I'll let this rather pessimistic piece by the Saker stand on its own. I rather hope he's wrong.
Let’s
stop the stupid flag waving! (Saker rant)
20
October, 2015
Both
here and in the comments section at the Unz Review, I am noticing a
steady stream of hostile comments directed at those who, like Rambo
and myself, who are urging caution and realism about the entire
Russian operation in Syria. A week ago I felt compelled to post
a rant entitled “answer
to a disappointed reader”
but apparently, this was not enough. So today I want to share
with you some of the views of Konstantin Sivkov whose credentials
are, I hope, impressive enough for everмybody:
Konstantin
Sivkov: Doctor
of Military Sciences, the first vice-president of the Academy of
Geopolitical Problems, a military expert. He was born in
1954. In 1976 he graduated from the Naval College. He
served in the Navy. He graduated from the Military
Medical Academy. In 1992 he graduated from the Academy of
the General Staff. From 1995 to 2007 he served in
the General Staff of the Armed Forces. A specialist
in the field of military political science. He
participated in the development of doctrinal
documents determining the development and use of the
Armed Forces.
Good
enough? He was recently
interviewed by
Svobodnaia Pressa (free press). I hope to bring you the full
text of the interview in the next couple of days. In the
meantime, here are some of the highlights of what Sivkov had to say:
- The Syrian Army offensive has grinded to a halt
- In several locations Daesh successfully counter-attacked
- The airbase at Latakia is maxed out or will very soon be
- The Russians are not providing close air support, but only strikes on operational-level fixed targets
- There are signs that the Syrian military is running out of ammunition
- The USA are supplying Daesh with ammunition to compensate for the ammo dumps destroyed by Russian airstrikes
- Russia will probably have to engage long-range aviation to compensate for the small number of aircraft in Lakatia
- The Russian flotilla in the Caspian has used up almost all its cruise missiles
- Dash forces are commanded by very skilled officers from the ex-Iraqi army
- Russia needs either another airfield in Syria or, better, the agreement of the Iranians to let the Russian deploy more or less 120-130 aircraft on Iranian airfields
- The Russian force in Latakia is very vulnerable and the base will have to be urgently reinforced
Sivkov
said many more interesting things, but I will wait for the
translation before commenting on them. My point is that we
most stop the stupid flag waving under the pretext that we are
pro-Russian or pro-Syrian!
The Russian operation so far has been very successful, but the fact
remains that the Syrian offensive is stalling. Yes, the
performance of Russian pilots has been superb, but the Russian force
in Syria is so small that it cannot, at this point in time, break
Daesh’s defenses. Why? Because there
are not enough aircraft to do bombing on operational level targets
(command posts, ammo dumps, infrastructure) and close air support.
Guys,
please make no mistake, the Russians are very good, yes, but their
operation is extremely
daring, dangerous and difficult and, as for right
now, the deciding factor is not the Russians in the skies, but the
Syrians on the ground and they are having serious difficulties:
several successful counter-attacks by Daesh have prevented the Syrian
forces from concentrating on key offensive directions and, instead,
they had to move elsewhere to stop the advance of Daesh. In
other words, the initial plan has failed. Yes, Russia has
options, especially if the Iranians give their full support, but
right now the situation is very difficult.
At
the end of the day, I suppose that it all boils down to this: do we
trust Putin and the men around him. I do. Completely.
But all that flag-waving and high-fiving is totally premature and,
frankly, indecent. Just in the last couple of days, an Iranian
general and a senior Hezbollah commander have died and the best way
to honor them is not to
act like Dubya did and not to
declare “mission accomplished” when there is along
and hard struggle ahead.
The best way to honor these men is to recognize the heroic nature and
great difficulty of their struggle.
Right
now, it could go either way. In theory, Daesh could break under
pressure and basically collapse. This is possible, but this is
not what I expect will happen. I expect Daesh to show
flexibility and adapt to the new environment at which point the
Russians will have to bring in more forces (although a Russian ground
offensive is not on the table). As for the Iranians, they
cannot afford to allow Daesh to prevail, so if the Syrian military
continues to be over-extended and lacking supplies, they will have to
move in. If that happens, the Americans and their Arab stooges
in the region will go ballistic. So make no mistake, there next
couple of weeks will be extremely dangerous.
In
conclusion, here below is some recent footage of a Russian SU-30SM
meeting a US MQ-9 Reaper drone over Syria. I expect a lot of
that will be happening in the near future. So let’s quit the stupid
flag-waving!
The
Saker
Here is the interview referred to -
Константин Сивков: "США нивелируют действия России в Сирии!"
Военный эксперт о том, что группировка ВКС России в Сирии достигла предела оперативных возможностей. Почему "захлебывается" наступление правительственных войск против террористов в Сирии? Почему войска Асада не вышли к турецкой границе и не замкнули "Идлибский котел"? Почему необходимо срочно наращивать группировку ВС РФ в Сирии?
Почему
афганские моджахеды появятся в Сирии?
Константин
Сивков продолжает анализировать боевые
действия на Ближнем Востоке.
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