Britain’s policy on Syria has just been sunk, and nobody noticed

Britain’s policy on Syria has just been sunk, and nobody noticed

PATRICK COCKBURN

Saturday 14 December 2013

World View: The West’s favoured faction is on the run, while the
Riyadh-backed rebels steadily gain ground

The final bankruptcy of American and British policy in Syria came 10
days ago as Islamic Front, a Saudi-backed Sunni jihadi group, overran
the headquarters of the Supreme Military Council of the Free Syrian
Army (FSA) at Bab al-Hawa on the Syrian side of the border with
Turkey. The FSA, along with the Syrian National Coalition, groups that
the United States and Britain have been pretending for years are at
the heart of Syrian military and political opposition, has been
discredited. The remaining FSA fighters are in flight, have changed
sides, or are devoting all their efforts to surviving the onslaught
from jihadi or al-Qa’ida-linked brigades.

The US and Britain stopped the delivery of non-lethal aid to the
supply depot at Bab al-Hawa as the implications of the disaster sank
in. The West’s favourite rebel commander, General Salim Idris, was on
the run between Turkey and his former chief supporter and paymaster,
Qatar. Turkey closed the border, the other side of which is now
controlled by the Islamic Front. The so-called moderate wing of the
Syrian insurgency has very limited influence, but its representatives
are still being urged by Washington and London to attend the peace
conference in Geneva on 22 January to negotiate Bashar al-Assad’s
departure from power.

Confusion over what is happening is so great that Western leaders may
not pay as much of a political price at home as they should for the
failure of their Syrian policy. But it is worth recalling that the
Syrian National Coalition and the FSA are the same people for whom the
US and UK almost went to war in August, and saw as candidates to
replace Assad in power in Damascus. The recent debacle shows how right
public opinion in both countries was to reject military intervention.

Who are the winners in the new situation? One is Assad because the
opposition to him – which started as a popular uprising against a
cruel, corrupt and oppressive dictatorship in 2011 – has become a
fragmented movement dominated by al-Qa’ida umbrella organisation the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil); the other al-Qa’ida
franchisee, the al-Nusra Front; and the Islamic Front, consisting of
six or seven large rebel military formations numbering an estimated
50,000 fighters, whose uniting factor is Saudi money and an extreme
Sunni ideology similar to Saudi Arabia’s version of Islam.

The Saudis see this alliance as capable of fighting pro-Assad forces
as well as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, but Riyadh’s
objections to the latter appears to be based on its independence of
Saudi control rather than revulsion at its record of slaughtering
Shia, Alawi, Christians, Armenians, Kurds, Turkomans or any dissenting
Sunni.

The allegation of Saudi control is becoming easier to substantiate.
Until a year ago, the Saudis stayed somewhat in the background when it
came to funding the Syrian rebels, in which the leading role was
played by Qatar in association with Turkey. But the failure of the
rebels to win and US anger that the Qataris and Turks had allowed much
of the aid to go to jihadis led to an important change this summer,
when Saudi Arabia took over from Qatar as chief supporter of the
rebels.

An interesting example of just how hands-on this Saudi direction has
become is illustrated by a fascinating interview given by a top
defector from the FSA to Isil, Saddam al-Jamal. Commander of the Liwa
Allah Akbar battalion, he was until recently the top FSA commander in
eastern Syria, much of which is under rebel control. He recalls that
`we used to meet with the apostates of Qatar and Saudi Arabia and with
the infidels of Western nations such as America and France in order to
receive arms and ammo or cash’. He says Western intelligence
operatives had of late been worried about the growing influence of
al-Qa’ida affiliates and repeatedly asked him why he was growing a
beard.

Jamal gives an account of a recent three-day meeting between the FSA
commanders from northern and eastern Syria with Western, Saudi,
Qatari, Emirati and Jordanian intelligence operatives. This appears to
have been soon after the Saudis took over the Syria file from the
Qataris. He says the FSA commanders, including General Idris, had a
meeting with Prince Salman bin Sultan, the Saudi deputy defence
minister who was the leading figure at the meeting. Jamal says that
Prince Salman `asked those who had plans to attack Assad positions to
present their needs for arms, ammo and money’.

The picture that Mr Jamal paints is of an FSA that was a complete pawn
to foreign intelligence agencies, which is one reason why he defected.
The Saudis subsequently decided that the FSA would not serve their
purposes, and were frustrated by America backing away from war in
Syria and confrontation with Iran. They set about using their
limitless funds to attract into alliances rebel brigades such as the
Islamic Front which would be Sunni fundamentalist, committed to the
overthrow of Assad, against political negotiations, but distinct from
al-Qa’ida. In reality, it looks highly unlikely that Saudi money will
be enough to bring down or even significantly weaken Assad though it
may be enough to keep a war going for years.

The old, supposedly moderate, opposition has been marginalised. Its
plan since 2011 has been to force a full-scale Western military
intervention as in Libya in 2011 and, when this did not happen, they
lacked an alternative strategy.

The US, Britain and France do not have many options left except to try
to control the jihadi Frankenstein’s monster that they helped create
in Syria and which is already helping destabilise Iraq and Lebanon.
Turkey may soon regret having given free passage to so many jihadi on
their way to Syria. Ankara could close its 500-mile border with Syria
or filter those who cross it. But Turkish policy in Syria and Iraq has
been so dysfunctional in the past three years that it may be too late
to correct the consequences of wrongly convincing itself that Assad
would fall.

The Geneva II peace conference on Syria looks as if it will be born
dead. In so far as the FSA and its civilian counterparts ever
repres-ented anyone in Syria they do so no longer. The armed
opposition is dominated by Saudi-sponsored Islamist brigades on the
one hand and by al-Qa’ida affiliates on the other. All US, British and
French miscalculations have produced in Syria is a re-run of
Afghanistan in the 1980s, creating a situation the ruinous
consequences of which have yet to appear. As jihadis in Syria realise
they are not going to win, they may well look for targets closer to
home.

http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/britains-policy-on-syria-has-just-been-sunk-and-nobody-noticed-9005332.html

Art Group Did Not `Harm Another’s Property’: Artists to Appeal in Co

Art Group Did Not `Harm Another’s Property’: Artists to Appeal in Court

12.14.2013 13:36 epress.am

Four members of the group Art Laboratoria (“art lab”) are appealing a
police decision to slap them with an administrative fine of 30,000 AMD
each (about $75 USD) for spray painting detained political activist
Shant Harutyunyan’s face on the National Assembly building. Recall,
the men were detained by police on Nov. 10, the same day they
graffitied the wall.

Of the two options for appeal, to complain to the superior or take the
judicial route, the activists chose the latter, since the superior of
the officers who detained them is the police chief. Furthermore, by
taking the matter to court, the artist-activists can be present during
examination of the case.

Helsinki Association of Human Rights representative, attorney Gayane
Khachatryan will be defending the artist-activists’ rights in court.
Speaking to Epress.am, the attorney said that the rationale for the
appeal is the lack of evidence in the police decision.

“The police decision was made based on Article 53 Section 2 of the
Code on Administrative Offenses, causing damage to another’s property,
[which was] based on the conclusion of the examination. This was used
as grounds that 15,000 AMD is necessary to clean up the graffiti;
meanwhile, there is no evidence that the image damaged another’s
property,” she explained.

http://www.epress.am/en/2013/12/14/art-group-did-not-harm-anothers-property-artists-to-appeal-in-court.html

Beijing: Armenia’s Aronian leads competition

Beijing: Armenia’s Aronian leads competition

December 14, 2013

Grandmaster (GM) Levon Aronian played a draw with GM Ruslan Ponomariov
(Ukraine) in the first round of the blitz chess tournament being held
within the framework of the World Mind Games in Chinese capital city
Beijing. In Rounds 2, 3 and 4, Aronian – who plays first board for the
three-time World Chess Olympiad champions and the previous World Team
Chess champions, Armenia, and who is ranked second in the FIDE
ratings – defeated GM Wang Yue (China), GM Wang Hao (China) and GM
Vassily Ivanchuk (Ukraine), respectively.

After Round 4, the Armenian GM tops the standings all by himself. In
the fifth round, Levon Aronian will face GM Péter Lékó (Hungary).

In Beijing, the Armenian GM is competing in the rapid, blitz, and
Basque system chess tournaments. Levon Aronian’s opponents are GMs
Karjakin, Grischuk, Mamedyarov, Dominguez, Ponomariov, Radjabov, Lê
Quang Liêm, Wang Hao, Wang Yue, Nepomniachtchi, Vachier-Lagrave,
Kamsky, Lékó, Ivanchuk, and Giri.

NEWS.am Sport

Ankara learned lessons from Armenian-Turkish reconciliation process

Ankara learned lessons from Armenian-Turkish reconciliation process in
2009- turkologist

December 14, 2013 | 13:18

YEREVAN. – With his visit to Armenia, Turkey’s FM Ahmet Davutoglu got
what he wanted, Armenian turkologist Artak Shakaryan said at a press
conference on Saturday.

In his words, the conditions for the normalization of
Armenian-Azerbaijani relations were discussed yet again.

`Davutoglu clearly demonstrated: Ankara has learned lessons from the
Armenian-Turkish reconciliation process in 2009, and, in
Armenian-Turkish relations, they are discussing their steps with
Azerbaijan, in advance.

`Turkish diplomacy is not aimed at the final result; the Yerevan visit
was a mere small ring in the large chain,’ Shakaryan maintained.

Reflecting on the steps taken by the Armenian side, the turkologist
stated: `We absolutely were not preparing to open the Armenian-Turkish
border. Nothing has changed four years after the signing of the
Armenian-Turkish Protocols.’

In his words, It would have been right if Thursday’s meeting, which
was held between the Armenian and the Turkish FMs, were to be held
with the participation of the media.

`For the most part, we [i.e., Armenia] are not proactive in our
policy; we need to have our own scenario on how to respond to a given
move,’ Artak Shakaryan argued.

To note, Turkish FM Ahmet Davutoglu participated, under protests, in
Thursday’s meeting of the Council of the Ministers of Foreign Affairs
of the Organization of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation. The event
was held in Armenian capital city Yerevan. Subsequently, Davutoglu met
with Armenian FM Edward Nalbandian.

http://news.am/eng/news/185428.html

ISTANBUL: Question only 1 percent of our kids could answer correctly

Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
Dec 14 2013

Question only 1 percent of our kids could answer correctly

İSMET [email protected]

The results of the PISA test were out last week, which the
Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) conducts
among its member and other participating countries or cities to test
their 15 year old students’ skills and knowledge.

If you are interested in the subject, you may have seen tiny stories
and some articles. You have not seen a comprehensive debate; whereas,
the topic of education is a matter that closely concerns almost every
family in Turkey, where there are 17.3 million students.

Most probably you have read that Turkey was again failing in PISA. We
love to beat and criticize ourselves mercilessly. The PISA results
once again made us do that and maybe some were quite satisfied with
this.

Well, what kind of a test is this PISA that it can test and compare
with each other the skills and knowledge of students in Turkey,
Finland, the US, Mexico and Korea simultaneously?

Do the aim, target and curriculum of education in all these countries
match each other that we have such a means of comparison?

The PISA test which has an incredible accumulation of knowledge and
designing behind it is based on one essential assumption: The aim of
education is to equip the student with `critical thinking’ skills.
This what the PISA essentially tests. In other words, there is no
point in looking at the PISA results and say, `How sad; we have scored
448 in the math test.’ What we need to say is this sentence: `Our
critical thinking skill is only 448 points while Shanghai has 613
points.’

Well, is the aim of our education to teach critical thinking to
students in light of the knowledge they learn in school and from other
sources?

The questions of the PISA test were secret previously, but this year
questions were disclosed for the first time.

This is one of the `6th level’ questions in math that determine the
highest level of skill:

`Helen went to the river 4 kilometers away from her house with her
bicycle in 9 minutes. On her return she used a 3-kilometer short cut
and her ride took 6 minutes. What was Helen’s average speed of the
whole journey?’

The 15-year-old students from China’s Shanghai city were the most
successful in this question with 31 percent of them answering this
question and other questions on the same level correctly.

Only 1 percent of the 15-year-old students taking the same test from
Turkey have correctly answered the level 6 questions, which also
included this question.

I am sure our 15-year-old kids are able to answer much tougher
questions in the math field in all those kinds of central exams they
sit. But when it comes to reading, interpreting and forming simple
connections, obviously we stumble.

Actually if we can find why our children are having difficulty in
reaching the correct answer, that is 28 kilometers per hour after two
simple additions and a multiplication, we will then be able to find
our huge system problem in education.

Dare to criticize false information!

My son is 10 years old and he is a 4th grade elementary school
students. I looked at his class notes the other day and I saw that
after World War I, it seems that Armenians had invaded the east of
Turkey and we, during the Liberation War, not only fought against the
Greeks in the west but had also fought against the Armenian invasion
in the east.

Is it possible to reach critical thinking with this utterly false
information? If my son told his teacher in class, `No dear teacher, it
was the Russians not the Armenians who invaded the east of Turkey but
even before the World War I ended, Turkey had taken back the entire
east from the Russian army, including Kars and Ardahan it had lost
much before; we have actually never fought with Armenia,’ I wonder how
my son’s school life would be from that point onwards?

We are trying to teach our son critical thinking at home; we are
encouraging him but look, our son is encountering `national lies’ at
school. And he is taking serious lessons while is only 10 on living
his life with these lies and spending his life in this hypocrisy.

*İsmet Berkan is a columnist for daily Hürriyet in which this piece
was published Dec 10. It was translated into English by the Daily News
staff.

December/14/2013

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/question-only-1-percent-of-our-kids-could-answer-correctly.aspx?pageID=238&nID=59548&NewsCatID=396

Chess: GM Niaz loses to Armenian Samvel in Kolkata Chess

The Financial Express (Bangladesh)
December 9, 2013 Monday

GM Niaz loses to Armenian Samvel in Kolkata Chess

Bangladesh

Bangladesh, Dec. 9 — Bangladeshi GM Niaz Murshed of Dhaka Mohammedan
SC lost to Armenian GM Ter-Sahakyan Samvel in the 3rd round match of
the SREI International Grandmaster Chess Tournament held in Town Hall
of Kolkata Saturday, reports UNB.

After the 3rd round match, Niaz Murshed bagged two points from three matches.

Mohammad Sharif Hossain of Titas Club and Zoar Haque Prodhan earned
one point each while FM Debaraj Chatterjee of Titas Club bagged 0.5
point after the 3rd round.

In the other 3rd round matches, Sharif beat Saidul Islam Masum,
Debaraj lost to Karthik V AP of India, Sajjad Kishore lost to Harini
of India and Saimon Siddiqur Rahman lost to Krishna Thapa of Nepal.

Yerevan offers Turks a new road map for the normalization of Armenia

Aravot newspaper [Armenian], Armenia
Dec 10 2013

Yerevan offers Turks a new road map for the normalization of
Armenian-Turkish relations

[Translated from Armenian]

A source in the Armenian Foreign Ministry said that Armenia has
developed a new road map for the normalization of Armenian-Turkish
relations forwarded 10 days ago via unidentified channels personally
to [Turkish Foreign Minister] Ahmet Davutoglu.

It is clear that [Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip] Erdogan’s
government which started its tenure with slogans like “zero problems
with neighbours” and currently having reached a level of “serious
problems with all neighbours” has a task of saving the face in the
international arena and in essence, is not against a serious
discussion of the Armenian road map under the condition of strict
confidentiality.

The same source claims that the map is concentrating on three specific
points:

1. Turkey should publicly recognize the fact of the Armenian genocide
[in 1915], its responsibility for it, and apologize for it to the
Armenians worldwide.

2. Turkey should open the Armenian border [sealed in 1993] and
establish diplomatic relations with Armenia.

3. Subsequently, Turkey might be involved in the efforts of peaceful
settlement of the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict and be allowed to
implement non-governmental projects aimed at checking
[Armenian-Azerbaijani] aggressive rhetoric, preventing border
incidents, withdrawing snipers, and preparing societies for peace.

It is believed that within the framework of Davutoglu’s visit to [the
Armenian capital of] Yerevan, he will have the opportunity to inform
[Armenian Foreign Minister] Edvard Nalbandyan on Ankara’s position on
the road map.

New Video Camera in Exchange for Her Silence: Armenian Activist Refu

New Video Camera in Exchange for Her Silence: Armenian Activist
Refuses Police Deal

12.14.2013 13:14 epress.am

The police offered human rights activist Lala Aslikyan a deal,
promising that they will display “good will” toward her and buy her a
new video camera to replace the one they seized from her if she stops
complaining and says that police have returned the (original) video
camera to her. Aslikyan conveyed this news to Epress.am on Friday. The
activist, however, refused the police “deal,” saying she doesn’t enter
into deals.

“They say they will purchase a video camera of equal value and give it
to me; meanwhile, no action is being taken to penalize the police
officer [who took the camera]. They also said that my video camera has
been found, but it’s broken. I asked them to return the memory card
and said I need it to film, but they refused, explaining that they’ll
return it only after the actions have been done,” she said. What
actions will be done, however, was unclear.

The fact that law enforcement officials, instead of punishing, are
covering up the actions of their colleague has enraged Aslikyan. “This
means that at any time a police officer can seize an item belonging to
you and not be penalized. Why don’t they want to hold the officer
accountable so that it becomes a lesson for the others?” she asked,
adding that in the coming days she will submit a report to the police.

Recall, the activist’s video camera was seized on Dec. 2, during a
march protesting Russian President Vladimir Putin’s visit to Armenia.
At the intersection of Amiryan and Zakyan streets, police officers
forcefully shoved several protestors, including Aslikyan, into nearby
police vans, where she attempted to film. One of the officers seized
the video camera, after which she was taken out of the vehicle.
Asklikyan asked that the video camera be returned to her, insisting
that it contains important material, but officers took it away from
the scene. Later, at the police station, the human rights activist
explained how her video camera was taken, saying that a few news
outlets caught the incident on tape.

The moment when Aslikyan was picked up by police can be seen in the
video below.

http://www.epress.am/en/2013/12/14/new-video-camera-in-exchange-for-her-silence-armenian-activist-refuses-police-deal.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F4rBJzUD34E#t=0

Henrikh Mkhitaryan 69th in World Soccerâs annual poll

Henrikh Mkhitaryan 69th in World Soccer’s annual poll

14:27 14.12.2013

Henrikh Mkhitaryan

Cristiano Ronaldo has been named World player of the year by ‘World
Soccer’ magazine, after journalists from around the world cast their
votes for the Portugal international ahead of Leo Messi and Franck
Ribery.

Ronaldo, who also won the award in 2008 -the same year he won the
Ballon d’Or-, scored a total of 1,075 points, whilst Messi scored 926
and Ribery, 870. The three are also finalists for the FIFA Ballon d’Or
to be announced next month.

The ‘top 10′ players included Zlatan Ibrahimovic , Arjen Robben,
Neymar, Philipp Lahm, Robin Van Persie, Gareth Bale and Robert
Lewandowski. Andres Iniesta, in twelfth place, was the highest ranking
Spanish player.

Midfielder of the Armenian national team and Borussia Dortmund Henrikh
Mkhitaryan shares the 69th place with Mario Balotelli (Milan & Italy),
Gianluigi Buffon (Juventus & Italy), Christian Eriksen (Ajax/Tottenham
Hotspur & Denmark), Samuel Eto’o (Anzhi/Chelsea & Cameroon), Ryan
Giggs (Manchester United & Wales), Javi Martinez (Bayern Munich &
Spain), Blaise Matuidi (Paris Saint-Germain & France), Joao Moutinho
(Porto/Monaco & Portugal), Paulinho (Corinthians/Tottenham Hotspur &
Brazil), Mohamed Salah (Basle & Egypt) and Carlos Tevez (Manchester
City/Juventus & Argentina).

http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/12/14/henrikh-mkhitaryan-69th-in-world-soccers-annual-poll/

Levon Zurabyan: Street is a platform for true struggle against power

Levon Zurabyan: Street is a platform for true struggle against power

by Ashot Safaryan

ARMINFO
Saturday, December 14, 15:34

The ruling regime has no way out from the created hard economic
situation in Armenia, the head of the opposition Armenian National
Congress parliamentary faction, Levon Zurabyan, told Arminfo
correspondent.

He thinks that all the initiatives of the government failed. It could
not provide 7% economic growth which President Serzh Sargsyan demanded
at the beginning of the current year either. “Prime minister could not
give a clear answer to any of the problems risen by the opposition. I
told Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan in the parliament that his
government had committed a crime. For the last two years the
government gathered about $300 million debt for delivery of the
Russian gas, but did not report about that either the community or the
parliament. In 2011 the debt was $47 mln, in 2012 – $118 mln and in
2013 – it became $130 mln. It was gamble made by the government,
members of which are criminal participants in the state crime”, –
Zurabyan said.

He also added that instead of giving explanation to all their actions,
members of the government with a help of the parliamentary majority
torpedoed all the initiatives of the parliamentary opposition.

In this context, Zurabyan emphasized that they will go on fighting at
the streets. “I mean rallies and marches the goal of which is
resignation of the incumbent power”, – Zurabyan said.