In this thread I'm going to try and build a timeline of events which have transpired over the course of a few years. The beginning has it's initial
formation during the Arab Spring, however, although many countries were involved in it, highlighting a few of them, Libya and Syria particularly, will
help to form the narrative I'm trying to write. So let's begin...
On March 19, 2011, American and European allies began a bombing
campaign in Libya to oust Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi. The
campaign which lasted
several months, ended in the demise and
assassination of Qaddafi weeks later at
the hand of opposition forces, who were waging a ground war following months of aerial bombardments by NATO forces.
During this period, weapons caches in and around Libya were left
unchecked and abandoned. The benefit these
weapons have
had for
extremist groups in waging a continued
campaign of violence and destruction, has no
boundaries.
After the death of Qaddafi, the loose weapons which fell into the hands of the opposition not only remained on the battlefield, but also began to
trickle into
Syria
at the behest of Libya's National
Transitional Council,
which was established in Benghazi on March 25, 2011.
The newly formed governing body immediately dispatched it's leading
commander, renowned Isamist leader, Abdulhakim Belhadj, head of the Tripoli Military Council, to meet with Free Syrian Army leaders in Istanbul
and on the border with
Turkey.
The influx of Libyan fighters onto the
battlefield in Syria to join forces
fighting to overthrow Bashar Al-Assad, the opposition group
recognized by the United States
and a month earlier
internationally, is known as the free Syrian army or
FSA.
However, this same group also received recognition by the United Nations. On the one hand the group is supported and
funded by Saudi Arabia, who pays the wages for these men to
fight, and on the other hand it's rejected and deemed a extremist
group.
So the stalemate continues. As the Syrian state continues to decline so does it's wealth. The oil
embargo imposed on Syria in the beginning of the onslaught and
ensuing civil war, is crippling the infrastructure of the regime, this however has had little affect due to support and
cash coming in from Russian assistance, including military advisers and
intelligence gathering capabilities from
Iran.
But, the game has just begun. In the makings is something more cynical and profound. Something surely sinister enough and awe inspiring to create a
scenario for an allied military strike. This however, is not the case, "yet."
The outside support of the Syrian regime has helped to prop up the government and Assad's power. To mitigate this threat, and create an atmosphere
where wealth distribution can possibly help opposition forces, the EU determined it would lift the embargo it placed on Syrian
oil, and begin investing and assisting the
rebels in hopes to win the war.
As the money began to flow to rebels within the country, a
scramble by various extremists elements to control oil wells
accelerated, a race Western backed moderates lost. In the mean time, warlords and extremist groups start consolidating power and filling the vacuum
left behind. The big bucks allowed the formation of a unified strong state, openly defying and controlling large swathes of cross boarder land masses
in Syria and Iraq, in a struggle to maintain control over smuggling routes into the black market in Turkey, and dominate on the ground to control oil
fields and critical infrastructure.
Well I'm done for now. Finish second perhaps tomorrow.
edit on 7-9-2014 by Daedal because: edit
edit on 7-9-2014 by Daedal because: edit