Washington’s US$10 million bounty on Abu Mohammad
al-Jolani’s head hasn’t stopped Western media from trying to sanitize his
image. In an interview with CNN a few days before the fall of Assad’s
government, the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham leader was introduced as a misunderstood
revolutionary, whose youthful exuberance somehow prompted him to behead
civilians on a regular basis.
“I never had the intent to do these things. [I was] at a
certain state of consciousness and young age back then,” he told the CNN
reporter, while the female journalist nodded her head in understanding.
The terror leader added that the only threats against Syria were Iran and
Hezbollah.
As the world ponders whether it should give the Al-Qaeda and
Daesh affiliate a second chance, Iran is likely to reach a clear conclusion
sooner. The reason? Al-Jolani seems adamant about sticking to part of his
character inspired by Netanyahu.
In similar remarks to his CNN interview on Saturday,
al-Jolani said the HTS has no animosity towards the Iranian people, a line
usually used by Netanyahu whose biggest dream is to pummel Iran and divide the
country into different states.
While he also spoke about his intentions to “unite Syria”
and respect all groups in his potential future government, al-Jolani failed to
roll out any plans about the elephant in the room, Israel’s recent occupation
of new regions in Syria, and its nonstop bombardment of the country in the past
week.
The HTS leader said Syria will not be engaging in any
military conflict with Israel because it is “not ready”. He did, however, say
that Israel has no reason to attack Syria, as “Iranian forces have left the
country”. Israel has bombed Syrian soil on over 2000 occasions since December 08.
According to the regime, over 80% of Syria’s military infrastructure now
lies in ruins.
Elsewhere in his remarks, al-Jolani said he will not be
joining the Axis of Resistance in support of Palestinians.
For the most part, so far, al-Jolani has acted as the
perfect Western puppet. He has changed his looks to better fit Western TV, he
demonizes Iran, and he has a phenomenon indifference to Israeli aggressions
against his country.
Much to the dismay of Washington and Al-Jolani’s second
biggest supporter, Turkey, however, nobody knows when this carefully
constructed façade of a reformed terrorist is going to crack and backfire on
all involved actors. Some believe that day might be right around the corner.
“The sudden regime change in Syria is a short-lived victory.
How this all plays out moving forward is almost impossible to say, other than
it looks like there will be considerable chaos in Syria for the foreseeable
future,” said John Mearsheimer, a renowned political science professor and
theorist before condemning Western media for whitewashing HTS’s leader. “These
journalists understand full well, most Americans understand… that the US is
supporting terrorists.”
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