Daarmee
behoort ook Nederland tot de zwaar misdadige of beter gezegd
terroristische organisatie die men NAVO noemt, waar we godbetert ook nog eens een enorme berg belastinggeld aan spenderen....... Het bouwen van een militaire basis op het grondgebied van een autonoom, soeverein land en tegen de wil van dit land is een oorlogsmisdaad van formaat!
Uiteraard
komen de bewuste terreurstaten met het excuus dat men verdere terreur
in Syrië wil voorkomen, terwijl de VS, GB en Frankrijk wel
samenwerken met terreurgroepen ofwel met moordenaars, verkrachters en
martelbeulen, kortom groepen waarbij de legers van de 3 voornoemde
landen en de rest van de NAVO zich prima thuis voelen.......
Natuurlijk
gaat het om een andere zaken: niet als laatste olie! Het gebied waar de bases gebouwd
zullen worden ligt in een olierijk gebied.......... Een nog onbekende oliemaatschappij uit de VS zou al olie verkopen in de regio....... Daarnaast wordt met deze bases voldaan aan de wens van Israël om Syrië op te delen, ofwel de Balkanisering van Syrië, als één van de eerste voorwaarden daartoe zet men in op het afzetten van de regering Assad.......
Nog een opvallend gegeven: het gebied dat de eerder genoemde westerse landen controleren, beschikt over de grootste watervoorraad in Syrië.........
Nog een opvallend gegeven: het gebied dat de eerder genoemde westerse landen controleren, beschikt over de grootste watervoorraad in Syrië.........
Hoe
is het mogelijk dat de rest van de wereld deze terreurstaten hun gang
laten gaan, waarvoor hebben we de VN nog? Om Rusland, China,
Noord-Korea en Iran de les te lezen??
US, UK and France Establishing New Military Bases in Syria
May
30, 2018 at 10:43 pm
Written
by Truth
In Media
The
coalition of the US, UK and France are establishing new military
bases throughout Northern Syria in support of its Kurdish-majority
proxy army, angering nearby Turkey and cementing the coalition’s
hold over Syria’s most oil rich region.
(TIM) — Despite
the fact that President Trump recently considered withdrawing U.S.
forces from Syria, the United States— along with its allies the
United Kingdom and France— are doubling down and expanding their
military presence in Northeastern Syria by establishing new military
bases near the town of Manbij. Reports of the bases first broke last
month, but were recently confirmed by Reuters. The
bases are believed to be part of a wider effort by the
U.S./U.K./France coalition to aid its military proxy force in Syria,
the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in its “resistance”
to the Turkish government.
Turkey
has long maintained that the SDF, which is largely composed of
members of the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), are
terrorists. The U.S. announcement earlier this year that they would
be using the SDF to build a “border
force”
subsequently led Turkey to invade parts of Northern Syria previously
controlled by the SDF with help from its own proxy force in Syria,
the Free Syrian Army (FSA).
After
Turkey took control of Afrin, Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan announced that
he was considering removing YPG/SDF forces from Manbij as well,
prompting the coalition forces to consolidate their positions. With
the coalition now beefing up its military presence to prevent Turkey
from encroaching further, Syria is set to become a new sore point in
Turkey’s relationship with NATO and the West.
According
to reports, the military bases are located throughout the Manbij
region, with the U.S. having at least two bases while the French are
constructing one. The U.K. does not have its own base, but its
soldiers are known
to be present in
the area and to work with U.S. and French troops stationed in Manbij.
Helil
Bozi, the commander of the Military Council of Manbij of the Syrian
Democratic Forces (SDF), told Sputnik that “the U.S. has deployed
its Special Forces units near the Sajur River thereby setting a red
line the crossing of which will be seen by the [U.S.-led] coalition
forces as an attack and will prompt retaliatory actions,” noting
that the increase in the coalition’s military presence was a direct
result of Turkey’s prior statements regarding Manbij.
Though
locals have claimed that the presence of the coalition members of the
military are aimed at Turkey, they are also likely to prevent Syrian
government forces from retaking the area. Now that the Syrian
government has successfully
removed terrorist
groups from Damascus as well as other key parts of the country, there
has been speculation that the Syrian military would turn its focus to
areas of the country occupied by foreign powers.
Indeed,
the Syrian government is very interested in recuperating the area
currently occupied by the coalition and nominally controlled by the
Kurds as it holds
95% of
the entire country’s oil and gas potential. Under Kurdish
leadership, an unknown U.S. company is already extracting and selling
oil in the region, thus making it unlikely that the U.S. would
willingly leave the area. The U.S. is also unlikely to leave its
investment in the SDF behind, having recently
allocated $550
million to arm and train the group over the next year.
In
addition, the area also boasts the country’s largest fresh water
reservoirs and over 60% of its agricultural land, making it an
invaluable bargaining chip in determining the future of Syria, a
future that coalition powers hope will remove the current Syrian
government from power and replace it with a more Western-friendly
government.
However,
the aims of the coalition appear directed more toward partition than
regime change. The U.S. has
long sought to
divide Syria in order to take control of the country’s resource
rich Northeast and to isolate the
Syrian government and, by extension, its regional
allies such
as Iran.
Though
the U.S. has played on the hopes of Kurdish nationalists, it has long
established plans for an authoritarian Wahhabist enclave in
Northeastern Syria according to a
leaked Defense Intelligence Agency document from
2012 and, more recently, courting
the Saudis to
“rebuild” the area. Furthermore, the fact that the SDF includes
militias composed of “retrained” ISIS fighters also underscores
that the coalition is more interested in controlling the region than
aiding a Kurdish nationalism project.
Though
advertised as an effort to “protect” the Kurds, the establishment
of new American
and
French military bases in Northern Syria appear to serve as protection
of the coalition’s regional ambitions and plans for the region.