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Obama Wars Title: Next Stop For NATO Regime Change: Syria No humanitarian intervention to protect victims of US and British-backed tyrants in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia With western-backed Al-Qaeda rebels now firmly in control of Libya, NATO is set to move on to its next target for regime change -- Syria -- with Bashir Assad's government becoming increasingly isolated as attack plans are finalized. According to DebkaFile's military and intelligence sources, several different blueprints for military intervention in Syria are now being considered by NATO powers and allied states in the region, including the use of Turkish and Saudi troops to overthrow Assad's regime. "Well-informed military sources warn that Assad will not be cowed by the international, military and economic noose tightening around his neck. He is far more likely to try and loosen it by lashing out against his enemies, starting with Israel. Iran will certainly be a willing supporter of such belligerence, starting a war which could spread like wildfire across the region," states the report. Earlier this month NATO powers, including US President Barack Obama, called on Assad to step down. The UN has already pulled all its non-essential staff out of the country. Obamas demand that Assad step aside is exactly what happened prior to the bombardment of Libya. On February 26, Obama called on Gaddafi to give up power. Three weeks later, US B-2 bombers were attacking Libyan airfields. The establishment media is repeating precisely the same rhetoric we were bombarded with prior to the attack on Libya, where for weeks rebel troops who had seized control of fighter jets, tanks and rocket-propelled grenade launchers were described as "protesters" and "demonstrators". Given that the western press has proven adept at manufacturing lies to justify military interventions, whether the actions of Assad's regime represent genuine atrocities or legitimate conduct in the midst of a civil war remains unclear. Some have claimed the abuses are being embellished, while both former CIA agent Robert Baer and ex-MI6 officer Alastair Crooke point out that the Syrian people definitely want change, but not in the form of a NATO "humanitarian" assault. Syrians want change. But whether Westerners believe it or not, most people in Damascus, in Aleppo, the middle classes, the merchant classes and the [sectarian] minorities believe Assad is the only person who can bring in reforms, he said. They fear two things above all else civil war and Western intervention
They would like to avoid the example of Libya because it would lead them into civil war, said Crooke. Whether or not Assad's regime has committed atrocities, as Congressman Ron Paul points out today, both Assad and Gaddafi are no worse than some of the tyrants currently being propped up by western powers, such as the US and British-backed unelected monarchy in Bahrain which has terrorized and murdered its people for almost six months. Fellow western ally Saudi Arabia also sent troops into Bahrain, trained by the British Armed Forces, to crush the popular uprising, leaving behind a trail of human rights abuses. There was no NATO "humanitarian" intervention when Bahraini troops acting on behalf of the dictatorship began indiscriminately firing tear gas into villages and homes, killing old women and children via asphyxiation, before detaining thousands of pro-democracy protesters and subjecting them to torture while killing scores of others. Meanwhile, western ally Saudi Arabia is trying to pass a law that would designate any form of protest against the monarchy as a terrorist act. This follows widespread protests by pro-reform demonstrators earlier this year which were met with police brutality, murders and arrests without charge. "Gaddafi may well have been a tyrant, but as such he was no worse than many others that we support and count as allies," writes Ron Paul. "Disturbingly, we see a pattern of relatively secular leaders in the Arab world being targeted for regime change with the resulting power vacuum being filled by much more radical elements. Iraq, post-Saddam, is certainly far closer to Iran than before the US invasion. Will Libya be any different?" Given that Libya has now been seized by Al-Qaeda terrorists who are already committing atrocities against the country's black population, NATO's "humanitarian" pretext for further interventions has been completely discredited, but don't expect that to stand in the way of the opportunity to capture another "rogue state" and homogenize it into the global empire of the new world order.
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