Despite public denials, military preparations
for intervention in the horrendous Syrian crisis are quietly afoot in
Washington, Paris, Rome, London and Ankara. President Barack Obama is
poised for a final decision after the Pentagon submits operational plans
for protecting Syrian rebels and beleaguered populations from the
brutal assaults of Bashar Assad’s army, debkafile’s Washington sources disclose. This process is also underway in allied capitals which joined the US in
the Libyan operation that ended Muammar Qaddafi’s rule in August, 2011.
They are waiting for a White House decision before going forward. In Libya, foreign intervention began as an operation to protect the
Libyan population against its ruler’s outrageous crackdown on dissent.
It was mandated by UN Security Council. There is no chance of this in
the Syrian case because it will be blocked by a Russian veto. Therefore,
Western countries are planning military action of limited scope outside
the purview of the world body, possibly on behalf of “Friends of
Syria,” a group of 80 world nations which meets for the first time in
Tunis Friday, Feb. 24, to hammer out practical steps for terminating the
bloodbath pursued by the Assad regime. The foreign ministers and senior officials – Russia has excluded itself
– will certainly be further galvanized into action by the tragic deaths
of two notable journalists Wednesday, Feb. 22, on the 19th day of the
shelling of Homs.
Preparations for the event are taking place at the Foreign Office in
London. Wednesday, Foreign Secretary William Hague said: Governments
around the world have the responsibility to act…and to redouble our
efforts to stop the Assad regime’s despicable campaign of terror.”
Hague pointedly said nothing about removing the Syrian ruler. Nor did
he spell out the efforts need to stop the campaign of terror. debkafile’s
military sources note that he left these issues open because a decision
by President Obama about if and how the US will act is pending until
the Pentagon submits operational plans to Commander-in-Chief Obama.
The US president is also waiting for Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton’s report on the mood at the Tunis conference. He wants to know
in particular if Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Qatar and the UAR will support
US-led Western intervention in Syria, both politically and financially.
The Sunday Times correspondent Marie Colvin and the French Figaro video-photographer
Remi Ochik died Wednesday in the heavy shelling of a fortified building
which housed Western journalists making their way into Homs under the
protection of Syrian rebels. Three other Western journalists were
injured. Western military sources reported Thursday that this undercover
Western press center was maintained by the rebels in tight secrecy. The
building was practically gutted by a direct hit, suggesting that Syrian
forces located it with the help of advanced electronic measures.
Another Western source noted that the journalists covering the
atrocities in Homs from this hideout used coded channels of
communications protected by anti-jamming and anti-tracking devices. The
Syrians must therefore have called on Russian satellites or advanced
Iranian electronic systems to locate it.
The authorities in Damascus decided to treat the press hideout as the
first step in overt Western intervention in the Syrian conflict. It was
accordingly razed totally with its occupants.
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