The skies above Syria are crowded with military planes
from various nations. However, the non-stop bombardment of Islamic State (IS,
formerly ISIS/ISIL) seems to be producing nothing in return. The group still
maintains the ability to strike anytime, anywhere - even in the US. And while
Western nations along with Russia are trying to destroy IS, some of America’s
alleged "allies" in the region seem to be playing their own game. Can
a war be won in such conditions? Can progress be made if only some are committed
to end the fighting? We pose these questions, and many more, to an ex-CIA agent
and counter-terrorism expert. Philip Giraldi is on Sophie&Co today.
Follow @SophieCo_RT
Sophie Shevardnadze: Philip Giraldi, it's really great to have you with us
today - thanks for coming to Russia!
Philip Giraldi: Well, thank you very much. I've enjoyed it.
SS: So, I wanna start with Turkey. You think that Turkey's
downing of the Russian plane was a deliberate action, and it was actually aimed
at derailing of the anti-ISIS efforts. Why would they want to do that? Don't
they want to beat ISIS as well?
PG: Well,
that's a complicated question. I'm convinced it's deliberate, because I know
they way their government works - there's no way that a local general or
colonel would have ordered the shoot-down of the Russian plane. It had to come
straight from the top, meaning from the President himself, Erdogan - and
knowing that, it had to be premeditated, it had to be something they were
setting up and were prepared to do. I think, it's very clear it was a
premeditated act.
SS: But why would they want to shoot it down? What is the
reason behind it, in your opinion?
PG: They
wanted to create an incident that would derail what was developing as a large
coalition against ISIS.
SS: And why would they want to do that?
PG: Turkey
has no interest in defeating ISIS. Turkey has one foreign policy objective in
the Arab world, and that's to keep Kurdish state from development. They are
fearful of a Kurdish state developing, taking Turkish territory, Syrian
territory, Iraqi territory and Iranian territory.
SS: Now, before this incident between Turkey and Russia we
had good neighborly relations - why is Erdogan upon himself - sanctions and
tensions - does he not care?
PG: Erdogan
made a miscalculation. He thought that by staging this attack on the Russian
plane, claiming that Russians had attacked him, that he would get NATO to line
up behind him and NATO would support him in a policy against Al-Assad. Now,
that didn't happen, and Erdogan is now saying: "I wish I had never done
it".
SS: Why do you think Turkey is having so many problems
controlling the flow of weapons, ISIS recruits, the oil flow back and forth
across the border - even Washington is saying that Turkey should take care of
the 100 km border line it has with Syria.
PG: Well,
they're having problems because they don't want to control it. They,
essentially are putting a lot of pressure on Europeans by letting the refugees
through - so that's one aspect of what they're thinking, and also, supplying
weapons to ISIS and Al-Nusra is Turkish policy, secret policy, and in return
they're able to buy the oil that ISIS is selling, and then they re-export it.
The Turkish president's family is involved in making a profit from this.
SS: So, I want to read out your quote: "Turkish war
against ISIS is mostly a war against the Syrian Kurds and it's own Kurdish
insurgency", and while the government may paint the Kurds as more
dangerous than ISIS - are they really?
PG: Well,
of course, most of us know they're not. The real enemy is ISIS, but the Turks
tend to see this in a very limited terms, in terms of their own very narrow
interests, and their very narrow interest is to....
SS: But is ISIS not a threat to Turkey though?
PG: No.
SS: Really?
PG: ISIS
has not targeted Turkey, except there's been a couple of incidents that have
been attributed to ISIS, but I don't believe that ISIS actually did them. I
think the Turkish intelligence service did it.
SS: Do you think Ankara is hoping to use ISIS to actually
advance its policy agendas?
PG: Yeah,
I think Ankara sees ISIS as an enemy of the Kurds, and therefore it's a friend
of Turkey in a way.
SS: But what makes the Turkish establishment think that
they won't backfire?
PG: I
think they hope they will have good luck, but that, of course, doesn't always
happen. I think, in this case, they're demonstrating that their optimism about
how they could play this situation has been unfounded.
SS: Mr. Erdogan's leadership is slowly eroding the secular
nature of the Turkish society. How far can this go?
PG: Well,
that's a good question. It certainly is what is occurring: Turkey is becoming
more islamist in many ways, and Erdogan is the one that's pushing this. Most of
the Turks I know are secular and we may call them "Kemalists",
embracing the original constitution of the Turkish Republic. They are very
resentful of all of this, and the fact that they even had big demonstrations
during the recent elections and also the last summer, demonstrates that there's
an undercurrent opposing this. I think that Erdogan will reach a point where he
can't push this very quickly or very much further.
SS: But is advancing a political Islam a tool or a goal
for him?
PG: I
think it's both. It's an objective. He believes in it, and at the same time
it's a tool, because where he has been successful is to get, basically,
relatively uneducated and deeply religious part of the Turkish population to
come out and vote for him, and this has been successful.
SS: So, we have a little situation here. While American
planes bomb ISIS in Syria and Iraq, Turkey hosts ISIS fighters in their
hospitals, they can come over the border, get well, go back and fight; the oil
smuggling, obviously, that we all know about. Now, Syrian Kurds who receive
money from the Americans are being bombed from the same Turks who are actually
one of America's biggest allies... How does that really go together? How does
that mesh together? After all, why does America, Washington still have Turkey's
back?
PG: That's
an excellent question. Having Turkey's back is being questioned in the U.S.
right now. There were editorials before I left Washington three days ago,
suggesting that Turkey should be pushed out of NATO, for example, because it's
no longer a reliable ally. So, there's a lot of understanding that Turkey has
been playing a double-game, as it were pretending to be part of
coalition.
SS: Yeah, because we get that feeling that Washington is
being played by Ankara.
PG: Well,
yes and no. Washington needs Turkish permission to use Incirlik air base to
bomb in Syria, and because it has that need, and because it recognizes that
Turkey is a significant player in what's going on there, it is willing to look
the other way; but, Obama last week told Erdogan he has to start taking steps
to seal the border and to get more actively engaged.
SS: So, you feel like America's not going to take any of
that anymore?
PG: Well,
America understands what's going on, but it's weighing up what is the plus here
and what is the minus here.
SS: So, Russian journalists were hit in Latakia just
recently while driving along the Syrian-Turkish border, and they were hit by an
American TOW missile, that, supposedly, the State Department sends to Syrian
moderate forces. How come they end up hitting the Russian journalists? Is this
wise use of their missile and force?
PG: No,
it's not, and people have been understanding for quite some time now that there
are no moderates. These weapons, once they get over there, they wind up
somewhere else. The moderate of today becomes the Al-Nusra of tomorrow and he
takes his weapons with him. Plus, a lot of weapons were captured in Iraq, which
then made their way into Syria. So, you have American weapons coming from
various sources, winding up in this conflict, and of course, more sophisticated
weapons means that it would be harder and harder to resolve it.
SS: If you look at Syria, it is such a mess from all
sides, because Reuters reported that CIA is actually stepping up with Saudi
Arabia and Qatar its aid to anti-Assad rebels, right? So, you have Russia who
is actually helping the Assad's army fight the ISIS... So, what do you have
here? You have Russia aiding the Syrian army against ISIS, the U.S. and its
allies are helping the enemies of the Syrian army, undermining its anti-ISIS
efforts, right? I mean, the U.S. is fighting ISIS, but it helps those who fight
the enemies of ISIS, thereby helping ISIS, no?
PG: Right.
That's exactly what's happening, and it gets even more complicated than that,
because there are, probably, three separate types of armies fighting each other
simultaneously. We have the U.S. arming the Kurds, which have their own army.
We have the so-called moderate rebels, who are in fact, Al-Nusra and Al-Qaeda,
and they have benefited from American arms too, and we have Russia supporting
the Al-Assad's government which is number 3, and you can probably count the
Syrian army as number 4, and if you want to put Hezbollah in it and Iranian
volunteers, it's probably 5 and 6.
SS: So, is this confusing strategy part of a bigger
conspiracy theory or is it just poor planning?
PG: I
think it's just poor planning. I think that the Obama administration as well as
some of the Europeans anticipated that this situation, by putting some pressure
on ISIS, putting pressure on Al-Assad, would eventually resolve itself. But
that was a bad policy, because that didn't lead anywhere. There was no end
objective to know when it was over, or when you won, and as a result this has
become like a swamp that people are walking into, and it just gets deeper and
deeper. I think that part of the problem is that... you remember our Secretary
of Defence Hagel resigned because he wanted clarity on what the policy should
be in Syria, and we don't have any clarity, the White House has no clarity.
SS: I was just going to ask you, I keep asking this every
time: does Washington even know what it's doing in Syria?
PG: Well,
it probably know what it's doing, but whether it understands what it is doing
is another question. Bear in mind that Obama has only one policy right now -
that's to get through the last year of his presidency...
SS: But what is his goal? What does he want to achieve in
that one year of his presidency - in Syria?
PG: I
don't think he wants to achieve anything. I think he wants to keep it from
blowing up in a very bad way, so that a Democrat will get elected President
next year.
SS: So, Mr. Giraldi. Upcoming presidential elections in
the U.S., let's talk about that. It leaves so much to be desired in a realm of
a foreign policy. So, on a Democratic side we have Hillary Clinton, who's quite
a Hawk, because let's remember that the Libyan war was possible thanks to her. Among
Republicans, as you've said, the only candidate that's making some sort of
sense in foreign policy is Donald Trump, but, then again, you know, it doesn't
say much about the height of the bar. So, whoever becomes President, we
shouldn't be really expecting pragmatism and reserve in American foreign
policy, should we?
PG: No.
But I think, one thing to bear in mind is that, normally, when a Presidential
candidate talks about foreign policy, first of all, the American public is not
very interested in foreign policy, and, secondly, they are saying what they
think they have to say to get elected, and thirdly, once they're in office,
they don't do what they said they were going to do. Obama was, essentially,
elected President as a "peace" candidate. People forget that. The
margin of victory for Obama was with people who wanted peace, and he
immediately turned his back on that, as soon as he got into the White House and
he started getting confidential briefings from the Pentagon and the CIA, he
became hawkish.
SS: But, American public may not be interested in foreign
policy. We're interested in America's foreign policy. Why is it so messianistic
in any case? Why is it always about bringing freedom to one place or the other,
and deciding on what's safe, what's unsafe, good or bad for other places in the
world?
PG: Well,
it's because this is the kind of language the American public wants to hear.
So, that's why a lot of it comes out that way. I think that most of the
candidates, at least most of them, are relatively intelligent, and they
probably understand that what they're saying doesn't make a whole lot of sense,
but the fact is, they are compelled to say this: America has the messianic
streak, where you manifest destiny, where the U.S. is God-given, so on and so forth.
Other countries have done this too, but the fact is, in America, it all is kind
of tied together - you lived there, you understand how it creates a toxic mix,
I think, in terms of how America sees itself, this AMerican exclusiveness is a
bad thing.
SS: That "American exclusiveness" is actually
contradictory of the notion of democracy, because if American foreign policy
was truly democratic, it wouldn't align itself to absolute monarchies like
Bahrain or Saudi Arabia, would it?
PG: That's
exactly right. I believe personally that we shouldn't be trying to change
governments anywhere, but the fact is that the U.S. is hypocritical in
supporting regimes that essentially are against our interests, like Saudi
Arabia, while at the same, not particularly being helpful with the countries
that are trying to transition to democracy.
SS: So, is this talk of freedom, like a screen for
something ultimately?
PG: It's...
yeah, there are couple of phrases that really irritate me: when the American
President describes himself as the "leader of the free world".
America basically wants to be hegemonistic, wants to be the dominant power in
the world and setting the standards for everyone else, and the way you do that
is through language.
SS: Meantime, more countries are joining the anti-ISIS
fight: we see Britain actually extending its activities, we see Germany that's
sending 1200 troops, aircrafts into the region. Is all
this going to make a difference?
PG: No.
No, because, ultimately, if ISIS is... I believe that it's necessary to contain
ISIS, to try to shrink the area that it controls, to reduce its ability to make
money from oil, to do things like that, to push ISIS back into...
SS: You see, when you're saying "contain" -
that's what Obama says as well, and you may contain ISIS on territories of
Syria and Iraq, which, maybe, America has done somewhat. But then, you have
terror attacks in Beirut, in Paris, and you have Russia's passenger plane being
shot down... That's not really containing.
PG: Well,
no, but the fact is, terrorism is not a group, terrorism is a tactic. So, as
long as you have groups that have less power trying to oppose groups that have
more power, they will use terror. So, terrorism or terror is never going to go
away, but the fact is, you can reduce the ability of terrorist groups to strike
outside their neighborhood. For example, take a look at Al-Qaeda. Al-Qaeda back
in 2001 was powerful, was international, was able to direct terrorist actions
all over the world. Now, it's nothing, really, it's a franchise operation,
where people in various places call themselves "Al-Qaeda", but
they've raised their own money, they do their own planning. It's been
fragmented, and that's what we should aspire to do with ISIS.
SS: Do you know what scares me? I'm thinking, if the
world's top armies are trying to combat ISIS, how come that a handful of
jihadists are actually still able to survive?
PG: It's
because the world's top armies have other issues that they have to deal with in
terms of actually using their force. Any one of the major countries in the
world could crush ISIS in a week, but the fact is, there are political aspects
to that to, and it makes it complicated. Turks for example - Turks have 600,000
army which could take care of ISIS in 10 minutes, but the facts is that they're
not going to use it. They have political reasons not to use it. The U.S.
government cannot use its forces because, basically, the American public does
not support this kind of action.
SS: So, Obama called the recent tragic San-Bernardino
shooting "an act of terror", saying that the U.S. will defeat this
threat. Does Obama have a new plan to defeat ISIS?
PG: No,
he doesn't. He basically is averse to using military force exclusively, because
he knows that will turn ISIS into heroes for the rest of the Muslim world, so
it's a bad policy. He's trying to, incrementally, work against ISIS - but
that's not working either. So, he doesn't have a plan. Every president since
George Bush has declared that they would destroy terrorism, but it hasn't
happened yet.
SS: So, you've just said that American public isn't too
keen about actually reinforcing its presence in Syria, but I have a poll,
actually, an ORC poll, that says that most Americans are now in favor of
sending ground troops to fight ISIS, and 69% are saying the U.S. response to
ISIS hasn't been aggressive enough. So, I'm thinking, President Obama has
actually warned against being dragged into a ground war in Syria, saying that
that would be a godsend for those terrorists. So, how come the American public
and President aren't on the same footing right here?
PG: Okay.
Yeah, the most recent polls, because they're reflecting what happened in
California, are showing a more aggressive side to the American public. But,
after, say, another month, when things calm down, go back to normal, the
American public will routinely declare that it's not interested in getting
involved militarily in the Middle East. So, it depends on when you talk to the
American public, and how you phrase the question.
SS: So, the Syrian situation is dragging more and more
countries into this war, into fight against ISIS - but we can see right now that
ISIS is establishing a foothold in Afghanistan. So, I'm wondering, will the war
in Syria prove to be useless with ISIS popping up everywhere else?
PG: Well,
yes and no. The problem is, as I said before, you can't stop terrorism, you
can't contain terrorism - what you can do is to diminish the ability of the
groups we call terrorist to do what they want to do. You can do that. The fact
is that ISIS is popular because it is a form of resistance to the West, which
is seen in negative terms, and that's why it attracts recruits, that's why it
gains money and that kind of thing. So you have to cut down on that. The fact
is that no, we're not going to stop ISIS from spreading to Afghanistan, it's in
Libya, it's in Central Africa, it's probably in the U.S., it may be in Russia -
I don't know - but it's a marketing success right now. Its an attractive
product that's bringing in a lot of people to support it.
SS: But do you think we will see the return of the Western
military in Afghanistan if ISIS takes gain?
PG: I don't
think so. I think that everyone understands very clearly that a Western-led
alliance to destroy ISIS would be counter-productive. It would produce more
sympathy for ISIS than it would succeed in destroying it.
SS: So, EU is now facing the biggest refugee crisis ever,
there is a massive flow and they don't really know what to do with it. But,
ISIS is actually hoping that this terror attacks would make the EU close down
its borders so they'd have workforce back at home. So, should the U.S. be
helping Europe to deal with this? Because, really, we wouldn't be in this mess
if it wasn't for Iraq in 2003, there would be no ISIS - and besides, all the
refugees, they come from the countries where U.S. tried to tap in and change
regimes.
PG: Well,
I have in fact argued just what you're saying, that the U.S. has ultimate
responsibility for what has occurred in Iraq and Syria and for the creation of
ISIS - so we should be playing a humanitarian role in terms of helping with
crisis of refugees.
SS: Because right now, it just said that it will accept
10,000 refugees from Syria.
PG: And they will not be for two years. We have to be
more active on this. But again, it's a political issue in the U.S. The public
is very against taking in Muslims, that's really what it comes down to. Obama
is sensitive to this, he knows elections are coming up and the Republicans are
playing on it the other way, that "let's not let Muslims in, let's monitor
the mosques, let's go make a list of Muslims in the U.S." - that kind of stuff
is crazy.
SS: A lot of crazy stuff goes on in Europe as well,
because the EU Parliament says EU must prepare for possibility of chemical and
biological weapons being used by ISIS. Do you think that's a real possibility?
PG: They
don't have the capability of creating those weapons, but they have the
capability of taking them or stealing them from Iraq and from Syria, which do
have those weapons... and Turkey. So, it's a possibility. I don't go to
sleeping at night, worrying about ISIS, I worry more that we over-react to ISIS
and we take away our liberties by giving the government the authority to listen
to our phone calls, to read our emails, to do that sort of thing. You have to
strike a balance here, the balance has to be that the government should be able
to do things that are reasonable - the key word is "reasonable."
SS: Thank you so much for this wonderful interview. We
were talking to Philip Giraldi, an ex-CIA agent and counter-terrorism expert,
discussing the international efforts against ISIS and what more needs to be
done to stop the terror group. That's it for this edition of Sophie&Co, I
will see you next time.
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