Week
Three of the Russian Intervention in Syria: The return of diplomacy
25
October, 2015
This
column was originally written for the Unz Review:
http://www.unz.com/tsaker/week-three-of-the-russian-intervention-in-syria/
The
end of international law and diplomacy
The
end of the Cold War was welcomed as a new era of peace and security
in which swords would be transformed into plows, former enemies into
friends, and the world would witness a new dawn of universal love,
peace and happiness. Of course, none of that happened. What happened
is that the AngloZionist Empire convinced itself that it had “won
the Cold War” and that it now was in charge. Of the entire planet,
no less. And why not? It had built anywhere between 700 to 1000
military bases (depending on your definition of “base”) worldwide
and it had split up the entire globe into several areas of exclusive
responsibility named “commands”. The last time any power had
mustered the megalomania needed to distribute various parts of the
planet to to different commands was the Papacy in 1494 with its
(in)famous “Treaty
of Tordesillas”.
And
to make that point abundantly clear, the Empire decided to make an
example and unleashed its power against tiny Yugoslavia. Yugoslavia,
a founding member of the Non-Aligned Movement was viciously attacked
and dismembered, creating an immense wave of refugees, mostly Serbs,
which the democratic and civilized world chose to ignore.
Furthermore, the Empire unleashed yet another war, this time in
Russia, which pitched the semi-comatose Eltsin regime against what
would later become a key part of al-Qaeda, ISIS and Daesh: the
Wahabis in Chechnia. Again, many hundreds of thousands of “invisible
refugees” resulted from that war too, but they were also largely
ignored by the democratic and civilized world, especially the ethnic
Russians. It took Russia a full decade to finally crush this
Wahabi-Takfiri insurgency but, eventually, Russia prevailed. And by
that time, the AngloZionists had turned their attention elsewhere:
the US and Israeli “deep states” jointly planned and executed the
9/11 false flag operation which gave them the perfect excuse to
declare a “global war on terror” which basically gave the
AngloZionists a worldwide “license to kill” à la 007,
except that in this case the target was not a person, but entire
countries.
We
all know what followed: Iraq, Afghanistan, Philippines, Somalia,
Ethiopia, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen, Mali, Pakistan, Syria, Libya, the
Ukraine – everywhere the US was at war, whether officially or
covertly. The spectrum ranged from an (attempted) complete invasion
of a country (Afghanistan) to the support of various terrorist groups
(Iran, Syria) to the full financing and management of a Nazi regime
(the Ukraine). The US also gave full support to the Wahabis in their
long crusade against the Shia (KSA, Bahrain, Yemen, Syria, Iran).
What all these wars had in common is that they were all completely
illegal – the US and any ad hoc “coalition of
the willing” became an acceptable substitute for the UN Security
Council.
Here
again it is important to remind everybody – especially those
Muslims who rejoiced at the bombing of the Serbs – that this all
began with the completely illegal destruction of Yugoslavia followed
by an even more illegal bombing of Serbia.
Of
course, the Empire also suffered from a few humiliating defeats: in
2006 Hezbollah inflicted on Israel what might well be one of the most
humiliating military defeats in modern history while in 2008 a tiny
force of truly heroic Ossetian fighters backed by a comparatively
small Russian military contingent (only a small part of the Russian
military was involved) made mincemeat of the the US-trained and
US-funded Georgian military: the war was over in 4 days. Still, by
and large, the first decade of the 21st century saw a triumph of
the law of the jungle over international law and a full vindication
of the age old principle of “might makes right”.
Logically,
these were also the years when the US diplomacy basically ceased to
exist. The sole function of US diplomats remained the delivery of
ultimatums “comply or else…” and the Empire simply stopped
negotiating about anything. Seasoned and sophisticated diplomats like
James Baker were replaced either by psychopaths like Madelaine
Albright, Hillary Clinton and Samantha Power, or by mediocre
non-entities like John Kerry and Susan Rice. After all, how
sophisticated must one be to threaten, bully and deliver ultimatums?
Things got so bad that the Russians openly complained about the “lack
of professionalism” of their US counterparts.
As
for the poor Russians with their pathetic insistence that the norms
of international law must be observed, they looked hopelessly passé.
I won’t even mention the European politicians here. They were best
characterized by the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, who called them
“great
supine protoplasmic invertebrate jellies‘.
But
then, something changed. Dramatically.
The
failure of force
Suddenly
everything went south. Every single US victory somehow turned into a
defeat: from Afghanistan to Libya, every US ‘success’ had somehow
morphed itself into a situation where the best option, if not the
only one left, was to “declare victory and leave”. This begs the
obvious question “what happened?”.
The
first obvious conclusion is that the US forces and their so-called
“allies” have very little staying power. While they are
reasonably skilled at invading a country, they then rapidly lose
control of most of it. It is one thing to invade a country, but quite
another to administer it, nevermind rebuilt it. It turns out that
US-led “coalitions of the willing” were unable to get anything
done.
Second,
it became obvious that the enemy which was supposedly defeated had
really only gone into hiding and was waiting for a better time to
come back with a vengeance. Iraq is the perfect example of that: far
form being really “defeated”, the Iraqi Army (wisely) chose to
disband itself and come back in the shape of a formidable Sunni
insurrection which itself gradually morphed into ISIS. But Iraq was
not an isolated case. The same happened pretty much everywhere.
There
are those who will object and that that the US does not care if it
controls a country or if it destroys it, as long as the other guy
does not get to “win”. I disagree. Yes, the US will always prefer
the destruction of a country to an outright victory of the other
side, but this does not mean that the US does not prefer to control a
country if possible. In other words, when a country sinks into chaos
and violence this is not a US victory, but most definitely a US loss.
What
the US missed is that diplomacy makes the use of force much
more effective. First, careful diplomacy makes it possible to
build a wide coalition of countries willing to support collective
action. Second, diplomacy also makes it possible to reduce the number
of countries which openly oppose collective action. Does anybody
remember that Syria actually sent forces to support US troops against
Saddam Hussein in Desert Storm? Sure, they did not make a big
difference, but their presence gave the US the peace of mind that
Syria would at least not overtly oppose the US policy. By getting the
Syrians to support Desert Storm, James Backer made it very hard for
the Iraqis to argue that this was an anti-Arab, anti-Muslim or even
an anti-Baathist coalition and he made Saddam Hussein look completely
isolated (even when the Iraqis began shooting missiles at Israel).
Second, diplomacy makes it possible to reduce the overall amount of
force used because “instant overkill” is not needed to show the
enemy that you really mean business. Third, diplomacy is the
necessary tool to achieve legitimacy and legitimacy is crucial when
engaged in a long, protracted, conflict. Finally, the consensus which
emerges from a successful diplomatic effort prevents the rapid
erosion of the public support for a military effort. But all these
factors were ignored by the USA in the GWOT (Global War on Terror)
and the “Arab Spring” revolutions which now have come to a
screeching halt.
A
diplomatic triumph for Russia
This
week saw a true diplomatic triumph for Russia culminating in Friday’s
multilateral negotiations in Vienna which brought together the
foreign ministers of Russia, the US, Turkey and Saudi Arabia. The
fact that this meeting took place right after Assad’s visit to
Moscow clearly indicates that the sponsors of Daesh and al-Qaeda are
now forced to negotiate on Moscow’s terms. How did that happen?
As
I have been mantrically repeating it since the Russian operation in
Syria began, the Russian military force actually sent to Syria is
very small. Yes, it is a very effective one, but it is still very
small. In fact, the members of the Russian Duma have announced that
the costs of the entire operation will probably fit in the normal
Russian Defense budget which has monies allocated for “training”.
However, what the Russian have achieved with this small intervention
is rather amazing, not only in military terms, but especially
in political terms.
Not
only has the Empire (very reluctantly) had to accept that Assad would
have to stay in power for the foreseeable future, but Russia is now
gradually but inexorably building up a real regional coalition which
is willing to fight Daesh on the same side as the Syrian government
forces. Even before the Russian operation began, Russia had the
support of Syria, Iran, Iraq and Hezbollah. There are also strong
signs that the Kurds are basically also willing to work with Russia
and Assad. On Friday it was announced thatJordan
would also coordinate some as of yet unspecified military actions
with Russia and that a special coordination center will be set up in
Amman.
There are also very strong rumors that Egypt will also join the
Russian-lead coalition. There are also signs that Russia and Israel
are also, if not working together, at least not working against each
other: the Russian and Israelis have created a special line to
directly talk to each other on a military level. The bottom line is
this: regardless of the sincerity of the different parties,everybody
in the region now feels a strong pressure to at least not look
opposed to the Russian effort. That, by itself, is a huge triumph for
Russian diplomacy.
Putin’s
secret weapon: the truth
The
current situation is, of course, totally unacceptable for the Global
Hegemon: not only has the US-lead coalition of 62 countries managed
to conduct 22,000 strikes (iirc) with nothing to show for it, but the
comparatively smaller Russian coalition has managed to completely
displace the Empire and negate all its plans. And the most formidable
weapon used by Putin in his proxy war with the USA was not even a
military one, but simply speaking the truth.
Both
at his
UN speech and,
this week, at his
speech at the Valdai Conference Putin has
done what no other world leader before has ever dared doing: he
openly call the US regime incompetent, irresponsible, lying,
hypocritical and terminally arrogant. That kind of public “dissing”
has had a huge impact worldwide because by the time Putin said these
words more or less everybody knew that this was absolutely true.
The
US does treat all its allies as “vassals” (see Valdai speech) and
the US is the prime culprit for all the terrible crises the world now
has to face (see UN speech). What Putin did is basically say “the
Emperor is naked”. In comparison, Obama’s lame speech was
comically pathetic. What we are witnessing now is an amazing turn
around. After decades marked by the “might makes right” principle
advocated by the USA, suddenly we are in a situation where no amount
of military might is of any use to a beleaguered President Obama:
what use are 12 aircraft carriers when you personally look like a
clown?
After
1991 it appeared that the only superpower left was so powerful and
unstoppable that it did not need to bother itself with such minor
things like diplomacy or respect for international law. Uncle Sam
felt like he was the sole ruler, the Planetary Hegemon. China was
just a “big Walmart”, Russia a “gas station” and Europe an
obedient poodle (the latter is, alas, quite true). The myth of US
invincibility was just that, of course, a myth: since WWII the USA
has not won a single real war (Grenada or Panama do not qualify). In
fact, the US military fared even much worse in Afghanistan that the
under-trained, under-equipped, under-fed and under-financed Soviet
40th Army which, at least, kept all the major cities and main
roads under Soviet control and which did some meaningful development
of the civilian infrastructure of the country (which the US is still
using in 2015). Nevertheless, the myth of US invincibility only
really came crashing down when Russia put a stop to it in 2013 by
preventing a US assault on Syria by a mix of diplomatic and military
means. Uncle Sam was livid, but could do nothing about besides
triggering a coup in Kiev and an economic war against Russia, neither
of which have succeeded in their goals.
As
for Putin, instead of being deterred by all the US efforts, he
invited Assad to Moscow.
Assad’s
Moscow visit as yet another indicator of US impotence
This
week’s visit by Assad was nothing short of extraordinary. Not only
did the Russian succeed in getting Assad out of Syria and to Moscow
and then back without the bloated US intelligence community noticing
anything, but unlike most heads of state, Assad spoke face to face to
some of the most powerful men in Russia.
First,
Assad met with Putin, Lavrov and Shoigu.
They spoke for a total of three hours (which, by itself, is quite
remarkable). They were later joined by Medvedev for
a private dinner. Guess who else joined them? Mikhail Fradkov,
Head of the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service, and
Nikolai Patrushev,
Head of the Russian Security Council:
Normally,
heads of state do not meet personally with men like Fradkov or
Patrushev and, instead, they send their own experts. In this case,
however, the topic discussed was important enough to 1) get Assad
personally to the Kremlin and 2) get all the top players in the
Kremlin around the same table for a personal discussion with Assad.
Obviously,
not a word came out from this meeting, but there are two main
theories circulating out there about what was discussed.
The
first theory says that Assad was told in no unclear terms that his
days were numbered and that he would have to leave.
The
second one says the exact opposite: that Assad was brought in to
signal to him, and the US, that he had the full support of Russia.
I
don’t believe that either one of these is correct, but the second
one is, I think, probably closer to the truth. After all, if the goal
was to tell Assad that he had to go, a simple phone call would have
been enough, really. Maybe a visit by Lavrov. As for “backing
Assad”, that would go in direct contradiction with what the
Russians have been saying all along: they are not backing “Assad”
as a person, although they do recognize him as the sole legitimate
President of Syria, but they are backing the right of the Syrian
people to be the only ones to decide who should be in power in Syria.
And that, by the way, is something that Assad himself has also agreed
to (according to Putin). Likewise, Assad has also agreed to work with
any non-Daesh opposition forces willing to fight against Daesh
alongside the Syrian military (again, according to Putin).
No,
while I believe that the meeting between Assad and Putin was, at
least in part, a message to the USA and the others so-called “friends
of Syria”, indicating that their “Assad must go” plan had
failed, I believe that the main purpose of the behind-closed-doors
meeting with all the top leaders of Russia was something else: my
guess is that what was discussed was a major and long term alliance
between Russia and Syria which would formally revive the kind of
alliance Syria had with the Soviet Union in the past. While I can
only speculate about the exact terms of such an alliance, it is my
guess that this plan, probably coordinated with Iran has two major
aspects:
a)
military component: Daesh must be crushed.
b)
political component: Syria will not be allowed to fall under US
control.
Considering
that the Russian military operation is assumed by most Russian
experts to be scheduled to last about 3 months, we are dealing here
with separate, middle to long term, plan which will require the
Syrian armed forces to be rebuilt while Russia, Iran and Iraq jointly
coordinate the struggle against Daesh. And, indeed, it
was announced on Friday that Iraq had authorized
the Russian military to strike at Daesh inside the Iraqi territory.
It sure looks like the Russian operation has acted as a catalyst for
a region paralyzed by US hypocrisy and incompetence and that the days
of Daesh are numbered
Too
early to celebrate, but a watershed moment nonetheless
Still,
it is way too early to celebrate. The Russians cannot do it all by
themselves, and it will be incumbent upon the Syrians and their
allies to fight Daesh, one small town at a time. Only boots on the
ground will really liberate Syria from Daesh and only true Islam will
be able to defeat the Takfiri ideology. This will take a time.
Furthermore,
it would be irresponsible to underestimate the Empire’s
determination and ability to prevent Russia from looking like “the
winner” – that is something which the US imperial ego, raised in
centuries of imperial hubris and ignorance, will never be able to
cope with. After all, how can the “indispensable nation” accept
that the world does not need it at all and that others can even
openly oppose and prevail? We can expect the US to use all its (still
huge) power to try to thwart and sabotage every Russian or Syrian
initiative.
Still,
the recent events are the mark that the era of “might makes right”
has come to an end and that the notion that the US is an
“indispensable nation” or world hegemon has now lost any
credibility. After decades in the dark, international diplomacy and
the international law are finally becoming relevant again. It is my
hope that this is the beginning of a process which will see the USA
undergo the same evolution as so many other countries (including
Russia) have undergone in the past: from being an empire to becoming
a “normal country” again. Alas, when I look at the 2016
Presidential race I get the feeling that this will still be a very
long process.
The
Saker
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