Syria and the Middle East SITREP October 18th, 2015
by John Rambo
18
October, 2015
It’s
been a mediocre week in Syria. Syrian forces have committed to a
relentless offensive and have stepped up their assaults with fresh
operations in Homs and Aleppo. Operations are being committed against
both the Islamic State and the so called rebels supported by the
West.
Gains
have been modest, while territory is being recaptured by the Syrian
Arab Army (supported by the Russian air force) the offensives, in the
words of Russian advisers, have been less than spectacular. The speed
of the offensives has been gruelingly slow due to the entrenched
resistance seen in places like Aleppo and Hama.
Some of these areas have been in rebel hands for so long they have been reinforced into micro-garrisons. Tunnels are not only used to help shelter fighters during air raids and to move men from one part of the town to another in rapid defense but also to smuggle in supplies from outside the city during government sieges and encirclement.
Needless
to say the fighting has been tough, but the SAA, with the aid of the
Russian air campaign and Iranian/Hezbollah support, have brought in
some hard earned victories.
However
there is a lack of a single decisive victory, the big win if you
will, for the Syrian Arab Army. Although morale has significantly
picked up since the entry of the Russian air force into the fight
there is also signs that the Syrian people have become accustomed to
war, or ‘crisis’ as the government calls it.
Syria
has been a nation at war for quite some time (4.5+ years). Despite
this and the fact major parts of the country are destroyed, other
parts of the nation have long returned to a level of normalcy. Of
course there will always be the security issue as long as the crisis
is ongoing. Law abiding citizens turning of age will have to commit
to their draft and most likely be deployed in areas of combat against
rebels or the Islamic State. Some boys have already been discharged.
There is the odd day or two where one or two streets will be shut
down due to terrorists but eventually normalcy returns. Life goes on.
Of
course that’s not to say large parts of the country haven’t been
reduced to rubble. Or that there isn’t an internal refugee crisis.
But where the government rules there seems to be a level of order.
The
government has had a long-standing program since the onset of the
crisis to maintain a series of government grocery shops and bakeries
to alleviate demands on the private sector. The government continues
to subsidize food and electricity. Roads are fixed and maintained.
Syrian TV dramas have continued to film and air over the four years
with minor interruptions. Although
some parts of Syria are destroyed, major segments still seem to be
functioning fine.
[Source]
And
just like Syrian society so too has the Syrian military accepted the
new security situation. Like all conflicts in the Middle East, long
protracted wars are the norm. From Lebanon to Iraq to Palestine and
back again. The Syrian Arab Army has seen so many causalities and has
fought hundreds of thousands of foreign jihadists over the years that
to achieve peace now would be as tedious as continuing the war in its
current state.
No
one has ever put it better than in Shakespeare’s Macbeth:
“I am in blood stepp’d in so far that should I wade no more, Returning were as tedious as go o’re,”
“I am in blood stepp’d in so far that should I wade no more, Returning were as tedious as go o’re,”
And
that is what many Syrian regulars are feeling today; fighting a war
that doesn’t seem to have an end. Despite the heavy propaganda of
the ever-so-happy Syrian soldier, who apparently does not feel
combat-fatigue fighting a war for almost half a decade, there is a
general acceptance of the facts on the ground.
One
of these facts it that to root out these Islamists from Syria once
and for all is going to take a lot more effort than initially
anticipated. The
fact Assad had twice offered an amnesty to all draft-dodgers,
deserters, and defectors highlights the complicated nature of
maintaining dedicated manpower through his regular forces.
[Source]
It’s
definitely going to take more than the 30 planes and the thousands of
troops coming in from Hezbollah and Iran. Something bigger must be
brewing to bring the decisive victory needed to shake off the
nation’s lackadaisical acceptance of the crisis and shake out the
foreign invaders that are destroying the country.
The
Russians have been continuously providing fire-support to Syrian
troops on the ground. On top of the consistent on-call air support to
the SAA, the Russian air force they have also taken the initiative in
continuously harassing opposition forces. The opposition has had no
respite from combat since the Russians have entered the conflict.
When the SAA ground offensives stop, the Russian attack runs pick up
the pressure and keep the enemy occupied and suppressed.
It’s
starting to appear, albeit unclearly, that Russia’s involvement
isn’t part of some larger geopolitical play or a scheme to expand
further militarily into the Middle East, but to genuinely deny the
fall of Assad.
The plan is to truly create favorable conditions on the ground to
allow for a better hand at the negotiating table. Right now Russia is
content providing these airplanes, but there is no doubt that Russia
has the power and projection capability to reset the battlefield
should Assad ever be pushed into a corner. Something that can’t be
said about the rebels, which the West refuses to support currently
through direct air strikes on Assad, and ISIL, which the GCC refuses
to continue financing until it comes to heel.
These
next few days are going to highlight the reserve capacity of the
rebels and Islamic State. As all factions have been fighting for a
week we’re starting to see if the rebels and the Islamic State have
the operational capability and strategic depth to withstand an
extensive SAA ground offensive supported by accurate Russian
firepower from the air. Iranian troops have landed in the thousands
to reinforce the ground offensives. More Shia militias, trained by
Iranians, have been imported from Iraq and Shia volunteers (or
mercenaries) from Afghanistan are being shuttled to the combat one.
It
also seems there’s a bit of politics occurring in the background.
Meetings between Russian and Saudi delegates. Russians trying to
bring the Americans in with the Americans shunning all attempts.
Secret Israeli and Saudi meetings. Everything is happening quietly
and quickly.
So
here is where we stand:
Syria:
• A double force multiplier: the SAA is being supported by Russian airstrikes as well as Iranian air mobility and airlift capability. This allows the SAA to use its limited manpower to deploy to any front by Iranian helicopters/planes supported by Russian air cover. [Source]
• Syrian
military intelligence have infiltrated into many of the factions on
the ground providing direct intelligence for air strikes, some going
undercover for three years and perhaps longer. This partially
explains the accurate intelligence on large stores of munitions and
important facilities. [Source]
• TOS-1
have been seen deployed in Syria, a thermobaric weapon designed for
anti-garrison/defense bombardment. Probably a response to the
mediocre effect of ground offensives. [Source]
Russia:
• Russia continues to provide air support to the Syrian Arab Army on the ground as well as take out high-level opposition targets such as foreign training camps [Source]
• Russian
air force has also undertaken an entropy-based strategy against
opposition forces, both rebels and ISIL, in a continuous effort to
not only destroy fighters and degrade command capabilities (through
both destruction of command centers and jamming of enemy signals) but
also force the opposition to continuously expend effort (fuel, man
hours, tools, etc.) avoiding Russian helicopter gunships and
strike-fighters (by constantly having engines running, repositioning,
dedicating manpower to watch out for incoming Russian air assets,
etc.) [Source]
• In
effect all the Russian air force has to do is just launch fighters
and automatically thousands of jihadi’s will be awoken in the
middle of the night to frantically rush to reposition or hide their
assets in a vain attempt to preserve their assets.
• Russia
has significantly degraded a lot of the war projection capabilities
of ISIL inside Syria as many of their heavy munitions areas have been
destroyed. [Source]
• Russia
still enjoys major popular support domestically for the air
intervention in Syria with the latest anti-intervention rally in
Moscow drawing out more journalists than protestors [Source]
• The
Russian air force in Syria has to worry about MANPADS such as
captured Soviet-era Igla and Strela systems, Chinese MANPADS, and
potentially advanced Western MANPADS from Turkey, Israel, or the US.
This worry is doubled for low-flying Mi-24 Hind helicopter gunships.
[Source]
• Anti-air
systems such as ZPU-1, 2, and 4s may also prove to be hazardous.
Syria is known to have over 4000 anti-air guns which many fell under
rebel control and can be seen mounted atop trucks in various youtube
videos [Source]
Iran/Hezbollah:
• Iran has finally provided some visible forms of support with the deployment of an IRGC brigade to help with the offensives in Homs and Aleppo. [Source]
• Iran
has lost another two senior IRGC officers in Syria highlighting the
increased presence of Iranian units inside Syria. [Source]
• Delayed
the deployment of significant number of troops by two weeks in an
effort to better understand the commitment of Russian involvement.
Although Russia is seen as a more honest international broker than
the United States, Iran hasn’t forgotten how easily Russia
postponed the S-300 contract due to international (and rumored
Israeli) pressure. [Source]
• The
Iranian leadership currently fears that the Russians will allow
“some” Israeli airstrikes to hit their targets inside Syria as
part of an appeasement. They also have fears that the Russians may
strike a bargain with the Saudis sometime in the future which will
limit Iranian influence in Bahrain and Yemen.
• Iran
has also brought in Iraqi Shia militias and Shia Afghanis to fight in
Syria. Many claim the (Shia) Afghanis are nothing more than
mercenaries hired by Iran (Afghanistan has had a history of warlords
for generations) [Source]
• Flexing
its military muscles, Iran has showcased one of its many massive
underground missile bases highlighting its capability to withstand
pre-emptive first-strike operations and be able to retaliate with
massive saturation missile attacks. Might be as a warning to Israel
of repercussions prior to deploying ground forces in Syria. Or
possibly another show of force prior to entering talks with the US
which consistently talks about “all options are on the table”
[Source]
• These
targeted killings of senior Iranian and Hezbollah commanders could be
the work of Western intelligence which passed down information to
opposition forces and the Islamic State. Israel, Turkey, or the US.
Of course pure speculation.
Iraq:
• Currently the Iraqi army is fighting Sunni tribes and the Islamic State in the West and North of the country in another major offensive. Efforts are focused on the Baiji area in a drawn out mop up operation to secure a strategic hub for continued offensives into the Anbar province (which is ISIL territory) [Source]
• Iraq
has been diversifying its arsenal away from the US for some time. Not
only do Iranian and Russian weapons fill the armories of Iraq but so
do the Chinese with missiles, heavy weapons, and drones [Source]
• There
is more evidence that Iraq has shifted closer and closer to the
Iranian sphere of influence than the US.
• There
is still currently 15,000 Western-affiliated forces in Iraq which
doesn’t include Kurdish units or the Iraqi military. US (4850
regulars + 7000 contractors) Australia (~900 troops), Canada (~700
troops), Spain (300 trainers), etc.; the so called Combined Joint
Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve or CJTF-OIR for short.
United
States of America:
• No
more carriers in the Middle East. The USS Theodore has completely
left the Arabian Sea [Source]
• Currently
the US is in the midst of a showdown with China over its island
expansion and may be repositioning the aircraft carriers for some
kind of double down on a show-of-force. [Source]
• The
US seems to have accepted the status quo of the situation but
continues to refuse to work with Russia in Syria. [Source]
• It
is unclear if the US is committing strike-fighters or just drones for
its bombing campaign in Syria. Although the last carrier pulled out
of the Middle East the US still enjoys the deployment of various
expeditionary air groups in Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey. [Source]
• US
media claims 300 Cuban special forces are also deployed inside Syria
but could very well be false information to distract from domestic
issues for political reasons as relations between the US and Cuba
begin to thaw. [Source]
• The
US has shifted its aid from training the rebels to just providing the
opposition with arms and ammunition. The goal of this is to continue
the chaos but not have it be effective enough to turn the tide.
[Source]
• Undoubtable
just like in the past some aid will end up in ISIL hands, either
through miss drops or being turned over/traded by other Islamists.
• It
is unclear if the US plans to commit to some counter action in
another theater against Russia for its interference in the
Western-driven plans to overthrow Assad.
Islamic
State:
• They
haven’t stopped committing the offensivэs.
• The
Islamic State has no allies currently, with Saudi Arabia and Qatar,
once supporters of ISIL, now refusing to support the group until they
return to following orders [Source]
• False
reports about another Baghdadi strike. Intelligence so far have
managed to strike Baghdadis entourage three times but never the man
himself. [Source]
• There
is some anecdotal evidence indicating Baghdadi was recruited by some
Western intelligence agency. This would clearly implicate Western
involvement in the creation of ISIL. Evidence such as Baghdadi being
a US prisoner for some time and released. Israeli air attacks on
Syrian assets occurring simultaneously with some Islamist attacks.
• As
previously noted by others, the US and co. can “turn on” these
groups, but they can’t switch them off. I like to call it letting
the Islamist genie out of the bottle, once out you can’t put it
back in.
Rebel
Factions including Al-Nusra:
• False
flag massacres have been occurring to try to shift international
media attention to demonize the actions of the SAA and the Russian
air force. [Source]
• Right
now the rebels are lacking a cohesive strategy once again in dealing
with the Russian air strikes and renewed ground offensives. All hope
awaits outside intervention. Considering the US has stopped training
the rebels officially, the GCC and Turkey may be given an incentive
to pick up where the Americans left off.
• The
rebel public relation and propaganda campaigns have taken a dive for
the worst being unable to show any tangible victories against the
government asides from a few TOW videos against obscure targets
[Source]
• Al-Qaeda
commanders have been killed in an airstrike, rumored to be sent
directly by Ayman al-Zawahri (part of the original OBL Al-Qaeda)
[Source]
Saudi
Arabia, Qatar, and co.:
• Saudi
Arabia and Russia have had a high-level meeting about the situation
in Syria. It’s unclear if Saudi Arabia is acting in its own
interests or as an ally of the US. Russia remained cordial. It’s
safe to say this meeting was probably met with coldness by the
Iranians. [Source]
• The
IMF has given a very dire prediction of the Saudi economy. The oil
bubble has allowed Saudi Arabia to grow much faster without adjusting
for its new expenses should the price of oil fall; which it has.
[Source]
• The
campaign in Yemen is sloppy and was committed haphazardly by a young
30 year-old Saudi defense minister, the youngest defense minister in
the world [Source]
• The
Arab Coalition bombing campaign of Yemen has been mostly ignored by
the mainstream media due to US political clout. The bombing is so
indiscriminate that the Saudis even strike their own allies from time
to time [Source]
• The
warfare seen in Yemen and the south of Saudi Arabia is escalating
ever so slowly. SCUDS have been fired by Houthi forces against Saudi
military positions inside Saudi Arabia [Source]
• These
North Korean SCUDS were probably purchased by the Yemen government in
the 90s and captured by the Houthis and then turned on the Saudis.
• Yemeni
Houthi forces have also attacked military bases near the Yemen border
inside Saudi Arabia inflicting substantial causalities [Source]
• Saudi
Arabia clearly has its own problems in its own backyard right now.
• Saudi
Arabia is backing the Hadi-government, which is supported by the Arab
Coalition and indirectly by the US due to Saudi support.
• The
Shia Houthis (rebels or revolutionaries) who were predominately in
the north, have taken over the government after grievances were not
addressed appropriately. They are supported given minimal support by
Iran.
• Yemen
also hosts Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, ISIL, and several other
Islamists groups (including the Somalian Al-Shahaab). Members of AQAP
have split and pledged their allegiance to ISIL; it is only a matter
of time before more AQAP forces switch over.
• The
US continues to commit drone strikes inside Yemen against AQAP.
• Saudi
Arabia and Israel may work together to counter Iran. Either by
finding a way to include the Palestinians instead of pushing them
into Iran’s corner or to completely denounce the Palestinians for
Israeli support against Iran. (Especially with the US) [Source]
• It
is said that Saudi Arabia has access to nuclear weapons through a
loan-agreement with Pakistan, which is considered the “vanguard of
the Sunni faith”. Although the transfer of these weapons will be
very unlikely (due to the international crisis Israel will make of
it) it is not the first time this agreement has been mentioned. This
threat could be a way to counter any Iranian nuclear ambitions, if
any. [Source]
Turkey
• Turkey
is playing hard ball right now, rejecting EU offers. It’ll continue
to play the refugee card until it can get something out of this
entire debacle. [Source]
• A
drone of unknown origins was shot down on the border of Turkey and
Syria. The US suspects it’s Russian in origin but there are many
operators of drones inside Syria including Iran, Syrian government,
and rebel forces. [Source]
• Turkey
has previously committed its own false flag operations, such as the
rumored rockets fired from Syria inside Turkey which was seized upon
to force NATO to deploy Patriot batteries on the border. [Source]
• This
could be another desperate attempt to extend the Patriot missile
deployment by NATO.
• The
patriot missile batteries are being pulled out despite an October 8th
appeal by Turkey to NATO [Source]
• Turkey
and the Kurds (PKK) are still skirmishing inside Turkey, violence
looks like it’s going to escalate. [Source]
Israel
• Israel
currently facing an escalation of violence from the occupied peoples
of Palestine. In turn Israel has increased security killing several
Palestinians, many captured on camera. [Source]
• So
far the mainstream media has managed to minimize the coverage of
Israel.
• It
is unclear to what level the West Bank is armed, citing previous
Iranian threats of arming the West Bank after the latest war against
Hamas in Gaza [Source]
• It’s
also unclear to what level this escalation will bring by the
Palestinians, who are being strangled in Gaza by Egypt and Israel,
and are being prosecuted by Israel in the West Bank. [Source]
• Israel
continues to buy oil from the quasi-state Kurdistan at a discounted
price, which directly funds the Peshmerga and its fight against ISIL
as well as solidifying its independence from Turkey and Syria.
[Source]
• Israel
has had a rough plan of attack against Hezbollah while the
organization was distracted by the war in Syria. This plan was
clearly interrupted by the Russian involvement.
• It
would involve a heavy propaganda blitz in tangent with an operation
to attempt to migrate as many Lebanese civilians from southern
Lebanon to the north of the country (this required chartering vessels
to shuttle civilians from Tyre to Tripoli). After the warning period
involving loud speakers, leaflets, and hacking into TV signals and
radio stations, Israel will treat all people who decide to remain in
the area as enemy combatants. [Source]
• Critics
have said it’s a way for Israel to use the Lebanese as a human
shield by having them positioned close to Israeli ground units as
they are being evacuated.
• Should
the evacuation fail Israel has steadily increased the rhetoric in the
past about striking Hezbollah in villages with no regard to civilian
causalities [Source]
• Once
civilians have been reduced and the world has been informed of the
extraordinary effort Israel has gone to inform civilians to flee, it
will level the whole of South Lebanon in a non-stop bombing campaign
before a ground incursion even begins.
• This
plan does not factor in Hezbollahs capability to infiltrate forces
inside Israel through tunnels, as seen by Hamas in Gaza against an
IDF army outpost inside Israel. [Source]
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