Major Syria developments soon?
9
July, 2016
This
article was written for the Unz
Review:http://www.unz.com/tsaker/major-syria-developments-soon/
A
number of events have happened recently which point to the
possibility that something might be brewing in the Syrian conflict.
First
and foremost, there was Erdogan’s apology to Russia which was
really much more than just an apology. The Turks have really extended
a hand to Russia and their offer officially includes not only a
return of Russian tourists or the sale of Turkish veggies in Russia,
but a strong collaboration
between the two countries against terrorism and
even join military operations. The Turks have even indicated that
they would be willing to offer
Russia the use of the Incirlik airbase for Russian aircraft involved
in the air operations against Daesh & Co.
Then the Turks denied
it,
which is fair enough and which is how they, apparently, do business.
Either way, the Russians politely
declined (more
about that later)
Second,
just two weeks after another “leak” which claimed that 51
US diplomats wanted Obama to authorize airstrikes against government
forces in Syria,
the WaPo
“leaked” the news that the USA was offering the Russians a new
“military partnership” in Syria only
to vehemently
denounce this plan a couple of days later.
“Moon of Alabama” immediately and correctly denounced
this so-called offer as “nonsense”.
Third,
while the Syrian move to advance towards Raqqa has clearly run into
some major difficulties, there are sign indicating that the
city of Aleppo might soon be fully encircled by the government
forces.
Fourth,
the Russian military has confirmed that heavy
aircraft-carrying missile cruiser Admiral Kuznetsov might
be soon deployed to the Mediterranean
Fifth,
Defense Minister Shoigu has announced that he was promoting
the current commander of the Russian task force in Syria,
Colonel-General Alexander Dvornikov, to the post of the commander of
the Southern Military District.
So
what does all that mean?
Concerning
the first point, it is remarkable that while Erdogan is personally
extremely disliked in Russia, all the Russian military and foreign
policy experts agree that Russia should, and will, resume cooperation
with Turkey. There is an acute awareness in Russia that, like it or
not, Turkey is a key player in the region and that Russia must
therefore engage with any Turkish leader. Furthermore, the Russians
feel that they are in a very advantageous position of strength and
that now is the time to press Turkey for some real changes. Topping
the Russian agenda is the objective to get Turkey to *really* close
the Turkish-Syrian border and to stop financing Daesh by shutting
down the illegal trade in oil. Second, several Turkey specialists
have expressed the opinion that the bombing in Istanbul was really a
Daesh warning to Erdogan and that this indicates that Erdogan took a
real risk by turning to Russia and that Russia must now give him
something tangible to support him in his terrible position. Again,
this is not going to be a love-fest between the Kremlin and Ankara,
but a case of pure Realpolitik where
the Russian feel that they must set aside their feeling of distrust,
and even disgust, and very carefully play the “Erdogan” card. At
the very least, the Russians will demand an end to Turkish support
for terrorism in the Caucasus and Central Asia and some tangible
signs of real, meaningful Turkish collaboration against Daesh. In
exchange, the Russians have indicated that they are willing to resume
collaboration with Turkey on energy (gas, oil, nuclear plants) and
economic (building, transportation) issues.
Russia
has no need and no interest in the Incirlik air base. Not only is it
basically run by the USA, but Russian aircraft have the reach to bomb
anywhere in Syria if needed.
What
is currently happening in the USA can only be described as utter
chaos. When when a large number of diplomats admit that their own
craft, diplomacy, is useless and when the only thing they can
recommend is the fully illegal and, I would add, irresponsible use of
force against a sovereign country (Syria) which is allied with, and
hosting the forces of, a nuclear superpower (Russia), you know that
you are dealing with a clueless and incompetent gang of amateurs.
This also is the sign that the United States have lost the control
(or even the illusion of control) and that the inevitable infighting
has begun. That is very bad news because it makes the USA even more
unpredictable and prone to “quickfix solutions” (which in the
case of the USA is always more military violence and escalation).
While I agree with Moon of Alabama that the US offer is a no-starter,
I also see it as a possible diversionary maneuver of those in the USA
who want to prevent the Neocon crazies from triggering a direct
confrontation with Russia. If that is the case, some vague promise of
collaboration from Russia would be good enough to at least
temporarily shut up the crazies and hope that Trump gets elected.
All
we know so far is that Obama and Putin have spoken on the phone and
that, according to a Russian statement,
During the discussion of the situation in Syria, Vladimir Putin urged Barack Obama to facilitate as quickly as possible the separation of moderate Syrian opposition forces from the terrorist group Jabhat al-Nusra and other extremists that are not covered by the ceasefire regime. Both sides reaffirmed their readiness to step up coordination of American and Russian military actions in Syria, and emphasised the importance of resuming inter-Syrian negotiations under the aegis of the UN to achieve a a political settlement.
Whether
any real “coordination” ever truly materializes remains to be
seen.
In
the meantime, the Syrians clearly need more help and while they are
apparently making progress around Aleppo elsewhere they are running
into problems. Rumor has it that Iranian forces have also taken a
pounding recently. Some Russian experts are saying that the reason
for this is that Hezbollah has made the determination that liberating
Aleppo is the single most important goal and that crack Hezbollah
fighters have been withdrawn from other sectors and concentrated
around Aleppo. Whatever may be the case, in the Raqqa province Daesh
still seems to be in control. This might change if the US somehow
manages to convince the Kurds to make a push for Raqqa, especially if
the Turks cut off the northern supplies routes to Daesh and the
Russians help the Syrians. This could happen if only because anything
could happen, I suppose, but I will believe it when I see it. It will
be awfully hard to get the Kurds, who are basically fighting a civil
war in Turkey, to agree to divert resources to the south and east to
fight Daesh. The obvious solution is to get US boots on the ground,
but that is politically very difficult for Obama who has promised
numerous times not to do so. Of course, the *real* solution would be
to make a deal with Russia and Assad and then jointly crush Daesh,
but that would extremely humiliating for the United States. There are
probably constituencies lobbying for all these options right now and
I won’t even try to guess who will prevail.
While
it is true that the Russian have confirmed that the Admiral Kuznetsov
will be sent to the Mediterranean, silly rumors about “countering
NATO” are, yet again, being circulated. The truth is that the
Kuznetsov, while a formidable
ship indeed,
is also a Cold War “fossil” which was originally designed to
extend the range of Soviet air defenses protecting the submarine
bastions of
the Soviet Navy. By the way, the correct classification for this kind
of ship is not “aircraft carrier” but “heavy
aircraft-carryingmissile
cruiser”
(тяжёлый авианесущий крейсер) which means
that unlike, say, USN aircraft carriers, the primary armament of the
Kuznetsov are her powerful anti-ship missiles designed to sink US
carriers.
Her
complement of aircraft, fixed and rotary-wing, are a secondary
capability: to extend the sensor range and to protect. This
will probably change in the future,
but in its current configuration the Admiral Kuznetsov is definitely
a weird ship: her anti-ship missiles are useless against Daesh. Her
rotary and fixed wing aircraft have been modernized and are very
capable, but they are also extremely
limited in numbers:
15 SU-33 and MiG-29K/KUB and more than ten Ка-52К, Ка-27 and
Ка-31. So, at most, there will be, maybe, 10 navalized (and
modernized) MiG-29K/KUB which would be a real threat to Daesh, plus a
few Ka-52K. The SU-33 is a pure air-to-air interceptor, though
capable of “dumb” (unguided) bombing while the Ka-27 and Ka-31
are SAR and EW helos respectively. Bottom line – in terms of
fighting Daesh, the Admiral Kuznetsov brings very little. What she
does bring, however, a world-class air defense capabilities and
advanced command, control and communication. In other words, the
Kuznetsov is an ideal task force command post. That, and the
SU-33/MiG-29K combo, can very substantially increase the Russian
capability of having advanced air-to-air aircraft on station for
combat air patrols. But, remember, Daesh has no air force, so make
your own conclusions here :-)
Here
I would tie-in the promotion of Colonel-General Dvornikov, a man who
knows the Syrian operational environment extremely well, to the
Southern Military District, the district which, should things get
ugly in Syria, would be the district supporting all Russian efforts
in Syria and upon whom the Russian task force in Syria would be
vitally dependent on. What better choice could there be for the
Russian task force in Syria than to have its former Commander now in
charge of support from the Motherland?
I
have no way of knowing what the Russians and the Turks or the
Russians and the Americans are discussing behind closed doors, so I
won’t even pretend. But what I see is Russia, yet again, taking
steps which would be expected of her if the Kremlin had come to the
conclusion that the situation in Syria is likely to heat up again. Oh
sure, it could be that Dvornikov got promoted to a position of
responsibility just because a man like him was needed in the very
important Southern Military District and that the Kuznetsov is just
being sent to the Syrian cost for some, shall we say, “realistic
trials”. But I have the feeling that the Russians are maximizing
their options while the Americans are clearly struggling to even
define what their policy now really is.
And
just to make things more complicated, there are some semi-official
differences between the Russians and the Iranians who wanted a much
larger Russian intervention and who don’t believe in the peace
process initiated by Putin. Finally, it is not at all clear from the
Russian statements so far that they are willing to continue their
intervention until the last Daesh fighter is killed, which is the
position of Assad. So while Russia, Iran, Hezbollah and the Syrian
have found a great deal of common interests, Russia is not in the
position to act like a mini-USA and just give orders to everybody
else. There are real differences in opinion between these loosely
allied forces and each one retains a very large freedom of maneuver.
The
political logic of a US pre-election period would suggest that
US-generated conflicts such as the ones in the Ukraine and the one in
Syria should remain limited to minor moves until the new
administration gets elected and takes over. This might still happen
in Syria, but a lot of signs are beginning to point to a possible
acceleration of events on the ground.
The
Saker
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