interests is enough, I suppose.
like i said - not woke and intersectional enough
To misquote Celine, when you're in, you're in pic.twitter.com/QTZI3DOzd3
— LENIN_LOVER69 (@PissPigGranddad) October 24, 2016