Noam Chomsky (MIT's Professor) on How the Iraq War Birthed ISIS & Why U.S. Policy Undermines the Fig

Historian

Banned


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_uDY_ekatWQ



As Iraq launches a new military operation to retake the city of Tikrit from the self-proclaimed Islamic State, thousands of Iraqi forces and militia fighters have converged in the city Samarra to strike nearby ISISstrongholds.

The United States is expected to provide air support as part of its continued bombing campaign. The offensive comes as the Iraqi military prepares for a major U.S.-backed operation to retake Mosul from ISIS in the coming weeks. ISIS "is one of the results of the United States hitting a very vulnerable society with a sledgehammer, which elicited sectarian conflicts that had not existed," says Noam Chomsky.

"It is hard to see how Iraq can even be held together at this point. It has been devastated by U.S. sanctions, the war, the atrocities that followed from it. The current policy, whatever it is, is not very likely to even patch up or even put band-aids on a cancer."


TRANSCRIPT

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman, with Aaron Mat. Noam Chomsky is our guest for the hour, the world-renowned political dissident, linguist, author of over a hundred books, MIT professor emeritus. Aaron?

AARON MAT: Yes. Noam, I wanted to ask you aboutISIS. The big news is that Iraq is planning a major offensive to retake Mosul. It’s currently launching strikes to recapture Tikrit with U.S. support. My question is about the effectiveness of the U.S. strategy. To what extent is the U.S. constrained by its own policies in terms of the effectiveness of defeating ISIS, constrains in terms of its ties to Saudi Arabia and its refusal to engage with Iran and groups like Hezbollah, which have been effective in fighting ISIS?

NOAM CHOMSKY: Patrick Cockburn, who has done by far the best reporting on this, describes it as an Alice in Wonderland strategy. The U.S. wants to destroy ISIS, but it’s opposing every force that’s fighting ISIS. So, the main state that’s opposed to ISIS is Iran. They support the Iraqi government, the Shiite government.

But Iran is, you know, on our enemies list. Probably the main ground forces fighting ISIS are the PKK and its allies, which are on the U.S. terrorist list. That’s both in Iraq and in Syria. Saudi Arabia, our major ally, along with Israel, is both traditionally, for a long time, the main funder of ISISand similar groups—not necessarily the government; rich Saudis, other people in the emirates—not only the funder, but they’re the ideological source.

Saudi Arabia is committed, is dominated by an extremist fundamentalist version of Islam: Wahhabi doctrine. And ISIS is an extremist offshoot of the Wahhabi doctrine. Saudi Arabia is a missionary state. It establishes schools, mosques, spreading its radical Islamic version. So, they’re our ally. Our enemies are those who are fighting ISIS. And it’s more complex.

ISIS is a monstrosity. There’s not much doubt about that. It didn’t come from nowhere. It’s one of the results of the U.S. hitting a very vulnerable society—Iraq—with a sledgehammer, which elicited sectarian conflicts that had not existed. They became very violent. The U.S. violence made it worse. We’re all familiar with the crimes. Out of this came lots of violent, murderous forces. ISIS is one.

But the Shiite militias are not that different. They’re carrying out—they’re the kind of the—when they say the Iraqi army is attacking, it’s probably mostly the Shiite militias with the Iraqi army in the background. I mean, the way the Iraqi army collapsed is an astonishing military fact. This is an army of, I think, 350,000 people, heavily armed by the United States and trained by the United States for 10 years. A couple of thousand guerrillas showed up, and they all ran away. The generals ran away first. And the soldiers didn’t know to do. They ran away after them.

 
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HORUS

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When Former CIA and Mosad was asked What are you worry about what keeps you up at night ? They responded ISLAMIC STATE

thats why israel has bombed Un-Islamic State like they bomb Hamas


Waisay AbuDajjal how many times has Un-IS attacked israel?
 

Diriyah

Banned
Re: When Former CIA and Mosad was asked What are you worry about what keeps you up at night ? They responded ISLAMIC STATE

[h=1]Syria conflict: Islamic State arms dump 'blows up'[/h]An arms dump has exploded in Deir Ezzor province in Syria, killing 25 Islamic State (IS) militants, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a UK-based activist group.
A large explosion in the town of Al-Mayadeen was followed by several smaller blasts, the group said.
It is not clear if the blasts were caused by an attack or by an accident.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-32539478
 

Insan3

MPA (400+ posts)
Re: When Former CIA and Mosad was asked What are you worry about what keeps you up at night ? They responded ISLAMIC STATE

I'm surprised to see you quoting Fox News... but nevertheless please watch the video below and tell me how on earth khuwarij from ISIS and other stupid groups are getting treatment in Israeli hospitals. I have posted this video long time ago but non of you internet jihadi's (Khuwarij ) ever replied to defend your beloved ISIS.



http://www.siasat.pk/forum/showthre...-to-rest-of-us-INFIDELS&p=3013735#post3013735
 

Historian

Banned
Re: When Former CIA and Mosad was asked What are you worry about what keeps you up at night ? They responded ISLAMIC STATE

I'm surprised to see you quoting Fox News... but nevertheless please watch the video below and tell me how on earth khuwarij from ISIS and other stupid groups are getting treatment in Israeli hospitals. I have posted this video long time ago but non of you internet jihadi's (Khuwarij ) ever replied to defend your beloved ISIS.



http://www.siasat.pk/forum/showthre...-to-rest-of-us-INFIDELS&p=3013735#post3013735
Yes this is the fact
 

protek

MPA (400+ posts)
Re: When Former CIA and Mosad was asked What are you worry about what keeps you up at night ? They responded ISLAMIC STATE

thats why israel has bombed Un-Islamic State like they bomb Hamas


Waisay AbuDajjal how many times has Un-IS attacked israel?

And how many times Iran attacked Israel?????
 

HORUS

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When Former CIA and Mosad was asked What are you worry about what keeps you up at night ? They responded ISLAMIC STATE

Iran or anyother country is not claiming to be a islamic caliphate....if IS is just like the other, then what's the difference ?
And how many times Iran attacked Israel?????
 

Ahud1

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When Former CIA and Mosad was asked What are you worried about and what keeps you up at night ? They responded ISLAMIC STATE

[video=dailymotion;x2olzuh]http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2olzuh

[video=youtube;5x2lM_5Nsig]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5x2lM_5Nsig&feature=youtu.be

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5x2lM_5Nsig&feature=youtu.be

When Former CIA and Mosad was asked What are you worry about what keeps you up at night ? They responded ISLAMIC STATE.

[h=2]CIA and Mosad are seriously worried about their Pet doggs of hell
[/h]since they droped their performance especially after loosing TIKRIT
 

HORUS

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: When Former CIA and Mosad was asked What are you worried about and what keeps you up at night ? They responded ISLAMIC STATE

Ahud Bhai if Israel is so worried then how Many times has it attacked ISIS, Israel has bombed Lebanon, Syria and Iraq for harbouring terrorist in the near past....why not un-ISIS?
how many times has Un-ISIS attacked Israel for the rights of Palestinians??

Netanyahu has never cries about ISIS's threat when he visits US or the UN

CIA and Mosad are seriously worried about their Pet doggs of hell


since they droped their performance especially after loosing TIKRIT
 

Diriyah

Banned
Israel seemed more secure. Thanks to ISIS!

[h=1]The Israeli army raises the stakes in the fight against its arch-foe[/h]May 2nd 2015 | JERUSALEM | From the print edition


http://www.economist.com/news/middl...s-stakes-fight-against-its-arch-foe-hizbullah
israel-pwned-israel-pwned-loser-war-merkava-tank-jew-jewish-demotivational-poster-1258804728.jpg








IT WILL seem paradoxical, but for all the tumult around it, Israel has rarely seemed more secure. Egypt, after the counter-revolution of Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi, is a close friend that shares Israels loathing of the Islamist Hamas movement in Gaza. Saudi Arabia is an undeclared ally against Iran. Iraq is debilitated by civil war. Syria has imploded, and has given up enough of its chemical weapons for Israel to halt distribution of gas masks. The jihadists who have filled the vacuum are too busy fighting Arab foes to worry much about the Zionist enemy.


That leaves two worries. One is Iran. Israel is convinced that the Islamic republic is seeking to build nuclear weapons under the guise of a nuclear-power project. Israel has denounced Americas talks with Iran as a bad deal. But if a nuclear accord is signed, the threat of an Iranian bomb should be delayed by a decade or more. The second, more immediate, concern is Irans Lebanese client, Hizbullah.

Israeli intelligence reckons the Shia militia-cum-party is armed with around 100,000 missiles of various ranges. Israel is anxious to stop it acquiring more accurate missiles which, as well as sowing fear in Israeli towns, can target specific strategic installations and might be armed with chemicals. They are closing the qualitative gap, said the outgoing head of the home front command, Major-General Eyal Eizenberg, warning darkly that, in any future confrontation, Hizbullah would launch between 1,000 and 1,500 rockets daily.


Hizbullah has long cast itself as the leading force of resistance against Israel, but it is now fighting fellow Arabs in Syria and Iraq. Once a proxy of Syria, it has become the main guarantor of President Bashar Assads regime. This means that Israels northern border with Syria on the Golan Heights, which used to be the quietest, has become unstable. Israeli generals give warning of Hizbullah opening a second front against Israel on the Golan.


In January an Israeli drone strike hit a convoy near the border, killing the commander of Hizbullah operations on the Golan and a general from Irans Revolutionary Guards, among others. Hizbullah retaliated with a missile attack on an Israeli patrol, killing two soldiers.

Now tension is rising again, after a series of incidents near the border. On April 24th a Syrian army missile base in the Qalamoun mountains near the Lebanese border was hit by an air strike. Two days later Moshe Yaalon, the defence minister, all but acknowledged that Israel had carried out the attack. They are aware of the red lines Israel has set and has no intention of compromising on, said Mr Yaalon. We will not allow high-grade weapons to be transferred to the terror organisations, chief among them Hizbullah.

That evening brought two more incidents. Aircraft attacked and killed four men who were laying explosive devices along the Israeli side of the Golan border; a second attack took place at another Syrian base on Qalamoun. Uncharacteristically, Israel took responsibility for the first strike, although Israeli sources denied involvement in the second, suggesting it was the work of local rebels.


Through all this murk, Israel may be sending a signal: it is ready to strike Hizbullah, either because its presence on the Golan is becoming a greater threat or because Israel thinks Hizbullah is too stretched by its operations in Syria and Iraq to risk another big conflict with it. Although the Israeli government has little desire for a wide-scale military campaign so soon after the Gaza conflict of last summer, it appears more willing to risk one.


Many in the army think a showdown with Hizbullah is inevitable. Right now, the militia is embroiled in other wars and is suffering many casualties; it may have lost 1,000 fighters, some Lebanese sources reckon. In a few years time, Hizbullahs battle-hardened fighters could be back home. In the meantime, Israel may be seeking shorter-term gains. If trouble on the Golan serves to present Hizbullahs actions in Syria (and by extension Irans behaviour) as destabilising, it could strengthen Israels campaign to portray any nuclear deal with Iran as a menace to the region.


Jew-jitsu.jpg


Long Run Nation of Zion will win.... thanks to ISIS.
 

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