Tom Janssen | CagleCartoons.com
So within the space of a few days, the United States has,
first, commanded the government of Syria to keep its air force away from part
of its own sovereign territory, Hasakah, occupied by American soldiers and
their Kurdish “partners”; it then, with applause from other NATO countries, provided
air support for a Turkish invasion of Syria and seizure of the Syrian town of
Jarablus from those “partners.” These are unambiguous acts of war, and Orwellian
acts of doublethink aggression.
Note that Hasakah, where the incident with the Syrian Air
Force took place, is not in an area
controlled by ISIS. So whatever American troops were doing there, they were not
fighting ISIS. Note also that Turkey’s announced reason for seizing Jarablus—in
order to seal the border and prevent ISIS in Syria from receiving recruits and
supplies—is a flimsy excuse that, as the New York Times (NYT) reports, the
Turks don’t even try to maintain: “Turkish officials made little secret that
the main purpose of the operation was to ensure that Kurdish militias did not
consolidate control over an area west of the Euphrates River.”’
As Al-Qaeda cleric Al-Muhaysin has assured would-be recruits: “The truth is that the Turks
don't prevent anyone from entering Syria.” If the Turks wanted to close the
Syrian border, across which they’ve been trafficking ISIS soldiers, arms, and
oil for years, they could just close it, on their side. No need to invade
Syria. In fact, ISIS was informed of the attack, and left Jarablus before the
brave Turks and their Syrian rebel partners arrived. The Washington Post said: “The
rebels encountered almost no resistance from Islamic State fighters, who fled
ahead of the advancing force.” The blogger Moon
of Alabama (MoA) made the point more sharply: “There was no resistance to
the move. The Islamic State, which had been informed of the attack, had
evacuated all fighters and their families out of Jarablus. … As one commentator
remarked: They even left mints on the pillows. The toleration of ISIS by
Turkey, which includes some not so secret support, will likely continue.”