Week Four of the Russian Intervention in Syria: assessing the Vienna
declaration
November 02, 2015
I would argue that,
at least so far, Russia has achieved many important goal in her intervention in
Syria. Most importantly, the Russian intervention in Syria forced the USA
to agree to a conference in which all the regional actors, including Iran,
would be invited. At the end of its proceedings the conference adopted a
joint statement which I have fully reposted here: http://thesaker.is/joint-statement-final-declaration-on-the-results-of-the-syria-talks-in-vienna-as-agreed-by-participants/
I believe that this
statement represents a major diplomatic defeat for the USA and yet another
Russian diplomatic victory. Here some points which have been agreed upon
(with relevant section of the declaration indicated in brackets):
·
Iran will participate in the negotiations about the future of Syria
(preamble)
·
Syria will not be allowed to break up (#1)
·
Syria will not be ruled by a religious regime (#1)
·
The Syrian military will not be disbanded (#2)
·
Daesh and other terrorists must be defeated (#6)
·
The Syrian people will get to chose their leader (#8)
Now let’s translate
that into political terms and see what this implies.
·
The USA has failed to isolate Iran whose crucial role is now recognized
by all
·
The USA will not be allowed to partition into a Wahabistan and an
Alawistan
·
None of the factions supported by the US (all being religious) will be
allowed to rule
·
The Syrian military (which is solidly pro-Assad) will not be disbanded
or disarmed
·
All the factions supported by the US (all being Wahabi extremists) must
be militarily defeated
·
Assad will be allowed to remain in power (since he is by far the most
popular leader)
Now, I am not
stupid or naive to believe for one second that the USA will truly abide by
these terms. Quite to the contrary. All I am saying is that Russia
has inflicted yet another massive diplomatic defeat on the USA similar to the
one Lough Erne or to the Minsk-1 and Minsk-2 Agreements. In Lough
Erne, for example, the USA had to accept the following statement: “We call on
the Syrian authorities and opposition at the Geneva Conference jointly
to commit to destroying and expelling from Syria all organisations and
individuals affiliated to Al Qaeda, and any other non-state actors linked to
terrorism.” In other words, Daesh-linked Wahabis were told to
join forces with the Syrian military to defeat Daesh! Of course, we all
know that this did not happen. But what is important here is that theUS actions and policies
are so indefensible that the USA has to condemn or, at least, contradict them,
in any public forum.
Let me repeat this
once more: what the US is doing on the ground, in reality, is in complete and
total contradiction with the declaratory policy of the USA:
US actions/policies/goals
|
US official policy on Syria
|
Full military
support for Daesh
|
Categorical
opposition to Daesh
|
Promotion of a
Wahabi regime
|
Promotion of a
secular regime
|
Breakup of Syria
|
Maintaining a
unitary Syria
|
Destruction of
the Syrian military
|
Maintaining the
Syria military
|
Removal of Assad
at any cost
|
Syrian people get
to elect Assad
|
Sabotage of all
Russian efforts
|
Collaboration
with Russia
|
Regime change in
Iran
|
Iran as a partner
|
While, at least so
far, the USA has been successful in doing the exact opposite of what it has
been declaring, this becomes extremely difficult once the Russian military is
directly involved. This was best illustrated by the surreal moment when
following US accusations that Russia was bombing the “wrong” guys the USA
refused to give Russia a list of bad guys and a list of good guys.
This tactic, to
force the USA to formally agree to something which they oppose is also what
Putin used in the Minsk-2 Agreement where the Russians basically forced the USA
and its puppet regime to accept a dialog with the Novorussians even though such
a dialog is absolutely out of the question. This is what Russia is doing
now: forcing the USA to negotiate with Assad and Iran.
Russia’s declared
policies and actions in contrast, are as simple, straightforward and in full
conformity with each other: defeating terrorists, support the legal Syrian
government, uphold international law. In Russia’s case, there is no need
to hide anything and, in fact, the Russians have been amazingly transparent
about their operations.
For years now the
USA has been dreaming of doing to Assad what was done to Hussein and Gaddafi
and they most definitely have the military might to do so: what they are discovering,
to their great distress, is that Russia is capable of defeating US plans by
skillfully using a mix of intense diplomacy and limited military efforts.
So far, the US have not found a way of coping with this situation.
On the military
front the situation remain, at best, complex. The best reports about the
combat situation that I have found so far are, yet again, on Colonel Cassad’s
website. To make a long story short and in sparing you all the details
battle by battle, it appears that the Syrian Army is making slow progress on
many directions, but it has been unable to capitalize on the Russian airstrikes
and these modest tactical successes have not produced any operational
breakthroughs. In simple terms: the government forces are struggling very
hard to achieve even modest progress.
I am, by the way,
in no way blaming the Syrians for that. The frontlines are long,
convoluted, the Wahabis are well dug in, the Russian air force contingent is
very small and can only do so much. One Russian expert declared today
that he believes that the Syrian military lost about 85’000 men since the war
began. If that is true, it would explain, at least partially, the fact
that the Syrians are over-stretched and are having a hard time concentrating
enough forces in one location to achieve a breakthrough.
Still, it is quite
possible that the combined efforts of the Russians and the Syrian will
eventually yield an operational success and that the Daesh forces will suddenly
collapse, at least on one section of the front. The problem with that is
that both sides are in a race for time: the next round of negotiations is
scheduled in two weeks already and, so far, neither side as much to show to
come to the negotiating table in a position of strength. Apparently, the
Americans are planning some kind of attack on Raqqa, and they want to use
primarily Kurdish forces. If so, then this is a rather bizarre
plan. After all, why would the Kurdish forces agree to such a dangerous
and potentially costly (in terms of equipment and lives) operation far away
from their own zones which they must protect on more or less all
directions?! In comparison, the Russian plan of unblocking the Syrian
military and helping it reconquer Aleppo and the key highway linking Damascus
to Homs and Aleppo appears much more realistic, if full of potential
difficulties. If the Syrians fail to achieve these goals in the next 2
weeks, then this will immensely complicate the upcoming negotiations and might
forces Iran and Hezbollah to commit a much larger force to relieve the Syrian
Army.
The next couple of
weeks will be crucial.
The Saker
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