From Syrian Girl -
"Something
Major is about to happen - possibly of WW3 proportions.
Both the
Syrian Army flanked by Russians, and the US army flanking Kurds are
headed to Raqqa to destroy ISIS.
They say this is a race that will
decide wether Syria will stay together or wether Kerry's plan to tare
her apart will succeed.
What will happen when these forces meet? And
what about Russia's support of Kurdish factions? This is the topic of
my next video."
Syrian
Army joins the race to Raqqa as several thousand soldiers pour into
east Hama
1
June, 2016
Over
the weekend, a massive convoy of soldiers from the Syrian Armed
Forces traveled to the Hama-Raqqa border in order to take part in the
upcoming offensive to liberate Raqqa City from the Islamic State of
Iraq and Al-Sham (ISIS).
According
to an Al-Masdar field correspondent in Damascus, over 1,500 soldiers,
mostly from the Desert Hawks and Syrian Marines, departed for the
Hama-Raqqa countryside this weekend after the Syrian Arab Army’s
High Command and their Russian military advisers issued orders to
liberate Raqqa City.
The
entire force is comprised of approximately 4,800-5,000 soldiers from
the Syrian Marines, Desert Hawks Brigade, Golani Regiment, 550th
Regiment of the 4th Mechanized Division, and Al-Ba’ath Battalions.
Due
to several setbacks in the months of April and May, the Syrian Armed
Forces are no longer inside the western countryside of the Al-Raqqa
Governorate. Instead, the large pro-government force can be seen at
the imperative desert town of Ithriya, where they have already made
the necessary preparations to strike the Islamic State terrorists.
This
latest government offensive is expected to begin in the coming
weeks, as more soldiers pour into the east Hama countryside in
order to participate in this major assault.
On
the Road to Raqqa
Pepe
Escobar
1
June, 2016
The road to Raqqa, capital of the phony ISIS/ISIL/Daesh "Caliphate", will continue to be a riddle wrapped inside an enigma at least until the US Presidential elections. Let's examine why.
The
loose combo known as Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), led by the
Kurdish YPG alongside its women's brigade, the YPJ, are trying
to advance against Daesh north and now also west of Raqqa.
The
key target is Tabqa, west of Raqqa. Tabqa is crucial because it
links Raqqa with Daesh positions near Aleppo — where
an embryonic Mother of All Battles is gearing up. Conquering
Taqba itself will be no mean feat as it implies the SDF forces
crossing the Euphrates River, which happens to be a red line
imposed by Turkey's Sultan Erdogan.
Embedded
with the SDF advance is a massive P.R. operation deployed
by Washington, involving a
hilarious controversy on American
boots on the ground. President Obama has always repeated
non-stop there would not be US boots on the ground in Syria.
The State Department parroted the White House line. But boots —
as many as 250 — are indeed on the ground, even
as they may disguise themselves with YPG insignia.
The
Pentagon maintains they are only acting in an
"advise-and-assist" role — as in trademark
Obama "leading from behind" format. The boots are
in fact Special Forces specialized in UW (unconventional
warfare). Yet the theater of war — as established
by Daesh — is quite conventional. Daesh is constituted
as a small army, with heavy armor and considerable
artillery, against which UW is meaningless.
The
lame duck Obama administration — whose Syria "policy"
hardly deviates from the "Assad must go" mantra —
is trying to convey the impression for US public opinion
that it is actively fighting Daesh. Yet this is a fiction. With no
considerable "coalition" air power (apart from some
bombing of Daesh targets south of Ain Issa) and no
sizeable troops, no "leading from behind" will yield a
US victory in Raqqa.
The
election battlefield
It's
enlightening that the offensive on Raqqa got the go-ahead only
after CENTCOM Commander Gen. Joseph Votel traveled
to Kobani, in Syria, and Ankara. Yet CENTCOM only gave
the green light to a partial operation — vetoing the YPG
plan to go after the key border town of Jarablus, one
of Daesh's only remaining revolving doors to Turkey. That's
because the Pentagon refuses to confront a NATO ally's red
line.
This
is not even about taking over Raqqa; the SDF does not have
the manpower and the resources. As SDF
commander Abu Fayyad put it,
this is mostly about liberating the region north of Raqqa.
Syrian
Kurds though simply won't resign themselves to not advance
on Jarablus; their strategic priority for months has been
to try to open a corridor between their cantons
in Kobani and Afrin. While commanders insist Washington would
not interfere were that to happen — and that's highly
debatable — they also point out that the lame duck Obama
administration wants a "victory" in Raqqa (as well
as Mosul in Iraq) before the November presidential
election.
So
this is what it's all about; a "gift" from the foreign
policy-handicapped Obama administration to Hillary Clinton,
assuming she survives the subterranean email server scandal.
As
for the
Syrian Kurds,
even if they were able to conquer Raqqa with "leading
from behind" assistance — again highly debatable,
as Daesh will fight to the death with all its
firepower — they would not be able to clear and hold it.
Raqqa is a Sunni Arab city. The SDF could hardly transfer enough
resources to Raqqa without compromising its defense
of Rojava.
Once
again, "on the road to Raqqa" is being sold in the
US essentially as a P.R. stunt, as in "we're fighting
to win". Perversely, the P.R. stunt also carries the
embedded element of a possible trap to Damascus. The Syrian
Arab Army (SAA) is very much focused on trying to secure
Palmyra for good — as well as multiple supply
lines, oil and gas fields, small regional airbases to be used
by Russian helicopters, and trying to close multiple
remaining pockets of surrounded "moderate" rebels
and/or jihadis. That's a lot of work. There's no way the SAA
will overextend itself and make a play for Raqqa.
The
bottom line is that for Damascus — as well as for
Moscow — Raqqa is a non-issue, for now. A much more
worrying scenario is Aleppo, where Sultan Erdogan's mercenaries,
weaponized and paid-for, are gearing up for the Mother of All
Battles.
The
game plan
Assuming
an — unlikely — scenario of Syrian Kurds managing
somehow to conquer Raqqa, it's not hard to forecast the
follow-up, whoever wins in November. Washington will make Raqqa
its own satrapy and invest — once again — in Divide
and Rule; creating a joint Kurd/Sunni Arab vassal state within Syria,
along the Euphrates.
So
those "advise-and-assist" boots on the ground are
in fact the vanguard for a complex game plan —
through which Washington, if successful, would be able to cut
off that fiction much entertained by the petrodollar gang —
the Shi'ite crescent — as well as weaken a
fragmented Syria for the foreseeable future.
"NATO
ally" Turkey though will pose a tremendous problem to the
US game plan. There's no way Ankara under Sultan Erdogan will
abolish its Syrian Kurd red lines. Quite the contrary; Sultan Erdogan
is doubling down. Erdogan is avidly betting on Jabhat al-Nusra —
being bribed by Turkish operators to extricate itself
from al-Qaeda — to wreak further havoc in Syria
in the Aleppo front.
And
one should not — ever — forget the gas; after all
Syria is an energy war. Syria's gas reserves happen to lie
mostly between Raqqa and Deir Ez-Zoor. It's not hard to fathom
many a US Big Oil player salivating as these reserves may one
day be under proxy US control.
Which
brings us to the key question; how will Moscow crack the Raqqa
riddle? Here's another riddle — inside an enigma.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those of the
author and do notnecessarily reflect the official position
of Sputnik.
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