Russia's
Trap: Luring Sunnis Into War
16
February, 2016
- Washington should think more than twice about allowing Turkey and Saudi Arabia, its Sunni allies, militarily to engage their Shiite enemies in Syria. Allowing Sunni supremacists into a deeper sectarian war is not a rational way to block Russian expansion in the eastern Mediterranean. And it certainly will not serve America's interests.
- Turkey and Saudi Arabia are too weak militarily to damage Russia's interests. It is a Russian trap -- and precisely what the Russians are hoping their enemies will fall into.
After
Russia's increasingly bold military engagement in war-torn Syria in
favor of President Bashar al-Assad and the Shiite bloc, the regional
Sunni powers -- Turkey and its ally, Saudi Arabia -- have felt
nervous and incapable of influencing the civil war in favor of the
many Islamist groups fighting Assad's forces.
Most
recently, the Turks and Saudis, after weeks of negotiations, decided
to flex their muscles and join forces to engage a higher-intensity
war in the Syrian theater. This
is dangerous for the West. It risks provoking further Russian and
Iranian involvement in Syria, and sparking a NATO-Russia
confrontation.
After
Turkey, citing violation of its airspace, shot down a Russian Su-24
military jet on Nov. 24, Russia has used the incident as a pretext
to reinforce
its military deployments in
Syria and bomb the "moderate Islamists." Those are the
Islamists who fight Assad's forces and are supported by Turkey, Saudi
Arabia and Qatar. The Russian move included installing the advanced
S-400 long-range air and anti-missile defense systems.
Fearing
that the new player in the game could vitally damage their plans to
install a Sunni regime in Damascus, Turkey and Saudi Arabia now say
they are ready to challenge the bloc consisting of Assad's forces,
Russia, and Shiite militants from Iran and Lebanon.
As
always, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu spoke in a way that
forcefully reminded Turkey-watchers of the well-known phrase:
Turkey's bark is worse than its bite.
"No one," he
said on
Feb. 9, "should forget how the Soviet forces, which were a
mighty, super force during the Cold War and entered Afghanistan, then
left Afghanistan in a servile situation. Those who entered Syria
today will also leave Syria in a servile way." In other words,
Davutoglu was telling the Russians: Get out of Syria; we are coming
in. The Russians did not even reply. They just kept on bombing.
Will direct military
involvement in Syria by Turkey and Saudi Arabia spark a
NATO-Russia confrontation? Pictured: Russian President Vladimir
Putin with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (then prime
minister), meeting in Istanbul on December 3, 2012. (Image
source:kremlin.ru)
|
Turkey
keeps threatening to increase its military role in Syria. Deputy
Prime Minister Yalcin Akdogan pledged that Turkey will no longer be
in a "defensive position" over maintaining its national
security interests amid developments in Syria. "Can any team,"
he said, "play defensively at all times but still win a match?
.
.. You can win nothing by playing defensively and you can lose
whatever you have. There is a very dynamic situation in the region
and one has to read this situation properly. One should end up
withdrawn because of concerns and fears."
Is
NATO member Turkey going to war in order to fulfill its Sunni
sectarian objectives? And
are its Saudi allies joining in? If the Sunni allies are not
bluffing, they are already giving signals of what may eventually turn
into a new bloody chapter in the sectarian proxy war in Syria.
First,
Saudi Arabia announced that it was sending fighter jets to the
Incirlik air base in southern Turkey, where U.S. and other allied
aircraft have been hitting Islamic State strongholds inside Syria.
Saudi military officials said that their warplanes would intensify
aerial operations in Syria.
Second,
and more worryingly, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said
that Turkey and Saudi Arabia could engage in ground operations inside
Syria. He also said that the two countries had long been weighing a
cross-border operation into Syria -- with the pretext of fighting
Islamic State, but in fact hoping to bolster the Sunni groups
fighting against the Shiite bloc -- but they have not yet made a
decision.
In
contrast, Saudi officials look more certain about a military
intervention. A Saudi brigadier-general said that a joint
Turkish-Saudi ground operation in Syria was being planned. He
even said that
Turkish and Saudi military experts would meet in the coming days to
finalize "the details, the task force and the role to be played
by each country."
In
Damascus, the Syrian regime said that
any ground operation inside Syria's sovereign borders would "amount
to aggression that must be resisted."
It
should be alarming for the West if Turkey and Saudi Arabia, two
important U.S. allies, have decided to fight a strange cocktail of
enemies on Syrian territory, including Syrian forces, radical
jihadists, various Shiite forces and, most critically, Russia -- all
in order to support "moderate" Islamists. That
may be the opening of a worse disaster in Syria, possibly spanning
over the next 10 to 15 years.
The
new Sunni adventurism will likely force Iran to augment its military
engagement in Syria. It
will create new tensions between Turkey-Saudi Arabia and Iraq's
Shiite-dominated government. It may also spread and destabilize other
Middle Eastern theaters, where the Sunni bloc, consisting of Turkey,
Saudi Arabia and Qatar, may have to engage in new proxy wars with the
Shiite bloc plus Russia.
Washington
should think more than twice about allowing its Sunni allies
militarily to engage their Shiite enemies.This
may be a war with no winners but plenty of casualties and collateral
damage. Allowing
Sunni supremacists into a deeper sectarian war is not a rational way
to block Russian expansion in the eastern Mediterranean. And it
certainly will not serve America's interests.
Turkey
with Saudi Arabia are too weak militarily to damage Russia's
interests. It
is a Russian trap -- and precisely what the Russians are hoping their
enemies will fall into.
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