Russian
Ships Park Off Syrian Coast As NATO Deploys Patriot Missiles In
Turkey
6
January, 2012
Several
hours ago, Syrian president delivered his first public speech in
months, addressing the internal military conflict that has gripped
his country, and whose key excerpts can be found
here.
In it he called for a "full national mobilisation" to fight
against rebels he described as al Qaeda terrorists. "We meet
today and suffering is overwhelming Syrian land. There is no place
for joy while security and stability are absent on the streets of our
country," Assad said in a speech at the opera house in central
Damascus. "The nation is for all and we all must protect it."
Assad once again blamed the west for provoking and "facilitating"
the rebellion, which even the NYT admits is being orchestrated
by Al Qaeda,
which naturally begs the question: justwhat is
Al Qaeda to the US and to its intelligence agencies - foe or ally?
But while providing fodder for the pundits, the speech was largely
irrelevant. What does merit attention is the follow up to the
story from
two weeks ago the
Russia sent two squadrons of ship to Syria in mid-December. It
appears they have arrived, and just in time to offset the positioning
of NATO Patriot missiles along the Turkish-Syria border.
From Jerusalem
Post:
Russia has concentrated five landing ships in the eastern Mediterranean in a show of force meant to deter Western nations from intervening militarily in Syria, The Sunday Times quoted a Russian diplomat as saying.
According to the report, the ships are carrying military vehicles and hundreds of Russian marines, and are being accompanied by combat vessels.
Remember
when the official party line was that ships are being sent to assist
in the evacuation of Russian citizens? Looks like not even Russia is
going with that anymore.
While officially Russia has claimed the ships have been deployed to partake in an exercise to "improve the management, maintenance and testing of the interaction of naval forces,” the Times quoted the diplomat as saying the marines were meant to deter the West from deploying ground forces in the uprising against Syrian President Bashar Assad.
Meanwhile
in Turkey from Al
Jazeera
:
NATO has begun deploying Patriot missiles in Turkey in a bid to protect the country from the threat of war from neighbouring Syria, according to the US military's European Command (EUCOM).
EUCOM said in a statement on Friday that US military personnel and equipment were sent to Incirlik Air Base in southeastern Turkey to support NATO's Patriot battery deployment at Ankara's request.
Up to 400 troops are expected to be transported to Tukey within the week to operate two Patriot batteries supporting NATO's mission there. Additional equipment is scheduled to arrive by sea this month.
"The deployment of six Patriot batteries, including two each from Germany and The Netherlands, is in response to Turkey's request to NATO," EUCOM said in the statement issued from its offices in the southwestern German city of Stuttgart.
"The forces will augment Turkey's air defence capabilities and contribute to the de-escalation of the crisis along the Alliance's border," it added.
Yes,
we too find it amusing when by de-escalation the
US armed forces mean anything but.
Which
then leaves the only open question: when?
“Russia should be prepared for any developments, as it believes the situation in Syria might reach its peak before Easter,” the Times quoted the diplomatic source as saying.
In
other words, having been unable to convince the world that Iran is a
terminal threat to "democracy" everywhere and the window of
destroying its nuclear processing facilities now officially closed,
and with both the Lebanon and
the Gaza conflicts hibernating, the only loophole left to escalate
the region is now Syria, where the event timeline now appears to
culminate in 2-3 months.
Finally,
let's not forget the US naval presence in the region, whose most
recent update via Stratfor is shown below. Just need a few more US
ships in the eastern Mediterranean for things to get fun.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.