JANUARY 13, 2017 counterpunch.org
The Syrian Arab Army now
controls Aleppo, which means that the Syrian government once more is
in charge of the main population centres in the country. Opposition armed
forces are hemmed in around Damascus and in Idlib, while the Islamic State (IS)
still holds the northern city of Raqqa. These forces, including IS, are on the
back foot, disorganised, weakened logistically and disoriented. Largely abandoned
by their benefactors — the West, the Gulf Arabs and Turkey — these fighters
have either moved to great desperation in their violence or to near surrender.
A ceasefire brokered on December 30, 2016 holds in most parts of the country.
Peace talks are to begin on January 23 in Astana (Kazakhstan). Iran, Russia,
the Syrian government, sections of the
Syrian opposition, Turkey and the United Nations will have seats at
the table. The United States and the Europeans will not be there.
The war will
not end in Astana. Extremist groups such as the IS and the al-Qaeda-backed
Jabhat Fateh al-Sham continue to hold territory. Frustrated extremists who are
unwilling to accede to the new situation have already begun to trek to the IS
and the al-Qaeda proxy. For them, there is little to be gained from surrender
or reconciliation.
Western miscalculations
For the past
five years, the main slogan from the Syrian opposition and its Gulf Arab,
Turkish and Western allies was ‘Assad Must Go’. It now turns out that the
government of Bashar al-Assad will remain. It appeared, even in 2011, that the
fall of Mr. Assad without major Western military intervention was unlikely. The
Syrian military was far more disciplined than the Libyan military, which had
begun to crumble before the NATO bombing on Libya. There was also far less
daylight between the Syrian government and its military than there was between
the Egyptian government and its military. Absent massive military force, there
was going to be no regime change in Syria.
Direct
Western military intervention was curtailed — thanks to the fiasco in Iraq — by
the lack of domestic appetite in the West for the use of sufficient numbers of
troops to fight in Syria. Regime change in Libya and its disastrous aftermath
closed the door for a UN authorisation for war on Syria. By 2012, this meant
that the Assad government could not be easily defeated. The policy shifted from
direct overthrow to a much more cynical use of power. Covert shipments of arms
went to rebels of various stripes to help delegitimise the government. Al-Qaeda
and other extremist groups came across the Turkish border and from Iraq as well
as from the prisons of the Syrian government. Casualty rates edged upwards,
with over half a million dead. The impossible promise of Western bombardment
kept the war going in the hope that this would force Mr. Assad to negotiate.
The West
miscalculated. On September 22, 2016, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry made
some off-the-cuff remarks at the Dutch Mission to the United Nations. The tape
from that meeting, released by WikiLeaks, reveals the general Western consensus
on the Syrian conflict. Mr. Kerry indicated that the U.S. had watched the
growth of IS, and had hoped to use it as a bargaining chip against the Assad
government. As it turned out, Mr. Assad turned to Iran and Russia for help,
which is when the Russians intervened directly in September 2015 — ending any
possibility of regime change in Damascus and of an IS capture of Damascus. With
Mr. Assad now safe, the Russians have begun to draw down their forces, largely
to build confidence towards the Astana meeting.
By 2015, it
had become clear to the Turkish government that neither would Mr. Assad’s
government fall nor could Turkey protect itself from the detritus of its own
making — attacks by the IS inside Turkey and a reopened war with the Kurdish
resistance movement. Turkey’s government lashed out at its critics — who had
much to be critical about — and sought a rapprochement with Russia for economic
and political reasons. This new alignment for Turkey meant that its border —
long used to resupply the rebels in northern Syria — had to close, substantially
reducing the ability of the extremists in Aleppo. The Syrian government, which
had waited four years, then moved with great force. It was the Turkish shift
that allowed Mr. Assad to take Aleppo.
On January
5, Iraq’s National Security Adviser met Mr. Assad in Damascus to discuss their
mutual fight against the IS, just as Iraqi forces cleared the road from Haditha
to al-Qa’im, which is on the Iraq-Syria border. These public meetings, a senior
Egyptian military officer informs me, mirror the more private interactions
between the militaries of Egypt, Iraq, Algeria and Syria. In November, Egyptian
army officers went to Syria to re-establish connections that have frayed over
the past few years. Now Egypt is ready to send ‘peacekeepers’ to help manage
the ceasefire. Meanwhile, the Syrian and Turkish governments have met secretly
in Algeria over the past five months to begin a conversation about the status
of the Syrian Kurdish enclave on the Turkish border. Algeria is now openly
talking about the restoration of legitimacy to the Assad government.
The end is far
The
frustration of the extremists will not produce an easy end to this conflict.
Harsh violence is the more expected outlet. Attacks in Jordan, Saudi Arabia and
Turkey — all accused, rightly, of abandoning the uprising — will continue to be
a serious problem. Iraq, already accustomed to violence since the illegal U.S.
invasion in 2003, saw over 6,000 civilians killed last year alone. It is often
strategically targeted against Shia neighbourhoods and religious places in
order to deepen the trough of sectarianism. After a spate of attacks in
Baghdad, Sunni leader Sheikh Mahdi al-Sumaidaie, the Grand Mufti of Iraq, made
a plea on January 5 that echoes across the Arab world: “I confirm that Shias
and Sunnis will meet and hold accountable all who betrayed, deceived and burned
Iraq.” It was a statement of patriotism out of desperation. This seam of
patriotism will be hard for the extremists to rip apart.
North-west
of Damascus is Souq Wadi Barada. The al-Fija spring there is a crucial source
of water for the capital. Extremist groups have held this source for the past
several years and on at least six previous occasions cut off the water supply
to Damascus. The fall of Aleppo has led to new fighting in the area, with water
now firmly cut off from all but one tank, which the military controls. Damascus
faces great hardship. Negotiations are on to let the water flow again. When it
does, it will show that reconciliation is possible in these societies.
Vijay Prashad’s most recent book is No Free Left: The
Futures of Indian Communism (New Delhi: LeftWord Books, 2015).
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