Persian Gulf & Middle East Military News, Reports, Data, etc.

delft

Brigadier
A lot has been happening in and around Syria, very importantly the recovery of Qusair by the government. But I found the article by Ambassador M K Bhadrakumar also very interesting:
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TURKEY IN TURMOIL
Et tu, Gul? Then fall, Erdogan
By M K Bhadrakumar

One thing that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said before pushing ahead on Tuesday with a four-day tour of the Maghreb tour still hangs suspended in the air. Hardly anyone picked it up. He said Turkish intelligence is looking into possible links between the recent incidents in Istanbul, scene of violently suppressed protests, and foreign elements.

Erdogan hinted that some leads are already available with the Turkish intelligence. "Our intelligence work is ongoing. It is not possible to reveal their names. But we will have meetings with their heads."

His words suggested that there might have been concerted foreign
TURKEY IN TURMOIL
Et tu, Gul? Then fall, Erdogan
By M K Bhadrakumar

One thing that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said before pushing ahead on Tuesday with a four-day tour of the Maghreb tour still hangs suspended in the air. Hardly anyone picked it up. He said Turkish intelligence is looking into possible links between the recent incidents in Istanbul, scene of violently suppressed protests, and foreign elements.

Erdogan hinted that some leads are already available with the Turkish intelligence. "Our intelligence work is ongoing. It is not possible to reveal their names. But we will have meetings with their heads."

His words suggested that there might have been concerted foreign interference. Logically, the eyes turn toward Damascus, Tehran and Baghdad. But then, Erdogan also blamed Twitter for inciting unrest. He said,

There is now a menace, which is called Twitter. The best examples of lies can be found there. To me, social media is the worst menace to society.

The regimes in Syria, Baghdad and Iran should be out of their minds to dabble in the US-controlled social media as instruments of their regional policies. Besides, the reactions of the three countries to the Turkish unrest are conspicuously reticent under the current circumstances of intense mutual hostility, and quite apparently they have been taken by surprise that the ground beneath the feet of the Sultan in Istanbul could shift just like that.

Straws in the wind
What stands out in sharp contrast is the shrill, intrusive reaction of the United States. Washington has so far made six statements regarding the unrest in Turkey through the past five-day period since May 31, mostly at the level of the White House. These statements have been highly critical of Erdogan.

They viewed the protests as peaceful acts by ordinary law-abiding citizens exercising their rights to free expression. They expressed concern about the government's response to the protesters and "expected" Ankara to work through the issue while "respecting its [Turkey's] citizens' rights".

The White House considered that the Turkish government resorted to excessive use of force and called for the events to be investigated. Secretary of State John Kerry added that the Obama administration is "deeply concerned" by the large number of people who have been injured. Kerry said:

We are concerned by the reports of excessive use of force by police. We obviously hope there will be a full investigation of those incidents and full restraint from the police force with respect to those incidents. We urge all people involved ... to avoid any provocations or violence.

The US has taken up the matter with the Turkish government through diplomatic channels.

Indeed, something is strange in this overreaction, and it is not only as regards the disproportionate and harsh US pronouncements - considering that Erdogan and President Barack Obama had some special chemistry between them - but also because the US reaction looks suspiciously defensive.

These are early days, and firm conclusions cannot yet be made as to what exactly is happening in Turkey. However, there are straws in the wind.

Hereby hangs a tale
No sooner had Erdogan's jet taken off from the Essenboga airport on his scheduled trip to North Africa than Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc visited the presidential palace in Ankara to meet President Abdullah Gul. The two leaders thereupon publicly took a radically different approach than Erdogan's to the ongoing unrest.

Erdogan had summarily dismissed the protesters as "ideologically" motivated hoodlums with links to foreign powers and had no word of regret for the police excesses. Arinc, on the contrary, acknowledged that the original protesters were "right and legitimate" and the police methods were brutal, for which he even apologized. Indeed, he has since agreed to meet the protesters on Wednesday.

Again, Erdogan was harsh on the opposition Republican People's Party for inciting the protests, whereas Gul received its leader at the presidential palace for a discussion.

Erdogan argues that he won a handsome mandate in the last parliamentary poll, which gave him the prerogative to implement his programs, but Gul contradicts him that democracy is about more than holding elections.

To be sure, the secularists and liberals and the Kemalist camp have promptly greeted Gul as more conciliatory, more receptive to democratic ideals and generally more pro-Western than Erdogan.

Curiously, Erdogan, Gul and Arinc are being described in the same breath as the "founding fathers" of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), although Turks all over would know that Erdogan is as peerless as any sultan in their history.

And the intriguing part is that this characterization of an AKP "Troika" is the handiwork of the Zaman newspaper. Of course, Zaman is run by the followers of the hugely powerful faith-based Fetullah Gulen movement. Hereby hangs a tale.

Paragon of 'moderate' Islam
Although the Gulen movement had supported the Islamist AKP's march to power, a distance had developed between Erdogan and Gulen in recent years. Erdogan has been plainly indifferent toward Gulen and averse to submitting to him. In contrast, after meeting Gulen recently, Arinc showered praise on him in a TV interview and pointedly called him as "Hocaefendi", a title that his followers use for him. Arinc said Gulen is the "conscience of 75 million people" in Turkey.

Arinc's meeting with Gulen took place in Philadelphia during Erdogan's recent visit to the US, but the prime minister himself kept away.

Now, all this may seem out of context unless one has the background of Gulen, who heads one of the most influential movements in the Islamic world and which is regarded as drawing on the moderate mystical traditions of Sufism. He fled Turkey in 1999 amid accusations of plotting to overthrow the secular government at that time and has been living in exile on a 10-hectare haven in the mountains of eastern Pennsylvania.

According to a well-researched report by the New York Times, his Green Card application shows that Gulen's request to remain in the United States was endorsed by a former top official dealing with the Middle East in the Central Intelligence Agency. [1]

The mystery deepens when it transpires that the CIA's case officer also is an authority on the "Arab Spring" and political Islam, with a long career track specializing in the use of Islam as an instrument of US regional policies.

Suffice to say, Zaman newspaper has opened the heavy artillery on Erdogan and is exhorting Gul and Arinc to take on the mantle of leadership. Zaman commentaries have virtually called for a revolt against Erdogan by AKP stalwarts.

Erdogan faces an existential challenge. The heart of the matter is that he has grown in stature through the past decade in power taking Turkey to unprecedented heights of prosperity and striding the Arab Muslim world as a role model.

In the process, paradoxically, it has also become increasingly difficult for the US to harness his energy. Erdogan has become uncontrollable - be it in his stance on Syria, support for Iraqi Kurdistan, Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, or his visceral hatred toward Israel.

Waving the red flag
Woven into all this is also a congruence of interests between the US and Gulen in weakening and destabilizing Erdogan. From Gulen's perspective, Erdogan not only defies him, but is also accelerating a historic compromise with the PKK, a Kurdish group that he is violently opposed to. By the way, a WikiLeaks cable dated 2009 by the then US ambassador to Turkey, James F Jeffrey, assessed that the Gulen movement was strong in the police and security agencies.

Interestingly, Ambassador Jeffrey wrote,

The political context for conversations about Gulen is complicated because President Gul is himself seen by almost all of our contacts as a Gulenist, while Prime Minister Erdogan is not. Indeed, some of our contacts have argued that Erdogan is so firmly outside the Gulen camp that Gulen loyalists view him as a liability. At the same time, the Republican People's Party and other AKP opponents of the ruling Justice and Development Party are quick to accuse the US of working covertly to prop up Gulen, allegedly to weaken Turkey's secular foundation to produce a "model" moderate Islamic nation. [2]

Make no mistake, Turkey's unrest is not going to wither away. Gulen is making his epic move to bring about an "in-house" political coup within the AKP to bring Gul to the fore. Gulen has Washington's support for this "regime change" in Turkey. The Middle East situation has reached a criticality, and who rules Turkey becomes of seminal importance.

But will Erdogan walk into the sunset without a fight? Such meekness wouldn't be the hallmark of a sultan. Marc Champion, editor at Bloomberg, is spot on:

If the president is able to calm the protests before Erdogan returns in three days - as the prime minister says he hopes - Gul will get the credit. If Gul can create a new coalition across the opposition parties, he would be a great choice to lead them and would provide a good change for Turkey. But don't count on it ... Erdogan isn't just a political bruiser. He is a force of nature, and has a genius for turning events to his advantage. The party was built and succeeded around Erdogan's popular appeal, not Gul's. [3]

Meanwhile, the Syrian crisis has introduced another dimension into this. Gul is a protege of the Saudi royal family, whereas Erdogan shares the Qatari Emir's passion for the Muslim Brotherhood.

Evidently, Israel is terribly excited about the outcome of the turmoil in Turkey. The Ha'aretz newspaper has begun a "live blog" on the happenings. Equally, Tehran has counseled Erdogan to show "prudence", virtually waving the red flag, despite all the differences with him, that powerful forces could be arrayed against him.

Notes:
1. Turkey Feels Sway of Reclusive Cleric in the US, The New York Times, April 24, 2012.
2. See here.
3. Is Turkey's President Playing Good Cop to Erdogan's Bad Cop?, Bloomberg, June 4, 2013.


M K Bhadrakumar served as a career diplomat in the Indian Foreign Service for over 29 years, with postings including India's ambassador to Uzbekistan (1995-1998) and to Turkey (1998-2001).

(Copyright 2013 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)
The sponsors of the rebels are acting to a considerable extent at cross-purposes and after sacrificing 80 000 Syrians seem to be unable to defeat the government except by direct military intervention - perhaps by the Turkish army? The modernization of Turkey over the last ten years have created a huge debt, largely to Gulf countries. They might accept such an invasion in lieu of repayment but it might also do immense damage to the Turkish economy and to those of many other countries. Military action by France and/or the UK will also be difficult to pay for by those countries.
 

delft

Brigadier
Pepe Escobar on the developments in Syria:
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THE ROVING EYE
Hezbollah don't take no mess
By Pepe Escobar

The "Friends of Syria" are appalled. Their much vaunted "rebel held" stronghold of Qusayr is gone. This BBC headline sums it all up: "Syria conflict: US condemns siege of Qusayr."

For White House spokesman Jay Carney, "pro-government forces", to win, needed help from by their "partners in tyranny" - Hezbollah and Iran. Right: so the "rebels" weaponized by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the CIA, not to mention jihadis of the Jabhat al-Nusra kind, are partners in what, "freedom and democracy"?

Spin out, facts in. This is a monster strategic defeat for the NATO-Gulf Cooperation Council-Israel axis. [1] The supply lines from Lebanon to Homs of the Not Exactly Free Syrian Army (FSA) gangs and the odd jihadi are gone. The Syrian Arab Army (SAA) will next move to Homs and the whole Homs governorate. The final stop will be two or three Aleppo suburbs still controlled by the FSA.

There's absolutely no way Qusayr can be spun in the West as yet another "tactical withdrawal" by the FSA. The rebels insist they "withdrew". Nonsense. It was a rout.

This, in a nutshell, is how it happened. Qusayr had been under control of the Homs-based al-Farouk brigade, part of the FSA, for no less than 18 months. Six months ago, the SAA had already cleared the Syrian north-south highway, not far from the city - essential for all Damascus-Aleppo business.

Qusayr was strategically crucial as a key weaponizing depot for the FSA; Sunnis in Lebanon were relentlessly shipping them weapons through the Bekaa valley. So the first thing the SAA did was to encircle Qusayr. Then Hezbollah stepped in - as most of Qusayr's population of 30,000 had already left for either Lebanon or Jordan.

The final, wily SAA tactic was to allow the Aleppo-based al-Tawhid brigade to sneak into Qusayr to help the al-Farouk. So when these twin top FSA brigades were properly encircled, the SAA pounced. Virtually no civilians were in town, apart from a few farmers nearby. There was no "genocide".

And then Paris went chemical

When will the NATO-GCC axis ever learn? Hezbollah's Sheikh Nasrallah staked his reputation by going on air and promising a victory. Once again, he delivered. Contrary to Western spin, Hezbollah did not do it by itself; it was a combination of SAA, Hezbollah and Iranian specialists applying superior tactics and displaying crack urban warfare knowledge.

It's also easy to forget that a prime wet dream among US Think Tanklanders these past few months was the possibility of pitting Hezbollah against al-Qaeda-linked jihadis inside Syria. They got their wish.

Hezbollah fighters though don't need to overextend themselves and venture inside Syria further than Qusayr - which is roughly 10 km from the Lebanese border. Their "mission" is in practice to secure the Syrian side of the Lebanese border.

And talk about precious timing; the "fall" of Qusayr totally blew away a monster chemical weapons propaganda orchestrated by Paris. French Minister of Foreign Affairs Laurent Fabius is breathlessly spinning that "Bashar's army" used sarin gas against the "rebels". French media is gung-ho for a military intervention. [2]

There is a slight problem though. Buried in sensationalist reports in Le Monde or Liberation is the fact that the French scientific analyses - based on two samples, one of them collected by Le Monde reporters - do not specify who used sarin, the government or the "rebels". Even UN experts, in their official report, have admitted as much.

So once again - don't mess with Hezbollah. One can imagine the ear-splitting wrath levels in Washington, London, Paris, Tel Aviv, Riyadh and Doha. Their "response" - or revenge - may include setting Lebanon on fire. The usual imperial courtiers, Brookings Institution-style, are already mourning a Middle East prey to an "aggressive Russian-Iranian axis". [3] What about the aggressive NATO-GCC-Israel axis bent on totally destroying Syria to install an Islamist, pro-Western puppet state?

The Susan and Samantha show
And now, to compound the drama, we have Susan Rice as the new US National Security Adviser and Samantha Power as the new US ambassador at the UN Security Council. It's always helpful to remember that along with Hillary Clinton, these were the Three Graces of "humanitarian intervention" that forcefully pushed for the bombing and destruction of Libya.

Whatever replay strategy Susan and Samantha may come up with, Russia and China will veto. Moreover, even the Washington establishment admits all options are noxious. [4] To top it off, Turkey has been plunged into the Taksim/Occupy Gezi/Down with the Dictator maelstrom - and the last thing an embattled Erdogan will be thinking about is to further empower a bunch of "rebel" losers.

As for the Geneva II talks - co-sponsored by Washington and Moscow - their next preparation meeting will only happen in three weeks or so. This means that even if Geneva is on - and that's a major "if", considering the "rebels" in disarray are bound to boycott - it will be in early July or even later. Plenty of time for the SAA to keep advancing. But also plenty of time for the NATO-GCC axis to keep denying the "Syrian people" the fateful decision over who should lead them out of this ghastly proxy war.

Notes: 1. North Atlantic Treaty Organization-Gulf Cooperation Council.
2. See here (in French).
3. Iran Outmaneuvers U.S. in the Syrian Proxy War, Bloomberg News, June 5, 2013.
4. The No-Plan Zone, Foreign Policy, June 5, 2013.


Pepe Escobar is the author of Globalistan: How the Globalized World is Dissolving into Liquid War (Nimble Books, 2007) and Red Zone Blues: a snapshot of Baghdad during the surge. He also wrote Obama does Globalistan (Nimble Books, 2009). He may be reached at [email protected].

(Copyright 2013 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)
We do live in interesting times. Part of the aftermath of this drama might be who was responsible for this "civil war" and should therefore be forced to pay compensation.
 

plawolf

Lieutenant General
Considering the geographical location of Turkey and the events of the recent times it's great that Erdogan has steered the country's through 6-7% annual GDP growth, given Turkey a very robust military industry and has built Turkey into a modem country, does anyone know the planned high speed railways under construction inside Turkey?

Erdogan is right for Turkey, he has done what no one else has done, the defence spending is increasing every year, he has worked hard

As a Pakistani of origin I can only wish Turkey the very best, these youth idiots who want more relaxed laws on alcohol sales want more drugs and discos need to be put back to thier homes with a big police water cannon, but Turkey has a safety net no one else has, the military who's job it is to preserve the constitution

You must have read very different history books to me, because in the books I have read, the Turkish military and their generals had been a blight on Turkey and used to routinely trample the constitution until they were finally reined in. The idea of unchaining that old beast is likely the last thing the vast majority of Turks would want.

You perhaps would also like to actually take a real look at the kinds of people who are protesting and why, because anyone who has actually seen just how diverse they are (in every sense of the word, be it in terms of age, occupation, religious views of ethnicity, indeed the only thing that all these different groups and people's share is their dislike for Erdogen) will not be able to honestly lump them together and dismiss them as casually and dismissively you have.

Erdogan might have done good things for Turkey, but he has more than his fair share of personal character flaws that has earned him plenty of detractors and enemies and made plenty of mistakes along with his accomplishments.

I confess to only holding a casual interest in Turkey and will not claim any great insight, but even a casual observer can plainly see that there is something seriously wrong when protests of such magnitude erupts pretty much right across the country almost spontaneously and which an attract such a large and diverse following.

I can understand and respect your loyalty to Turkey, but I think it should go without saying that your loyalty should be towards the Turkish people and nation and not just its leader. If the leader has lost his way and is becoming an obstacle to the advancement of Turkey, a true friend of the Turkish people would not berate them for expressing their concern and disquiet.
 

asif iqbal

Lieutenant General
If you switch to CNN right now you will see Erdogans reception at Istanbul airport, it's late there but the streets are filled with supporters

He won a land slide victory in the electrons, he was democratically elected and his party has done great achievements for Turkey

The subway project took years in the planning and billions in FDI and investment, work has stopped time after time due to archaeological finds and all history has be preserved in the excavation works, do any of these idiots on streets demonstrating know anything about what they are even doing? This will only take Turkey backwards not forward

You have one person who is trying to build a country, just signed a peace deal which ended 30 year war with the PKK, his work is endless

If people don't like him or his party then wait till the next elections and vote him out, Turkey is not a Arab county he can't stay if he doesn't win, firstly these idiots voted him to power for last 10 years now when they get desperate they start demonstrating!? What the hell they can go do one, make up your mind for heavens sake

Erdogan since 1994, he took part in 3 general elections, 3 local elections, 1 by-election and 2 referenarms and has not lost any of them and was mayor of Istanbul, his last victory was a landslide, well he must be doing something right
 

thunderchief

Senior Member
Looks like US decided to arm Syrian rebels , possibly enforce no-fly zone . In case this turns out to be beginning of the WW3 , it was nice knowing you guys ;) On the other hand , at least we will have a chance to really see how good are some weapon systems in real combat : (S-300 against Western aircraft and such , Yakhont missiles against ships etc ...) :D:D



US Confirms Syrian Government Used Chemical Weapons



The United States has concluded that Syria used chemical weapons against rebels, a U.S. official confirmed to ABC News.

President Obama and his administration had delayed making such a determination even though other countries had accused the regime of Syrian President Bashar al Assad of using sarin gas on rebel forces.

The use of chemical weapons has long been considered a "red line" by President Obama that could prompt more forceful action against the Syrian regime. ............


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SinoSoldier

Colonel
Looks like US decided to arm Syrian rebels , possibly enforce no-fly zone . In case this turns out to be beginning of the WW3 , it was nice knowing you guys ;) On the other hand , at least we will have a chance to really see how good are some weapon systems in real combat : (S-300 against Western aircraft and such , Yakhont missiles against ships etc ...) :D:D



US Confirms Syrian Government Used Chemical Weapons



The United States has concluded that Syria used chemical weapons against rebels, a U.S. official confirmed to ABC News.

President Obama and his administration had delayed making such a determination even though other countries had accused the regime of Syrian President Bashar al Assad of using sarin gas on rebel forces.

The use of chemical weapons has long been considered a "red line" by President Obama that could prompt more forceful action against the Syrian regime. ............


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I think the focal point will rather be the Yakhont missiles. Perhaps this should teach China a lesson or two on how to counter India's BrahMos and possibly suggest improvements for the YJ-12.
 

muddie

Junior Member
Looks like US decided to arm Syrian rebels , possibly enforce no-fly zone . In case this turns out to be beginning of the WW3 , it was nice knowing you guys ;) On the other hand , at least we will have a chance to really see how good are some weapon systems in real combat : (S-300 against Western aircraft and such , Yakhont missiles against ships etc ...) :D:D



US Confirms Syrian Government Used Chemical Weapons



The United States has concluded that Syria used chemical weapons against rebels, a U.S. official confirmed to ABC News.

President Obama and his administration had delayed making such a determination even though other countries had accused the regime of Syrian President Bashar al Assad of using sarin gas on rebel forces.

The use of chemical weapons has long been considered a "red line" by President Obama that could prompt more forceful action against the Syrian regime. ............


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I find it strange that the Western media/general population has turned on the rebels but the governments still support them. Usually the media and the government actions go hand in hand towards one direction, similar to the Libyan Civil war. It seems that the US is shooting itself on the foot by reporting the atrocities committed by the rebels such as executing a 15 year old boy, Al-Queda within its ranks etc but also at the same time report how the US wants to arm/aid the rebels. The negative reporting on the rebels really sways public opinion against them hence the US is making itself look bad to its citizens by openly helping the rebels, especially militarily now.

If the US/NATO wanted to support the rebels wouldn't it of been easier to gain home support by reporting on atrocities committed by SAA and Hezbollah instead?
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
I find it strange that the Western media/general population has turned on the rebels but the governments still support them. Usually the media and the government actions go hand in hand towards one direction, similar to the Libyan Civil war. It seems that the US is shooting itself on the foot by reporting the atrocities committed by the rebels such as executing a 15 year old boy, Al-Queda within its ranks etc but also at the same time report how the US wants to arm/aid the rebels. The negative reporting on the rebels really sways public opinion against them hence the US is making itself look bad to its citizens by openly helping the rebels, especially militarily now.

If the US/NATO wanted to support the rebels wouldn't it of been easier to gain home support by reporting on atrocities committed by SAA and Hezbollah instead?


That worked once, when the US and the West were in control of the world media and soft power back than, but now, we have so many different sources of internet news and networks to bring out more various view points. As a result people are beginning to learn to see things in different perspectives instead of a bias one point of view.
 

plawolf

Lieutenant General
I find it strange that the Western media/general population has turned on the rebels but the governments still support them. Usually the media and the government actions go hand in hand towards one direction, similar to the Libyan Civil war. It seems that the US is shooting itself on the foot by reporting the atrocities committed by the rebels such as executing a 15 year old boy, Al-Queda within its ranks etc but also at the same time report how the US wants to arm/aid the rebels. The negative reporting on the rebels really sways public opinion against them hence the US is making itself look bad to its citizens by openly helping the rebels, especially militarily now.

If the US/NATO wanted to support the rebels wouldn't it of been easier to gain home support by reporting on atrocities committed by SAA and Hezbollah instead?

That is because firstly, in the case of Libya, the western governments wanted to get a piece of the action, so there was an aggressive and assertive PR campaign to pave the way for direct military intervention. The primary reason for that was because Libya's military was a joke and there was pretty much zero risk in going in and bombing the crap out of them.

With Syria, not only does the government process moderately capable air defences, the government forces also have capable foot soldiers and very effective guerrilla fighters allies in the form of Hezbollah. The proximity to Israel and Hezbollah also gives Syria retaliatory options Libya did not, that in turn could set the whole Middle East erupt in flames.

All of this means that no western government actually wants to get involved directly themselves, so they are not waging anywhere like as aggressive and co-ordinated a PR campaign, because western governments are wary of too much anti Assad PR forcing them into a corner and being pressed into direct intervention and then being punished at the polls when the body bags start coming home and the Middle East goes up in flames and the Israeli lobby in Washington and the pro-Israeli western press start looking for payback against those whose actions caused Israel to suffer as Syria implodes and disintegrates and its national arsenal of conventional and chemical weapons gets scattered to the wind and inevitably ends up in the wrong hands.
 

thunderchief

Senior Member
I find it strange that the Western media/general population has turned on the rebels but the governments still support them. Usually the media and the government actions go hand in hand towards one direction, similar to the Libyan Civil war. It seems that the US is shooting itself on the foot by reporting the atrocities committed by the rebels such as executing a 15 year old boy, Al-Queda within its ranks etc but also at the same time report how the US wants to arm/aid the rebels. The negative reporting on the rebels really sways public opinion against them hence the US is making itself look bad to its citizens by openly helping the rebels, especially militarily now.

If the US/NATO wanted to support the rebels wouldn't it of been easier to gain home support by reporting on atrocities committed by SAA and Hezbollah instead?

As we can see from recent events and discoveries , US is slowly moving from Constitutional Republic to Dictatorship . In such system public opinion is not that important . Nevertheless , there was a strong and coordinated campaign to demonize Assad regime in mainstream media and to portray rebels as innocent victims . Only , power of television is slowly vanning , more and more people relay on Internet to inform themselves .

My opinion , as a I said before , is that Western oligarchy now supports creation of Sunni Islamic Caliphate as some kind of super-state , if said Caliphate satisfies two condition :

1. To be relatively friendly towards Israel (like Saudi Arabia : just rhetoric , no concrete action against )

2. To continue to supply oil to West in exchange for dollars

I think the focal point will rather be the Yakhont missiles. Perhaps this should teach China a lesson or two on how to counter India's BrahMos and possibly suggest improvements for the YJ-12.

That would be interesting , but i don't think Western powers would move ships in range of Yakhont batteries before they make sure those batteries were destroyed in air strikes . What I would like to see is how good really is SPECTRA system deployed on Rafale aircraft and how stealthy F-22 really is against modern SAM systems .
 
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