The Western media is reporting that US military forces have killed the
supposed leader of the so-called “Islamic State in Iraq and Syria”
(ISIS) in Syria’s northern governorate of Idlib.
The supposed military operation – unfolding just miles from the
Syrian-Turkish border – comes at a time when the prospects of America’s
proxy war in Syria have reached all-time lows.
First – US proxy forces jointly armed and aided by Turkey as well as
other US allies – have been all but eliminated from the battlefield with
their remnants residing in Idlib, increasingly encircled by Syrian
forces.
Attempts by the US to intervene in Syria directly to oversee the
overthrow of the government in Damascus was also thwarted by Russia’s
military intervention beginning in 2015.
US forces have most recently retreated from the Syrian-Turkish border in Syria’s northeast, setting the stage for a joint Russian-Turkish agreement that
appears poised to see the disarmament of Kurdish militants or their
possible integration into Syria’s security forces. The deal also aims at
fully restoring Syria’s territorial integrity – fully derailing
Washington’s secondary plans to “Balkanize” Syria.
The Russian-Turkish deal comes at a time when US-Turkish relations
are particularly shaky, with Ankara realigning itself within a Middle
East emerging out from under decades of US hegemony.
Despite alleged ISIS leader al Baghdadi lurking about Syria and Iraq
throughout the duration of Syria’s war – why has the US with all its
vast resources only now been able to “find” and “eliminate” him? The
timing and location couldn’t have been better for the US if the entire
incident was staged.
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