The article contends that the narrative surrounding Syria's unrest has been shaped by significant miscalculations and strategic errors by Western powers. Initially, there was hope for an indigenous democratic movement in Syria, which was subsequently overshadowed by a shift towards supporting foreign-backed insurrection. By late 2011, it became clear to objective observers that the insurrection was faltering, yet Western nations continued to push for regime change, believing that external support could bring down Assad's government. This misjudgment not only resulted in a protracted conflict but also contributed to the suffering of the Syrian populace as they were caught in a relentless struggle for power.
The author references past writings to illustrate the dynamics at play during the early years of the Syrian conflict. They highlight a significant moment in July 2012 when a failed assassination attempt on Assad’s national security team was believed to be part of a larger strategy to destabilize his regime. Despite these efforts, Assad remained in power, prompting a reevaluation of the strategies being employed by the anti-Assad coalition. The narrative instead shifted to one of a failed Western intervention, which paradoxically exacerbated the situation in Syria rather than leading to the desired regime change.
Finally, the article reflects on the current state of the conflict, suggesting that many involved—both Western powers and regional players—may be seeking to wind down their involvement in Syria. However, it also points to ongoing tensions, particularly with Israel and hardliners in the US, who may still favor a military solution to counter Iran’s influence in the region. The author posits that the prolongation of the Syrian conflict serves to maintain divisions between the West, Russia, and Iran, complicating any prospects for peace. As the situation evolves, the article urges a critical examination of the decisions made by Western powers and their long-lasting impacts on the Syrian people and regional stability.
## I. Introduction
A. Context of the article
1. Reflection on Syria's conflict and Western media’s delayed coverage
2. Reference to a Guardian article revealing historical proposals regarding Assad's leadership
## II. Historical Background
A. Proposal by Russia
1. Russia's suggestion for Assad to step down as part of a peace deal
2. The date of the proposal: over three years prior (2012)
B. Consequences of Ignoring the Proposal
1. Failure of Western powers to act on the proposal
2. Resulting humanitarian crisis
a. Tens of thousands killed
b. Millions displaced, creating one of the largest refugee crises since World War II
## III. Misjudgments by Western Powers
A. Assumptions about Assad's regime
1. Belief that Assad would soon fall
2. Ignoring the escalating violence and conflict
B. Statistics on fatalities and displacement
1. Notable increase in death toll post-2012
2. Initial death toll was under 10,000 in early 2012
## IV. Critique of Western Strategies
A. Neoliberal Ass-covering
1. The narrative of waiting for Assad’s collapse
2. Failed foreign-backed insurrection strategies
B. Analysis of Strategic Failures
1. Shift from domestic insurrection to externally supported regime collapse
2. Historical context of failed democratic movements
## V. Evidence of Strategic Miscalculations
A. The Syrian Revolution Hijacked (November 2011)
1. Conclusion that the revolution was foreign-supported
2. Weakness of Syrian revolutionaries
B. July 17, 2012: The Day America Exited the 9/11 Era
1. Description of a failed decapitation strike against Assad
2. The broader implications of international coalition efforts
## VI. The Failed Regime Collapse Operation
A. Overview of the July 2012 bombing
1. Targeting Assad’s national security team
2. The expectation of regime collapse post-bombing
B. Reality After the Strike
1. Assad’s regime remained intact
2. An orchestrated assault failed to dislodge the regime
## VII. Future Implications and Scenarios
A. Evolving Perspectives Among Western Allies
1. Fatigue within the anti-Assad coalition
2. Changing dynamics among GCC, Turkey, and Western nations
B. Israel's Position
1. Hardliners in Israel and the U.S. seeking military solutions
2. Implications for the U.S.-Iran nuclear deal and regional dynamics
## VIII. Conclusion
A. The ongoing complexity of the Syrian crisis
1. Predictions of future developments remain uncertain
2. Importance of understanding historical context and strategic failures
B. References to previous works analyzing the situation
1. Links to articles discussing the evolution of the conflict and strategies
This outline summarizes the article's analysis of the Syrian conflict, the role of international powers, and the strategic failures that have contributed to the ongoing humanitarian crisis. It highlights the misjudgments made by Western powers and the ramifications of their actions over the years.
…though, to be accurate, loyal readers of China Matters knew the skinny as it happened, three years ago and the Western media is now playin’ ketchup.
From today’s Guardian:
Russia proposed more than three years ago that Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad, could step down as part of a peace deal, according to a senior negotiator involved in back-channel discussions at the time.
Former Finnish president and Nobel peace prize laureate Martti Ahtisaari said western powers failed to seize on the proposal. Since it was made, in 2012, tens of thousands of people have been killed and millions uprooted, causing the world’s gravest refugee crisis since the second world war.
…
But he said that the US, Britain and France were so convinced that the Syrian dictator was about to fall, they ignored the proposal.
As the Guardian ruefully points out, most of the quarter-million fatalities and millions of refugees were generated after early 2012. The total death toll in early 2012 was…less than 10,000.
Also consider this an instance of neoliberal ass-covering, as if the Western allies were just waiting for Assad “to fall.”
I guess now the “foreign backed insurrection worked so well in Libya and only Russian and Iranian support is standing in the way of an identical democratic nirvana in Syria” alternative history has exploded, it’s time for Plan C a.k.a. “the toothpaste is going BACK IN THE TUBE, people” (Plan A the optimistic “indigenous democracy movement will take down Assad while we cheer from the sidelines and provide just a teensy bit of arms & support” stance of 2011, Plan B being 2012 to date “the jihadis will lick Assad with a big assist from us you betcha.”)
Nope, the full story of Syria in 2012 includes multiple sins of commission, not just omission, chief among them promoting a strategy of foreign-backed insurrection that tossed most of Syria and its people into a meatgrinder for three years…without bringing down Assad.
The facts that the domestic insurrection had failed in late 2011 (with the crushing of resistance in Homs) and that the EOA (Enemies of Assad i.e. the GCC, Turkey, the US, and its EU pilotfish) had switched to a strategy of externally supported regime collapse was clear to objective observers as it happened.
As evidence, I attach two pieces of mine. The first one, from one from November 2011, The Syrian Revolution Hijacked, mordantly concludes:
The democratic revolution ship has sailed. What’s going on today is a foreign-supported insurrection.
…
The Syrian revolutionaries were too weak to get the nation they wanted.
They’ll have to make do with whatever state that Turkey, the Gulf powers, and the western democracies decide to give them.
It also includes a sinister cameo from Victoria Nuland, a guest appearance by Islamist muscle imported via Turkey, and a startling prescient prediction by M. Badhrakumar concerning a possible Turkish incursion into northern Syria.
The second piece, July 17, 2012: the Day America Exited the 9/11 Era…By Entering an Alliance with Al Qaeda uses recent tittle tattle to update a piece I wrote in 2012 a week after a botched decapitation strike/regime collapse operation engineered by the United States.
To placate the TL;DR crowd, here’s the main takeaway from that piece:
July 17, 2012, the day the US, Europe, Turkey, and the GCC optimistically thought they could wrap up the Syria crisis in a few weeks with a well-timed campaign of terror and insurrection starting in Damascus.
Recently, a Beirut based newspaper, As-Safir, published a report on the July 2012 bombing (not aerial bombing, a C4 boobytrap) that wiped out Bashar al-Assad’s “security cell” a.k.a. his national security team during their daily strategy session in Damascus.
As translated by an outfit called Mideastwire, As-Safir claims the bombing was a decapitation strike as part of an elaborately choreographed scheme by the U.S. to collapse the Syrian government and military and smooth the way for a drive on Damascus by the Free Syrian Army and the elevation of defecting general Manaf Tlass (who possessed limited capacities beyond a firm jaw well suited to Churchillian cigar-clenching but was adored by the French, perhaps because his socialite sister had allegedly been the mistress of a French foreign minister) to the presidency.
…
I am inclined to believe As-Safir, apparently a lefty, Syria-friendly outfit with a large circulation, because shortly after the bombing I drew the same conclusion, immortalized in my July 28, 2012 piece for Asia Times Online:
[A] funny thing happened last week. The Assad regime didn’t collapse, despite an orchestrated, nation-wide assault (coordinated, we can assume, by the crack strategists of the international anti-Assad coalition): a decapitating terrorist bombing in the national security directorate, near-simultaneous armed uprisings in the main regime strongholds of Damascus and Aleppo, and the seizure of many of Syria’s official border crossings with Iraq and Turkey.
This piece also features a rather farcical cameo by Juan Cole.
As the anti-Assad front cracks, I think we’ll see more of these sorts of reports leaking out, albeit framed as classic passive voiced “Assad didn’t collapse” instead of “a massive West-supported regime-collapse effort failed completely to dislodge Assad while destroying Syria so now it’s time to cut our losses, ignore responsibility,and MOVE ON.”
Ironically, of course, these reports will be leaking out in outlets like the Guardian, whose fact-and-logic-challenged cheerleading for the collapse strategy will probably remain unexamined.
My personal feeling is that most of the EOA including President Obama have grown tired of the game and would like to wind it down. Even the GCC, hemorrhaging from self-inflicted oil war and Yemen invasion wounds, may be willing to give the anti-Assad jihad a rest. Among governments, Turkey looks like the last “Assad must go” outlier in the official coalition, as part of its apocalyptic high-stakes anti-Kurd policy in northern Syria.
But then there’s Israel. I suspect hardliners in Israel, the US natsec establishment are still holding out for a military solution not just because they HATE ASSAD but because stringing out the Syria crisis offers the most effective way to drive wedges between the West and Russia and, more importantly Iran.
The hardliner/Likud Middle East policy is based on maintaining the Iran vs. civilization existential threat dichotomy, which is threatened by President Obama’s efforts at rapprochement via the nuclear deal…and the wholesale stampede of European powers eager to shed the sanctions incubus and do more business with Iran, which is (ironically, if you want to put it that way) the only reasonably stable, war-free oil power in the Middle East.
The best way to keep Iran on the other side of the fence from the West, in other words, is to sidetrack any talk of peace/transition negotiations, sustain the assault on Assad, and elicit ever more overt and off-putting support from Russia and Iran (which see the possibility of closing the books on the Syria adventure and are determined to keep Assad hanging on).
At the very least, a second win for Iran (in Syria) is forestalled. At best, during an escalating crisis, Iran gets painted as an enemy of all that’s good and decent and the wheels are pulled off the nuclear deal buggy—by instituting new US sanctions against Iran, perhaps, which is apparently seen as a dealbreaker.
Enough predicting. Time will tell, I guess.
Here are the pieces covering the evolution and execution of the EOA regime collapse strategy in 2011-2012.

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SYRIA WAR AND THE FAKE “REFUGEE” CRISIS ARE ABOUT CLEARING SPACE FOR “GREATER ISRAEL”
See my previous comment for full details. But the main points to reiterate are:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/greater-israel-the-zionist-plan-for-the-middle-east/5324815
http://forward.com/news/310825/jewish-groups-lead-push-to-open-doors-to-syrian-refugees/
http://www.jpost.com/Diaspora/Holocaust-refugee-We-owe-this-to-mankind-to-allow-Syrian-refugees-into-Britain-415493
http://www.jpost.com/International/WATCH-Palestinian-migrants-on-their-way-to-Vienna-sing-along-to-Yiddish-tune-415977
“Enough predicting. Time will tell, I guess.”
With Jews, we lose.
Israel wants Assad’s regime destroyed so as to break the Shi’a Crescent at what was thought to be it’s weak link; and both the Saudi’s and Israel want to punch a nat gas pipeline up thorough Syria and then to southern Europe…something else which Putin cannot permit. Contra Peter Lee, I don’t think Israel and its American puppet are going to cut bait anytime soon…and the chances for this mess escalating into a direct Russian-American confrontation and a genuine Third and Final world war are still quite good. PARTICULARLY if the entirely Zionized/neo-con’d Republiscam party wins the 2016 Prez election. Much as I despise the collectivists, we are – in terms of raw physical survival – probably better off with the Demoncrats in the WH. They are less likely to incinerate the planet on behalf of Israel
I don’t know. Killary is more competent and hard-working than the Bush clan. That’s a bad thing.
Killary…competent? Not sure about that one, but she is financial whore. Who’s got the money? Makes me almost root for Trump to win.
Video Link
http://www.abc.net.au/lateline/content/2012/s3420041.htm
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Did Americans see a statesman the like of Lavrov in the Republican debate yesterday?
If the US spent just 10% of the effort it has devoted to destroying the Arab/Persian/Muslim world to destroying Israel just imagine how peaceful and prosperous the world could be.