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Defeating Islamic State should take precedence over regime change in Syria, Henry Kissinger has argued, adding that Russia’s intervention may help re-establish order in the Middle East that was once entirely dominated by the US.

“The destruction of ISIS is more urgent than the overthrow of Bashar Assad,” the elderly US statesman, who served as Secretary of State to Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, wrote in the Wall Street Journal on Friday. “The current inconclusive U.S. military effort risks serving as a recruitment vehicle for ISIS as having stood up to American might.”

In the commentary, titled ‘A Path Out of the Middle East Collapse,’ Kissinger argues the region is “in shambles” as non-state movements tear apart countries like Libya, Yemen, Syria and Iraq. He calls the so-called Islamic State (IS, also known as ISIS and ISIL) established in parts of Iraq and Syria an “unrelenting foe of established world order,” seeking to replace the international system with an Islamic empire.


Comment: That’s a bunch of nonsense. ISIS was established by the U.S. in order to destabilize countries which it had previously identified as being important to the American empire and not having existing leaders who were already puppets of the U.S. Iraq, Yemen, Syria and Libya all fell into that category so we see ISIS primarily involved in those countries. It’s not at all about an Islamic empire, but about using terrorists to further U.S. imperialism.

Though the US has dominated the region following the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, Washington is now at odds with just about every party in the region and at risk of losing all ability to shape events, Kissinger warned. At issue in the Middle East today is “American resolve in understanding and mastering a new world.”

Russia, he says, merely stepped into a vacuum left by the conflicting and confused US policies. Moscow’s intervention in Syria is driven by geopolitical, rather than ideological concerns. Where ideology does come into play, however, is the conflict between “two rigid and apocalyptic blocs”: the Shia backed by Iran, and the Sunni states such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Jordan.

According to Kissinger, Iran is an imperialist power that seeks to extend its influence by backing the Assad government in Damascus, as well as non-state actors such as Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen. The Sunni states are pushing to overthrow Assad because they fear Iranian designs more than those of IS.


Comment: What evidence does Kissinger have that Iran has imperialistic ambitions? They are merely a secular Islamist state, which is something that the U.S. and Israel are deathly afraid of in the Middle East. They also are an ally of Russia. Those are two traits that equal targeting by the U.S. for overthrow.

Meanwhile, Kissinger argued that the US has antagonized its allies by reaching a nuclear agreement with Iran, “widely interpreted as tacit American acquiescence in Iranian hegemony” in the Sunni Middle East.


Comment: The U.S. nuclear agreement with Iran was more about the U.S. trying to poach Iran from Russia as an ally, but that is not likely to occur.

The nuclear deal should not be compared to the US-China breakthrough in the early 1970s, he warned: While Washington and Beijing had converging objectives at the time, in particular regarding the Soviet Union, the US and Iran remain fundamentally at odds today.

While the Russian intervention “serves Iran’s policy of sustaining the Shiite element in Syria,” Moscow is not committed to indefinitely backing Assad, Kissinger wrote.


Comment: What Russia is committed to is allowing Iran, and all countries, their sovereign right to choose their leaders. If Syrians re-elect Assad, Russia will support that. They operate in practically complete opposite tactics than the imperial U.S. uses to turn states into puppets who turn over their countries resources and wealth to the U.S.

In that sense, having the Russians defeat Islamic State without the need for overt Iranian involvement might offer a face-saving solution to the Sunni bloc, so long as the liberated territories are”restored to local Sunni rule.” In this, Kissinger sees a role for Egypt, Jordan, Turkey and Saudi Arabia.

He suggested federalizing Syria after the defeat of IS, as that “reduces the risks of genocide or chaos leading to terrorist triumph.” Washington should also be ready to have a dialogue with Tehran about Iran “returning to its role as a Westphalian state within its established borders.”


Comment: Good luck with that Henry. More Orwellian-speak from Kissinger. A “Westphalian state” really means a puppet state that will do as the U.S. says. Don’t count on it Washington. The rules have been changed by Putin, and it no longer involves the U.S. using terrorists to further their imperialistic designs.

The key role for the US would be to “implement the military assurances in the traditional Sunni states that the administration promised during the debate on the Iranian nuclear agreement,” Kissinger wrote.