Syria
Invasion: Obama Is About to Make the Biggest Decision of His
Presidency
Will
he go along with Saudi and Turkish calls to jointly invade or will he
resign himself to Syria peace with Assad remaining in power in
Damascus?
16
Febraury, 2016
Will
he let these jokers risk triggering WW3?
Exclusive: President
Obama must decide if he will let the Syrian civil war come to an end
with Russian-backed President Assad still in power or if he will
escalate by supporting a Turkish-Saudi invasion, which could push the
world to the brink of nuclear war, writes Joe Lauria.
By
Joe Lauria
With
the Russian-backed Syrian army encircling Aleppo, cutting off Turkish
supplies to rebels and advancing on
the Islamic State’s capital of Raqqa, a panicked Saudi Arabia and
Turkey have set
up a
joint headquarters to direct an invasion of Syria that could lead to
a vast escalation of the war. And there’s only one man who could
stop them: President Barack Obama.
It
is probably the most important decision Obama will make in his eight
years in office since a Turkish-Saudi invasion risks a direct
showdown between Russia and NATO, since Turkey is a member of the
alliance.
The
U.S. traditionally has held tremendous power over client states like
Turkey and Saudi Arabia. So, an order from Washington is usually
enough to get such governments to back down. But Ankara and Riyadh
are being led by reckless men whose continued existence in power
might well depend on stopping a Syrian government victory – helped
by Russia, Iran and the Kurds – and a humiliating defeat of the
Turkish-Saudi-backed Syrian rebels, who include some radical jihadist
groups.
Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Prince Mohammad bin Salman have
shown increasing defiance of Washington. Neither man is the legal
ruler of his respective country. But both have seized power
nonetheless.
Erdoğan
is technically in a symbolic post, a presidency without power. Prime
Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu should be leading the country the way
Erdoğan did when he was prime minister, but Davutoğlu is still
letting Erdoğan call the shots.
Erdoğan
is campaigning for a referendum that would make Turkey a presidential
system to legalize the power he already has. But that hasn’t
happened yet. So, he is simply acting as a de facto executive leader
while potential rivals are afraid to contest his overreach of power.
Erdoğan’s
increasing authoritarianism is alarming some people in Washington. He
is routinely throwing in jail journalists and academics who dare
criticize him. After a brutal crackdown in the Kurdish city of Cizre
inside Turkey this month, leaving much of the city in ruins, Erdoğan
has turned his attention to the Syrian Kurds.
They
are among the best fighters on the ground against the Islamic State
and are supported by both the U.S. and Russia. And they are
threatening to formalize their de facto autonomy inside Syria, which
Erdoğan has vowed to crush. By fighting the Islamic State, the Kurds
are also messing with Erdoğan’s goal of overthrowing Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad. Erdoğan has staked much of his power on
overthrowing Assad. A Syrian victory against Erdoğan’s five-year
project of “regime change” in Damascus could mean the end of him
politically. Sensing this danger, Erdoğan has been increasingly
belligerent toward anyone standing in his way.
Erdoğan
showed his defiance of the Obama administration when he said, “How
can we trust [you]? Is it me who is your partner or the [Kurdish]
terrorists in Kobane?”
Turkey
Shells Syria
On
Sunday, Erdoğan began shelling Syrian Kurdish areas in Aleppo
province, especially the city of Azaz. “We will not allow Azaz to
fall,” Prime Minister Davutoğlu vowed on
Monday, reflecting Erdoğan’s hard line. Turkey’s attacks also
are aimed at preventing the Syrian government from sealing the
Turkish border where the Islamic State and other jihadist groups have
smuggled across fighters, weapons and other supplies into Syria –
as well as oil from Syria into Turkey.
With
his aggressive strategies toward his neighbors, Erdoğan has been
accused of wanting to establish a new Ottoman empire. Azaz is near
Dabiq, the town where the Ottoman Empire began in
1516. Because of that symbolism, Turkey’s defeat there could mean
the death of Erdoğan’s neo-Ottoman dreams and perhaps of his
presidency. (For the Islamic State, Dabiq is the place where a future
Christian-Muslim battle will take place heralding the end of the
world.)
The
Saudis appear equally spoiling for a fight. Prince Mohammed bin
Salman is deputy crown prince, second in line to the crown. But his
father, King Salman, is suffering from dementia and the current crown
prince, Mohammad bin Nayef, 56, is considered loyal to the U.S.
But 30-year-old Mohammed has launched the most independent Saudi
military policy in the history of the modern Saudi state. He is said
not to trust the United States. And as defense minister, he has
recklessly launched a disastrous war in Yemen, where – despite
widespread death and destruction – the most powerful Arab army
cannot defeat the poorest Arab nation. Mohammed has staked his
credibility on the outcome of the Yemen war. But he also has vowed to
check Iranian regional influence. So, he may be going for broke now
by threatening to invade Syria.
Turkey
and Saudi Arabia have established a joint headquarters at Turkey’s
Incirlik base, 62 miles from the Syrian border. Turkish Foreign
Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu told a
Turkish newspaper last week that Saudi warplanes and troops would be
arriving at the base.
The
Saudis are also planning war games inside the Kingdom with 150,000
troops from 20 Arab nations. Jordan, however, sensibly said it
would not take part in an invasion unless it is led by U.S. and
British troops and has a U.N. Security Council mandate “with full
coordination with Russia.”
However,
the war clouds continued to darken along the Syrian border. On
Sunday, Turkey began shelling Syrian Kurdish positions, including the
town of Azaz in Aleppo province. And, Saudi Foreign Minister
Adel al-Jubeir said Russia
“will fail to save” Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, whom Jubeir
vowed to overthrow. In response to Saudi threats, Hezbollah said it
would “slaughter Saudi troops” if they invade.
Assad
Confronting Fanatical Erdoğan
For
his part, Assad has not ruled out that Turkey and Saudi Arabia will
invade. He told the French Press Agency (AFP) on Monday: “Logically,
intervention is not possible, but sometimes reality is at odds with
logic, particularly when there are irrational people leading a
certain state. That’s why I don’t rule that out for a simple
reason: Erdoğan is a fanatical person with Muslim Brotherhood
inclinations. He is living the Ottoman dream…
“He
believes that he has an Islamist mission in our region. The same
applies to Saudi Arabia. The collapse of the terrorists in Syria is a
collapse of their policies. I tell you that this process is surely
not going to be easy for them, and we will certainly confront it.”
The
risks of a Saudi-Turkish invasion of Syria are enormous. If soldiers
from NATO-member Turkish are killed by the Syrian army or Russian air
force, will they seek NATO protection? If Saudi or its allied troops
are killed how would the U.S. respond? An invasion could pit Saudi
troops against Iranian forces on the same battlefield in what could
be an historic Sunni-Shia battle.
Despite
the tough Turkish and Saudi rhetoric, Saudi Arabia at least, has made
it clear that it won’t invade without the U.S. leading the way.
That puts the ball squarely in the Oval Office where President Obama
has resisted committing U.S. combat troops to another war in the
Middle East but reportedly wants to avoid further alienating U.S.
“allies,” Turkey and Saudi Arabia.
At
the State Department, John Kerry has made no statement about a
possible invasion. Instead he’s using his close ties to Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to try to nail down a partial
ceasefire that is supposed start on Friday. The ceasefire would allow
continue fighting against terrorists, but the U.S. and
Russia disagree on
exactly who should be included on the list of terrorists. Further,
many of the U.S.-backed rebel groups collaborate with Al Qaeda’s
Nusra Front in some areas, making targeting difficult even when there
is U.S.-Russian agreement of who’s the terrorist.
Other
mixed signals have come from the Pentagon where Defense Secretary
Ashton Carter has “welcomed” the Saudi offer of ground troops.
The matter was discussed at a NATO defense ministers meeting last
week, but the only outcome was the acceptance of special forces from
the United Arab Emirates.
Obama
has given no public indication of what he will do if Turkey and Saudi
Arabia press ahead with an invasion. It’s not even clear that he
still has the leverage to stop Turkey and Saudi Arabia if they press
ahead.
Obama
could simply cut U.S. losses in its disastrous Syrian “regime
change” policy and accept a Russian and Iranian-backed Syrian
government victory, but he would come intense criticism from
Washington’s influential neoconservatives as well as Republicans.
But does he have another choice if he wants to avoid war with Russia?
On
Saturday, Obama called Russian President Vladimir Putin. It’s not
known what they discussed about a possible invasion of Syria.
However, if Obama threatened to intervene if Russia doesn’t end its
military support for the Syrian military offensive, we could be in
the middle of the most serious game of chicken since the Cuban
missile crisis.
Nor
do we know what Obama is telling the Turks and Saudis. On Monday,
both countries toned down their bellicose rhetoric. Perhaps Obama
delivered the only sane message possible: avoid a military
confrontation with Russia at all costs. But it seems the lights will
remain on at the Kremlin and the White House as the two nuclear
powers look for some way to avoid a collision.
Joe
Lauria is a veteran foreign-affairs journalist based at the U.N.
since 1990. He has written for the Boston Globe, the London Daily
Telegraph, the Johannesburg Star, the Montreal Gazette, the Wall
Street Journal and other newspapers. He can be reached
atjoelauria@gmail.com and
followed on Twitter at @unjoe.
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