Wednesday, 31 December 2014
A New Year’s resolution: enforce the old year’s resolution
Since March 2011, when protests began against the dictatorship in Syria, hundreds of thousands of Syrians have been killed. Many thousands of those killed, likely tens of thousands of them, were killed by regime air attacks using planes and helicopters dropping conventional bombs, barrel bombs, and chlorine chemical weapons. Many thousands more, adults and children, have been maimed.
As many as 95% of those killed in regime air attacks have been civilians.
In February 2014, the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 2139 which included the demand “that all parties immediately cease all attacks against civilians, as well as the indiscriminate employment of weapons in populated areas, including shelling and aerial bombardment, such as the use of barrel bombs, and methods of warfare which are of a nature to cause superfluous injury or unnecessary suffering…”
UNSCR 2139 closed with the Security Council expressing “its intent to take further steps in the case of non-compliance,” but since then no action has been taken by the UNSC to stop the air attacks.
In the absence of further steps by the UNSC as a whole, and with UNSC permanent member Russia both arming Syria’s air force and also blocking collective UNSC action, individual states enjoying the privilege of permanent membership of the UNSC must take responsibility: specifically France, the United Kingdom, and the United States. These three states have the proven ability to stop the Assad regime’s air attacks against civilians almost immediately. Their New Year’s resolution should now be to enforce the old year’s resolution.
Action is justified, in the words used by George Robertson in the 1999 Parliamentary debate on the UK’s Kosovo intervention, “as an exceptional measure in support of purposes laid down by the UN Security Council, but without the Council's express authorisation.” Whether individually or collectively, France, the United Kingdom, and the United States, must act now to stop this slaughter.
Protect civilians. Enforce UN Security Council Resolution 2139. Syria needs a No-Fly Zone.
Background notes at hhttps://nfzsyria.blogspot.com/p/about.html
Tuesday, 30 December 2014
Minimum of 24,168 civilians killed since Commons vote – true number may be over 42,000
The Violations Documentation Center in Syria has now documented 24,168 civilians killed since the 29 August 2013 UK Parliament vote rejecting military intervention in Syria.
That vote was on a Government motion which raised the possibility of military action in response to a massive chemical weapons attack on civilians by the Assad regime; however the motion was clear that military action could only take place after a UN Security Council debate, and after a further vote in the House of Commons.
224 Members of Parliament of the opposition Labour Party, under the leadership of Ed Miliband, as well as 39 backbench coalition MPs and 22 other MPs, voted against the motion.
The figure of 24,168 civilians killed since is from the Violations Documentation Center online database, and may have been updated by the time you read this. The VDC are just one of the organisations collecting and verifying reports of deaths in Syria. They are not able to document every death.
The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights has issued a series of reports on violent deaths in the Syria conflict by comparing information from a number of organisations on the ground, including the VDC. The most recent UN report covers the period from the start of protests in March 2011 up to the end of April 2014. It gave a minimum number of 191,369 confirmed violent deaths. According to the report, that number is “likely undercounting the true total number of conflict-related killings that have occurred during this time period.” For that same time period, the VDC was only able to document 109,531 confirmed violent deaths including regime deaths, just over half of the UN number. Therefore the VDC number is a significant undercount compared to the UN number, which itself is a minimum count and therefore an undercount by an unknown margin.
If the VDC undercount of civilian deaths for the period since the UK Parliament vote is of the same proportion as the undercount of all violent deaths for the period covered by the UN report, then the number of civilian deaths since the House of Commons vote is over 42,000.
For the entire conflict, the VDC has documented 78,819 civilians killed to date, greater than the recorded number of British civilians killed in the Second World War. By the same calculation of comparing to the UN count, the true figure of civilians violently killed in Syria since March 2011 is likely to be over 137,000. All violent deaths, civilian and military, are now well over 200,000.
None of these figures include war-related deaths caused by exposure, malnutrition, and destruction of medical services; more fallen sparrows than we can count.
Below are the 95 civilians that the Violations Documentation Center listed as killed in one day, Christmas Day, 2014.
Unidentified 3 | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Maskaneh | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Unidentified 2 | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Maskaneh | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Unidentified 1 | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Maskaneh | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Hasan Ali al-Tahhan al-Noaemi | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Quneitra | 2014-12-25 | Shooting | |
Abdul Salam al-Jahush | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Damascus Suburbs | Kanaker | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Alaa al-Rafea | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Quneitra | Rafeed | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Rifaa al-Hadhud | Civilian | Adult - Female | Homs | Der Baalba | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Ameera Mohammad al-Khateeb | Civilian | Adult - Female | Idlib | Taftanaz | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Ahmad Adnan Musa al-Khateeb | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Quneitra | Mashareh | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Hasan Ahmad al-Naqo | Civilian | Child - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Abdul Kader Faraj | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Mohammad Ali al-Hameed | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Ibrahem Meho | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Majed Merash | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Khaleel Ali al-Ali | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Musa al-Hamood | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Hasan Abbas | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Muhammad Shukri | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Qasem Hesso | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Kheder Hesso | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Mustafa Hmado al-Shehabi | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Ahmad Hmado al-Shehabi | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Satouf al-Naqo | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Ibrahem al-Mustafa | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bazzaa | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Mohammad Omar Mahmoud al-Jabali | Civilian | Child - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Mohammad Shasho | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Kabbasin | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Mohammad Abdul Baset Aboud | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Ismael Khamees | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Mustafa Kassar | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling | |
Husain al-Nayef | Civilian | Child - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Waseem al-Ghawi | Civilian | Child - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Abdul Hameed al-Ghawi | Civilian | Child - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Unidentified | Civilian | Child - Male | Hama | Abo Fashafeesh village | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Khawla Mustafa al-Hallak | Civilian | Child - Female | Idlib | Habeet | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Hassan Adnan al-Rahmoon | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Idlib | Jarjanaz | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Akram Abdulla Haj Qasem | Civilian | Adult - Male | Idlib | Saraqib | 2014-12-25 | Detention - Torture |
Mohammad Musa al-Khaled | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Daraa | 2014-12-25 | Shooting | |
Yusri Ali Mahmoud al-Barm | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Daraa | Giza | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Unidentified | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Daraa | Sheikh Miskeen | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Mohammad Qatleesh | Civilian | Adult - Male | Daraa | Dael | 2014-12-25 | Shelling |
Mohammad Yosef Abo Zaid | Civilian | Adult - Male | Daraa | Dael | 2014-12-25 | Shelling |
Alaa Abo al-Nadr | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Damascus Suburbs | Daraya | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Ammar Musa al-Hariri | Civilian | Adult - Male | Daraa | Dael | 2014-12-25 | Shelling |
Mamoun Khaleel al-Tamr al-Jbawi | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Daraa | Jassim | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Unidentified | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Manbej | 2014-12-25 | Kidnapping - Execution |
Usama Hawa | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Anadan | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Yousef Ibraheem al-Asad "al-Shaikh Deeb" | Civilian | Adult - Male | Hama | Karnaz | 2014-12-25 | Detention - Torture |
Omar Ahmad Thalji | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Zakwan Mohammad al-Abes | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Idlib | Jarjanaz | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Mohammad Abdul Moniem Deebo | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Idlib | Jarjanaz | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Mohammad Khaled al-Heer | Civilian | Adult - Male | Idlib | Maarat Numan: Deir Sharqee | 2014-12-25 | Detention - Torture |
Hasan Aboud | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Idlib | Bsagla | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Mohammad Zaatout | Civilian | Adult - Male | Damascus | Yarmuk Camp | 2014-12-25 | Detention - Torture |
Abo Rabea al-Bukaie | Civilian | Adult - Male | Damascus Suburbs | Yalda | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Bilal Tareefe | Civilian | Child - Male | Damascus Suburbs | Douma | 2014-12-25 | Other |
Ghaith Muhi Eddin al-Shazeli | Civilian | Child - Male | Damascus Suburbs | Douma | 2014-12-25 | Shelling |
Ahmed Darwish | Civilian | Adult - Male | Damascus Suburbs | Harasta | 2014-12-25 | Chemical and toxic gases |
Abo Malek al-Masri | Civilian | Adult - Male | Damascus Suburbs | Harasta | 2014-12-25 | Chemical and toxic gases |
Ihsan Mahmoud al-Shaeir | Civilian | Adult - Male | Daraa | Kafrshams | 2014-12-25 | Detention - Torture |
Sobh Mohammad Metiemb al-Aloush | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Daraa | Harra | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Ali Abdul Ghani Anees | Civilian | Adult - Male | Damascus Suburbs | Douma | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Maan Sahl al-Radi | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Daraa | Naseeb | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Abo Obaida al-Ansari | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Homs | Waar | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Majdi Azzam Farhat | Civilian | Adult - Male | Idlib | Binnish | 2014-12-25 | Shelling |
Unidentified | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Batbo | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Hosain Sayel al-Mostafa | Civilian | Adult - Male | Hama | Kaferzita | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Ahmad Khaled Obaid | Civilian | Adult - Male | Hama | Kaferzita | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Mahmoud Abd al-Moetei al-Elaiwi | Civilian | Adult - Male | Hama | Shehrnaz | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Hasan Mohammad al-Salloum | Civilian | Child - Male | Hama | Shehrnaz | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Mahmoud Mohammad al-Saloum | Civilian | Child - Male | Hama | Shehrnaz | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Abo Sardah | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Damascus | 2014-12-25 | Shooting | |
Mohammad Taher Wais | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Maher Taleb | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Mohammad al-Hasan | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Abo Taha al-Turkmani | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Abo Ibrahem al-Ghawi | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Ahmad Swaid | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Joud al-Ghawi | Civilian | Child - Female | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Futoon Abo Zahed | Civilian | Child - Female | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Hasna Mahmoud al-Sawas | Civilian | Adult - Female | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Fatema al-Sawas | Civilian | Adult - Female | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Mohammad Shaker Mehho | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Abdul Ghani Sheikh Ahmad | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Jomaa Qadour | Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Unidentified 1 | Civilian | Child - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Unidentified 2 | Civilian | Child - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Unidentified 3 | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Unidentified 4 | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Aleppo | Bab | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Shamoun Ali al-Jamous | Civilian | Adult - Male | Homs | Waar | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Abdul Ilah Ramadan al-Alewi | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Homs | Khalidiya | 2014-12-25 | Shooting |
Unidentified | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Quneitra | 2014-12-25 | Shooting | |
Wesam Ebraheem al-Eibrahim | Non-Civilian | Adult - Male | Homs | Hula | 2014-12-25 | Shelling |
Ibraheem Ahmad al-Aytam | Civilian | Adult - Male | Idlib | Ketyan | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Mohammad Hasoun | Civilian | Adult - Male | Idlib | Ketyan | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Basem Nadim | Civilian | Adult - Male | Idlib | Ketyan | 2014-12-25 | Warplane shelling |
Thursday, 18 December 2014
This Saturday: Syria vigils in London, Manchester, and online
In the past year, press attention on Syria largely shifted from Assad’s campaign of terror to the terror of ISIS as they first expanded their reach from eastern Syria into northern Iraq, and then went on to lay siege to the largely Kurdish town of Kobane in north Syria, a battle that ranged within sight of Western media across the border in Turkey.
The TV crews have mostly moved on, but the battle for Kobane continues, with Kurdish and Free Syrian Army forces still fighting together to beat back ISIS. And Kobane is not alone: Across Syria towns and villages are fighting for their lives – against ISIS, against the Assad regime, and in some cases against both at the same time.
And while ISIS adopts the Assad regime’s methods of torture and oppression*, the regime goes on killing Syrians on a scale that ISIS still only dreams of**.
In the past few weeks, the Syria’s Forgotten Cities campaign has aimed to raise awareness of the many other Kobanes: focusing on Aleppo, Homs, Raqqa, and remembering the many more, Daraa, Daraya, Deir Ez-Zour, Douma, Hama, Jobar, Idlib, Yarmouk, Zamalka – places battered but not beaten, cities and towns where the fight for freedom and dignity goes on.
As Syrians face another winter of bombing, siege, starvation, and terror, we must resist the temptation to turn away in despair, so we are holding vigils in London and Manchester this Saturday, and we invite you to join us.
LONDON
Saturday 20th December, 6 to 8:00 pm in Trafalgar Square.
Facebook event page.
MANCHESTER
Saturday 20th December, 5 to 6:00 pm in Piccadilly Gardens.
Facebook event page.
Press release PDF.
For anyone unable to be present in either of these two cities, we are also holding an online vigil. Please help show solidarity with Syrians in this fourth winter of war by lighting a candle wherever you are and posting a picture of it on Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram, with the hashtag #SyriasForgottenCities. More details here.
* See: Islamic State adopts Assad’s methods of torture, Richard Spencer, The Telegraph, 13 December 2014.
** See: Syrian Network for Human Rights on civilian deaths since the start of the US-led intervention against ISIS in Syria.
Sunday, 14 December 2014
Humanitarian aid is important but won’t stop the war
This is a guest post by Daniel Wickham, and first appeared as a series of tweets.
If we all agree that letting Syria descend into a civil war fought primarily between equally bad actors – the Assad regime on one hand, and extremist groups like ISIS and al-Nusra on the other – is not what we want, doesn’t that make the only logical solution to strengthen those caught in between?
As long as Assad has the upper hand against the mainstream rebels, and the world is distracted by ISIS, the chance of an agreement with a long-term ceasefire seems almost non-existent. That can surely only happen if the Syrian regime faces serious, violent internal pressure to make a deal, or is overthrown either in part or entirely, neither of which is likely to happen unless the mainstream rebels are supported.
That doesn’t mean *any* mainstream rebels, but specifically those who do not target and murder civilians, and can be made to abide by IHL.
Humanitarian aid is important but won’t stop the war, and the current air campaign against ISIS seems to be only strengthening the regime. To stop ISIS, there has to either be a deal followed by concessions or an overthrow of the regime, which is its most effective recruiter. What other way can that happen except through a strengthening of (certain) mainstream rebels and perhaps even an air campaign vs. Assad?
On a personal note, it really pains me to advocate policies like bombing, but I just don’t see how else the slaughter can be stopped/slowed. When it comes to tragedies like Syria, you have to look beyond your own ideological biases and ask what is the best of the bad options? I’ve said this before and been accused of supporting imperialism. But remember, the policy I’m advocating is aggressively opposed by the US.
To be honest though, I couldn’t care less what the US establishment or its opponents think about Syria. The uprising is not about them. It’s about people who are being starved, murdered and besieged simply for wanting to be free from a cowardly and murderous tyrant. And at the end of the day, I’d rather show solidarity with them than fake ‘anti-imperialists’ sitting in the West. A million times over.
If we all agree that letting Syria descend into a civil war fought primarily between equally bad actors – the Assad regime on one hand, and extremist groups like ISIS and al-Nusra on the other – is not what we want, doesn’t that make the only logical solution to strengthen those caught in between?
As long as Assad has the upper hand against the mainstream rebels, and the world is distracted by ISIS, the chance of an agreement with a long-term ceasefire seems almost non-existent. That can surely only happen if the Syrian regime faces serious, violent internal pressure to make a deal, or is overthrown either in part or entirely, neither of which is likely to happen unless the mainstream rebels are supported.
That doesn’t mean *any* mainstream rebels, but specifically those who do not target and murder civilians, and can be made to abide by IHL.
Humanitarian aid is important but won’t stop the war, and the current air campaign against ISIS seems to be only strengthening the regime. To stop ISIS, there has to either be a deal followed by concessions or an overthrow of the regime, which is its most effective recruiter. What other way can that happen except through a strengthening of (certain) mainstream rebels and perhaps even an air campaign vs. Assad?
On a personal note, it really pains me to advocate policies like bombing, but I just don’t see how else the slaughter can be stopped/slowed. When it comes to tragedies like Syria, you have to look beyond your own ideological biases and ask what is the best of the bad options? I’ve said this before and been accused of supporting imperialism. But remember, the policy I’m advocating is aggressively opposed by the US.
To be honest though, I couldn’t care less what the US establishment or its opponents think about Syria. The uprising is not about them. It’s about people who are being starved, murdered and besieged simply for wanting to be free from a cowardly and murderous tyrant. And at the end of the day, I’d rather show solidarity with them than fake ‘anti-imperialists’ sitting in the West. A million times over.
Monday, 8 December 2014
Deter and Retaliate
BUFFER ZONES, SAFE ZONES, AIR-EXCLUSION ZONES
The week from Sunday 30th November to Sunday 7th December started with a lot of words published on the possibility of a no-fly zone in Syria, and ended with a practical demonstration of the feasibility of imposing one. It began with three news stories, all based on leaks or off-record conversations by US officials about ongoing negotiations between retired Marine Gen. John Allen, US special presidential envoy, and Turkish officials on the possibility of establishing a ‘safe zone’ in Northern Syria where civilians and rebels would have a degree of protection from both Assad forces and ISIS.
- From Bloomberg View, 30th November:
Will U.S. and Turkey Create a Syria No-Fly Zone? By Josh Rogin and Eli Lake.
- From the Wall Street Journal, updated 1st December:
U.S., Turkey Narrow Differences on Islamic State Fight, by Adam Entous.
- From The Washington Post, 1st December:
U.S. considers opening new front against Islamic State to create a safe zone in Syria, by Karen DeYoung.
- Colonel Steve Warren, Pentagon spokesperson, 1st December:
“Right now, we don’t believe a buffer zone is the best way to relieve the humanitarian crisis there in northern Syria.”
- Josh Earnest, White House spokesperson, 1st December:
“… At this point, we don’t believe that a no-fly zone fits the bill here.”
- Susan Rice, National Security Advisor to President Obama, 2nd December:
“We are not moving in the direction of a no-fly zone or a safe haven at this point,” and “We think the establishment of a no-fly zone or a safe zone, at this point, is at best premature, and would be a major investment of resources that would be something, frankly, of a diversion from the primary task at hand.”
And then on Sunday the 7th of December Israel again demonstrated how vulnerable the Assad regime is to air attack by carrying out daylight strikes on the outskirts of Damascus.
DETER AND RETALIATE
Worth noting in the three initial news reports about safe zone negotiations is that the plan they describe envisages a no-fly zone maintained by deterrence and retaliation rather than by either air patrol and interception as seen in Bosnia and Iraq in the 1990s, or eradication of regime air assets as seen in Libya in 2011. From the Wall Street Journal version:
In contrast to a formal no-fly zone, the narrower safe zone along the border under discussion wouldn’t require any strikes to take out Syrian air defenses. Instead, the U.S. and its coalition partners could send a quiet warning to the Assad regime to stay away from the zone or risk retaliation.
While there’s an implication in the article that a Deter and Retaliate approach can only work for a limited scale no-fly zone, recent events in Syria suggest that it would work for a no-fly zone over the entire country. Three experiences point to Assad being susceptible to deterrence: his agreement to allow the removal of chemical weapons following the threat of military action; the lack of any military response by Assad to US-led forces carrying out strikes in Syrian territory; and the lack of any direct military response by Assad to Israel’s repeated strikes against his military. Assad clearly knows he is unlikely to survive a direct military conflict with the US or its allies, and will go as far as possible to avoid one. As to retaliation, yesterday’s daylight strikes by Israel against Assad’s military in the Damascus area once again make clear that it is well within the means of the US and its allies to retaliate should Assad defy a no-fly zone.
Finally, how would a Deter and Retaliate no-fly zone work, and why might it be preferable to a patrolled no-fly zone, or to eradicating Assad’s air force?
The US and its allies already have the means to monitor Syrian territory to detect air attacks, and have the means available to retaliate in the event of any attacks taking place, so the next step would be to demand an immediate end to air attacks by Assad’s air force, and declare that any further attacks will be met with a punitive military response. There is a good chance the Assad regime would comply fully with this demand in order not to risk being hit by US strikes. If however the Assad regime decided to test US resolve by carrying out one or more air attacks, the US and its allies would not seek to intercept the particular aircraft violating the no-fly zone; instead they would first verify that an attack had taken place, and then respond with an attack against a target of their choice, for example Assad aircraft on the ground or other similar military targets.
There are major advantages in this Deter and Retaliate approach compared to patrols or eradication. Not engaging in patrolling or interception is safer for air crews. Avoiding the wide-scale strikes needed to eradicate Assad’s air force lowers the risk of unintended civilian casualties as well as lowering risk to air crews. And of course avoiding patrols and wide-scale strikes also makes Deter and Retaliate cheaper. It could cost as little as a phone call.
There would be three justifications for declaring such a no-fly zone. One, as with earlier chemical attacks by Assad forces, the regime’s deliberate targeting of civilian areas blatantly contravenes established international humanitarian law. Two, United Nations Security Council Resolution 2139, passed in February, demanded an end to such attacks. Three, such attacks hamper efforts by the US and its allies to combat ISIS.
RELATED POSTS
- Stop the barrel bombs: A moral and legal responsibility to use force
- Seven months on: Enforce UNSCR 2139
- Obama’s Syria menu: Where’s the No-Fly Zone?
- No-Fly Zone options: Reasons for favouring a limited strike option
Tuesday, 2 December 2014
Over 23,000 civilians killed since the UK Parliament’s Syria vote
In August 2013, Labour’s Ed Miliband led his party in voting along with Conservative backbenchers to block any military option in the UK’s response to Assad’s chemical weapons massacre.
Since then the Violations Documentation Center in Syria has listed 23,255 civilians killed. (A minimum count of confirmed violent deaths; the true total is certain to be significantly higher.)
Since then, untold numbers have lost limbs in bombing and artillery attacks.
Since then, Assad’s forces have carried on using chemical weapons attacks, repeatedly bombing civilians with chlorine gas weapons.
Since then, aerial attacks by Assad’s air force have surged, killing at least 8,663 civilians by a minimum count.
Since then, Ed Miliband and his Shadow Foreign Secretary Douglas Alexander have said as little as possible on Syria. What they have said has seemed wholly disconnected from reality: promoting the doomed Geneva II talks as “Syria’s best chance for securing peace,” calling on the Government to admit “just a few hundred refugees” out of the over 3 million that have fled Syria, and, after the US attacked ISIS in Syria, calling for a UN Security Council resolution that they knew would be doomed and that they themselves seemed to think legally unnecessary.
I’ve heard it suggested that the Labour leadership never expected to win the August 2013 vote, but if they have since regretted the consequences they have never said so publicly, nor done anything to turn things around by building cross-party unity behind a more effective policy.
And so the killing goes on. What can we expect the tallies to be on 7 May 2015? And how will the British electorate weigh this disastrous foreign policy performance in opposition when judging Labour’s competency for power?
• Related post: A letter to Ed Miliband
Sunday, 30 November 2014
Raqqa: to appease Iran, Obama gives Assad’s air force a free pass for slaughter
Along with barrel bombings in towns and cities across Syria, this last week saw a series of attacks by Assad’s air force on civilian targets in the northern town of Raqqa. These regime air attacks were sandwiched between two weekends of airstrikes by the US-led coalition on ISIS targets in Raqqa.
When US and allied air forces first began strikes in Syria, there was speculation that their presence would deter attacks by Assad’s air force against civilians, at least in the US area of operations. This past week’s events demonstrates that any such deterrent effect is fading if not over. The taking of turns in Raqqa’s airspace by Assad’s air force and US-led forces further undermines US claims of concern for the fate of Syrian civilians.
RAQQA AIRSTRIKES 23-29 NOVEMBER
On Sunday 23 November, US warplanes carried out two strikes against an ISIS-occupied building in the city of Raqqa in north-eastern Syria. No civilian casualties were reported.
On Tuesday 25 November, Assad’s air force carried out ten air attacks on Raqqa, reportedly killing as many as 209 people, most if not all civilians. Targets were reported to include a busy marketplace, a bus depot, and a mosque where dozens of people were gathered for prayers.
On Thursday 27 November, Assad’s air force carried out between seven and ten further attacks, including one at the city’s National Hospital, reportedly killing at least seven more people.
On Friday 28 November, Assad’s air force carried out three attacks in Raqqa, killing at least five people including three children.
On Saturday 29 November, Assad’s air force again attacked Raqqa’s National Hospital. LCC Syria named five people killed.
In the evening of Saturday 29 November, US-led coalition aircraft were reported to have carried out at least 15 airstrikes. Later reports said the total had exceeded 30 airstrikes. The activist group Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently reported that all the targets of the US-led coalition were ISIS bases, hitting a high number of ISIS fighters.
CASUALTY REPORTS
The following are press reports of casualties from Tuesday’s attacks in Raqqa. Numbers given for people killed rose over time. No press reports gave precise numbers for people maimed and injured.
RESPONSES
The next day State Department Spokesperson Jen Psaki did her best to convince the world that the US opposed the strikes:
BACKGROUND
The above assertion by un-named Obama administration officials reported October 7th was refuted the following day by New York Times journalist Anne Barnard in an article titled US Focus on ISIS Frees Syria to Battle Rebels, where she gave a taste of the ongoing air attacks being carried out by Assad’s air force from the same air space being flown by US and allied air forces.
There is some evidence that Assad scaled back air attacks following the start of US strikes within Syria. According to the Violations Documentation Center in Syria, recorded numbers of people confirmed killed by air attacks in the first twelve days from 23 September showed a dramatic drop compared to the period before US strikes began. In the weeks following the recorded numbers of daily deaths rose again, but the number confirmed killed in October was still lower than in September.
It should be noted that VDC figures are minimum counts of confirmed violent deaths, and are by their nature most likely to be an undercount of the true total killed. For details see two posts by @lopforum:
It’s hard to draw clear conclusions on regime intentions from numbers of violent deaths alone. Since the peak number for violent deaths recorded in August 2012, vast numbers of Syrians have fled the country, consequently reducing the number at risk of being killed in any attack. Also, since that 2012 peak in killing, Syrian ground forces and militia have been reinforced by Iranian and Hezbollah forces, who may be more professional and militarily focused in their approach.
However, looking just at deaths from air attacks, one can see that a rise up to August 2013 seems to have been interrupted by the threat of an international response to the Ghouta chemical weapons attack, only to be resumed with increased ferocity once that threat had clearly passed in December 2013. Killings by air attacks peaked in February 2014, but dropped following the passing of UN Security Council Resolution 2139 which explicitly demanded an end to barrel bombing and threatened further action in the event of non-compliance. As that threat of UN Security Council action faded, the rate of killing by air was again rising in September 2014 before the US-led Coalition action against ISIS in Syria began.
It was reasonable then to expect the post-intervention lull in killing to be short-lived—for it to be followed by a tentative escalation to test the risk of a US response, then greater escalation as no US substantial response came—and short-lived it now seems to have been.
Targeting civilians is the rule rather than the exception for Assad’s air force. Most attacks are too inaccurate for the regime to risk striking front-line rebel fighters as they could just as easily hit Assad’s own forces, so instead air attacks are used to terrorise, destabilise, and depopulate areas outside of regime control. Historically Assad’s air force has focused these attacks on areas under rebel control, not areas under ISIS control, as the regime apparently sees ISIS as less of a threat to its rule, and according to many reports actively colludes with ISIS to weaken rebel forces. As ISIS in Raqqa has come under US attack, it may be that the Assad regime sees a danger of Raqqa again becoming independent of both ISIS and the regime, and has therefore decided to target the city with increased ferocity.
For an analysis of the Assad regime’s air bombardment strategy see Barrel Bombs: A tool to force displacement in Eastern Aleppo, by Ryan O’Farrell, Tahrir Souri, via EA WorldView.
APPEASING IRAN
Dennis Ross, a former special assistant to President Obama, points to two reasons the Obama Administration does not want to strike Assad’s air force, both related to Iran. One reason is the fear, voiced to him by “a senior administration official” that any direct attack on Assad by the US would be met with retaliation by Iran’s militia proxies against US forces in Iraq. The other reason is Obama’s desire to reach a nuclear agreement with Iran.
According to leaked accounts, a recent letter from President Obama to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on the nuclear negotiations included an assurance that the US didn’t intend to strike Assad’s forces in Syria. When those negotiations, supposed to conclude on Monday 24 November, were instead extended to a completion deadline of 1 June 2015, Assad would have had good reason to believe that Obama’s assurance not to use direct military force against him was now similarly extended.
Such a belief would no doubt have been reinforced by the dismissal of Chuck Hagel, US Defense Secretary, which also came on Monday 24 November. This was generally believed to be linked to Hagel’s criticism of Obama’s hands-off policy towards Assad. With the reassurance of these two events, it seems Assad felt safe to proceed the next day with his wave of attacks against Raqqa’s population.
The term appeasement is often overused. To negotiate with an enemy, to try and reach a peaceful settlement, is not in itself appeasement. But to trade the life and liberty of another country’s citizens in the pursuit of a hoped-for settlement that doesn’t serve their interests, that is a trade-off that deserves the name appeasement.
Obama’s free pass to Assad’s air force in exchange for a hoped-for nuclear deal with Iran is appeasement, and no form of public relations statement from the State Department’s spokesperson can alter that harsh fact.
When US and allied air forces first began strikes in Syria, there was speculation that their presence would deter attacks by Assad’s air force against civilians, at least in the US area of operations. This past week’s events demonstrates that any such deterrent effect is fading if not over. The taking of turns in Raqqa’s airspace by Assad’s air force and US-led forces further undermines US claims of concern for the fate of Syrian civilians.
RAQQA AIRSTRIKES 23-29 NOVEMBER
On Sunday 23 November, US warplanes carried out two strikes against an ISIS-occupied building in the city of Raqqa in north-eastern Syria. No civilian casualties were reported.
On Tuesday 25 November, Assad’s air force carried out ten air attacks on Raqqa, reportedly killing as many as 209 people, most if not all civilians. Targets were reported to include a busy marketplace, a bus depot, and a mosque where dozens of people were gathered for prayers.
On Thursday 27 November, Assad’s air force carried out between seven and ten further attacks, including one at the city’s National Hospital, reportedly killing at least seven more people.
On Friday 28 November, Assad’s air force carried out three attacks in Raqqa, killing at least five people including three children.
On Saturday 29 November, Assad’s air force again attacked Raqqa’s National Hospital. LCC Syria named five people killed.
In the evening of Saturday 29 November, US-led coalition aircraft were reported to have carried out at least 15 airstrikes. Later reports said the total had exceeded 30 airstrikes. The activist group Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently reported that all the targets of the US-led coalition were ISIS bases, hitting a high number of ISIS fighters.
CASUALTY REPORTS
The following are press reports of casualties from Tuesday’s attacks in Raqqa. Numbers given for people killed rose over time. No press reports gave precise numbers for people maimed and injured.
- Activists: Syrian strikes kill 60 in IS-held city, Associated Press, 25 November.
Cites initial counts of number killed – SOHR: over 60, LCC: at least 70, Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently: over 80 killed. - Syria conflict: Raqqa air strikes death toll rises, BBC News, updated 26 November.
Cites LCC as documenting 87 deaths and warning of more injured likely to die due to lack of medical facilities. Cites SOHR saying at least 95 killed, of whom at least 52 have been confirmed as civilians. - ‘Scores dead’ in air strikes on Syria’s Raqaa, Al Jazeera, updated 26 November.
Updated to cite activists as saying 135 people were killed. - By Friday 28 November, the activist group Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently said they had documented 209 people killed in Tuesday’s air attacks.
RESPONSES
Government in #Syria has launched airstrikes designed to hit #ISIS in #Raqqa; civilians caught in the crossfire: http://t.co/dPIKrMWay8
— StateCSO (@StateCSO) November 25, 2014
The above tweet from the US Department of State’s Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Operations was widely retweeted, reproduced, and criticised for characterising the Assad air force attacks as a misfired attempt to target ISIS when there was no evidence given in the linked story or elsewhere that the intended target was ISIS rather than the civilian victims.The next day State Department Spokesperson Jen Psaki did her best to convince the world that the US opposed the strikes:
- US ‘horrified’ by Syrian raids on Raqqa, AFP, 27 November.
- Syrian National Coalition Demands Use of Force Against Syrian Regime Aircraft Targeting Civilians from US Area of Operations, Syrian Coalition statement, 26 November.
- Syrian Coalition Decries the US-led Alliance’s Silence over Al Raqqa Massacre, Syrian Coalition statement, 27 November.
- Conflicting Policies on Syria and Islamic State Erode U.S. Standing in Mideast, Anne Barnard, The New York Times, 27 November.
- Syria, U.S. attack same Syrian city, then trade barbs, Hugh Naylor, The Washington Post, 28 November.
- The exchange of roles between the Alliance and Assad freak out US State Department, Hamoud Al-Mousa, Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently, 28 November.
This post from Friday put the number killed in Tuesday’s attacks at 209. It said that with further regime air attacks on Thursday the week’s total had reached 232 people killed and hundreds injured.
BACKGROUND
Officials note, for example, that the American-led coalition, with its heavy rotation of flights and airstrikes, has effectively imposed a no-fly zone over northern Syria already…
The above assertion by un-named Obama administration officials reported October 7th was refuted the following day by New York Times journalist Anne Barnard in an article titled US Focus on ISIS Frees Syria to Battle Rebels, where she gave a taste of the ongoing air attacks being carried out by Assad’s air force from the same air space being flown by US and allied air forces.
There is some evidence that Assad scaled back air attacks following the start of US strikes within Syria. According to the Violations Documentation Center in Syria, recorded numbers of people confirmed killed by air attacks in the first twelve days from 23 September showed a dramatic drop compared to the period before US strikes began. In the weeks following the recorded numbers of daily deaths rose again, but the number confirmed killed in October was still lower than in September.
It should be noted that VDC figures are minimum counts of confirmed violent deaths, and are by their nature most likely to be an undercount of the true total killed. For details see two posts by @lopforum:
- Impact of Coalition Airstrikes: Civilian Deaths due to Airstrikes Since September 1
- Syrian Civilian Casualties in October
It’s hard to draw clear conclusions on regime intentions from numbers of violent deaths alone. Since the peak number for violent deaths recorded in August 2012, vast numbers of Syrians have fled the country, consequently reducing the number at risk of being killed in any attack. Also, since that 2012 peak in killing, Syrian ground forces and militia have been reinforced by Iranian and Hezbollah forces, who may be more professional and militarily focused in their approach.
Chart by @lopforum based on VDC Syria data |
However, looking just at deaths from air attacks, one can see that a rise up to August 2013 seems to have been interrupted by the threat of an international response to the Ghouta chemical weapons attack, only to be resumed with increased ferocity once that threat had clearly passed in December 2013. Killings by air attacks peaked in February 2014, but dropped following the passing of UN Security Council Resolution 2139 which explicitly demanded an end to barrel bombing and threatened further action in the event of non-compliance. As that threat of UN Security Council action faded, the rate of killing by air was again rising in September 2014 before the US-led Coalition action against ISIS in Syria began.
It was reasonable then to expect the post-intervention lull in killing to be short-lived—for it to be followed by a tentative escalation to test the risk of a US response, then greater escalation as no US substantial response came—and short-lived it now seems to have been.
Targeting civilians is the rule rather than the exception for Assad’s air force. Most attacks are too inaccurate for the regime to risk striking front-line rebel fighters as they could just as easily hit Assad’s own forces, so instead air attacks are used to terrorise, destabilise, and depopulate areas outside of regime control. Historically Assad’s air force has focused these attacks on areas under rebel control, not areas under ISIS control, as the regime apparently sees ISIS as less of a threat to its rule, and according to many reports actively colludes with ISIS to weaken rebel forces. As ISIS in Raqqa has come under US attack, it may be that the Assad regime sees a danger of Raqqa again becoming independent of both ISIS and the regime, and has therefore decided to target the city with increased ferocity.
For an analysis of the Assad regime’s air bombardment strategy see Barrel Bombs: A tool to force displacement in Eastern Aleppo, by Ryan O’Farrell, Tahrir Souri, via EA WorldView.
APPEASING IRAN
Dennis Ross, a former special assistant to President Obama, points to two reasons the Obama Administration does not want to strike Assad’s air force, both related to Iran. One reason is the fear, voiced to him by “a senior administration official” that any direct attack on Assad by the US would be met with retaliation by Iran’s militia proxies against US forces in Iraq. The other reason is Obama’s desire to reach a nuclear agreement with Iran.
According to leaked accounts, a recent letter from President Obama to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on the nuclear negotiations included an assurance that the US didn’t intend to strike Assad’s forces in Syria. When those negotiations, supposed to conclude on Monday 24 November, were instead extended to a completion deadline of 1 June 2015, Assad would have had good reason to believe that Obama’s assurance not to use direct military force against him was now similarly extended.
Such a belief would no doubt have been reinforced by the dismissal of Chuck Hagel, US Defense Secretary, which also came on Monday 24 November. This was generally believed to be linked to Hagel’s criticism of Obama’s hands-off policy towards Assad. With the reassurance of these two events, it seems Assad felt safe to proceed the next day with his wave of attacks against Raqqa’s population.
The term appeasement is often overused. To negotiate with an enemy, to try and reach a peaceful settlement, is not in itself appeasement. But to trade the life and liberty of another country’s citizens in the pursuit of a hoped-for settlement that doesn’t serve their interests, that is a trade-off that deserves the name appeasement.
Obama’s free pass to Assad’s air force in exchange for a hoped-for nuclear deal with Iran is appeasement, and no form of public relations statement from the State Department’s spokesperson can alter that harsh fact.
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