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Russian-Iranian-Syrian Axis: France Brought Terror on Itself

Former Senior Fellow
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (L-2) meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin (R-2) at the Kremlin Palace in Moscow, Russia, on October 21, 2015. (Pool/Kremlin Press Office/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
Caption
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (L-2) meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin (R-2) at the Kremlin Palace in Moscow, Russia, on October 21, 2015. (Pool/Kremlin Press Office/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

Since the terrorist attacks in Paris Friday that killed more than 120 people and injured hundreds more, world leaders from President Barack Obama to newly elected Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau, and from U.K. prime minister David Cameron to German chancellor Angela Merkel, have expressed their solidarity with France An exception is Syrian president Bashar al-Assad, who sees mass murder as an opportunity to say I told you so.

According to Syrian state media, Assad blamed France for bringing the attacks on itself. "The flawed policies pursued by Western countries and especially France as regards what is happening in our region ... contributed to the spread of terrorism," said Assad.

The notion that Paris supports ISIS is nonsense. In September France started to launch attacks on ISIS positions in Syria in addition to its sorties against the terror group in Iraq. It had disdained targeting ISIS in Syria previously since it feared that might strengthen Assad’s hold in Syria and French president Francois Hollande wanted Assad gone. Indeed Hollande was the one Western leader who demanded that the Syrian dictator had to step down as part of any political settlement. What Assad and his allies want is for France and everyone else, from the EU to the Arab states and Turkey, is to stop backing any opposition at all.

It was Assad’s mass slaughter of the Syrian opposition, as well as Sunni civilians, that gave rise to extremist factions in the four and a half year war. But in the Syrian regime version of events, Western support for the anti-regime rebels is responsible for the rise of ISIS. After meeting with a delegation of French of lawmakers in Damascus, Assad told reporters that “We said do not mess with the fault-line in Syria, it’s going to be an earthquake that will reverberate around the world.” He continued: “Unfortunately the European officials did not pay attention.”

Assad is not alone in arguing that France’s policies are to blame for the death of French citizens. Iranian state media and key regime officials joined Damascus in arguing that France reaped the whirlwind.

“Terror hits its supporters,” writes the Iranian daily Hemayat.

Self-made terrorism hits back,” "claims the IRGC-affiliated Tasnim News.

The editor of Kayhan, Hossein Shariatmadari, an adviser to supreme leader Ali Khamenei, forecasts that “ISIS supporters—Saudi Arabia, United States, Qatar & Turkey—are next ISIS targets.” Kayhan’s front page says, “ISIS’s rabid dog bites its master.”

“Here you are, the dinner! West tasted what it cooked in Syria,” blasts the front page of Vatan-e Emrooz.

“French nation paid the price for France gov support to ISIS,” explains IRGC deputy chief Hossein Salami.

Curiously, Trita Parsi, president of the National Iranian American Council and one of the leading figures of Washington’s pro-Iran lobby, echoed the sentiments of the regime that has imprisoned his colleague Niamak Samazi. “If it turns out this horrible terror was done by ISIS or Al Qaeda,” Parsi tweeted the night of the attacks, “will France rethink its cosy ties with Saudi and those funding Salafists?”

Even Iran and Assad’s newest partner Russia says the attacks are France’s fault. Sure, Russian premier Vladimir Putin sympathizes with Paris, but, says the thuggish Russian media outlet Izvestia, “France is paying for its active part in the destabilization of the Middle East."

What we’re seeing unfold is an information operation. The Iranian axis is using the Paris attacks as an opportunity to shape the political environment to its advantage. __Iran and allies are the good guys, and the Arabs and Turkey are the black hats. We warned you that the terror you support against us would blow back on you. Now join up with us or else it will happen again.__

Assad and friends ran a similar propaganda campaign after the Charlie Hebdo/Hyper-Cacher attacks in January to argue that France has taken the wrong side in the Syrian war. With 17 dead in the streets of the French capital, pro-Iran, pro-Assad, and pro-Hezbollah media were in full swing, admonishing France, the EU and the United States to review its regional policies. Assad, in this telling, was not the problem, but the solution. If Western states want to secure their cities, they should coordinate with Damascus.

Assad promised the same after Friday’s attacks. The Syrian regime will help France fight terror, said Assad, provided Hollande abandons his goal of removing the Syrian dictator from power. And if France doesn’t meet Assad’s terms? With the Syrian regime it’s always a threat.