Many thanks to the Duran, and especially Alexander Mercouris who are providing some of the best coverage on Syria.
BREAKING: Erdogan calls Putin, pleads for Jihadis to be allowed to leave Aleppo
Alexander Mercouris
The Duran,
14 December, 2016
Turkish President Erdogan makes late night call to Russian President Putin in desperate last bid effort to get Jihadis extracted from Aleppo.
Turkish
President Erdogan called Russian President Vladimir Putin late in the
evening on Wednesday 14th December 2016 in what looks like a
desperate last minute plea by the Turkish leader to try to get the
withdrawal of Jihadis from eastern Aleppo restarted.
That
the two leaders discussed the situation in Aleppo is clear from the
Kremlin’s report of
their conversation
“The
heads of state continued their ongoing exchange of views on Syria. In
particular, they discussed the developments in Aleppo, and emphasised
the need to build up joint efforts to improve the humanitarian
situation and foster the start of a real political process in Syria.’
Shortly
after this conversation took place reports drawing on Jihadi sources
began to circulate in the Western media that the
plan for the Jihadis to withdraw from eastern Aleppo is
back on track, and that the withdrawal will happen shortly.
There
has been no confirmation of this however from Moscow or
Damascus. As I
said earlier,
experience has taught me to assume no agreement supposedly made by
Russia until Moscow confirms it.
What
is different this time is that Erdogan has now come out into the open
as the true broker of the deal, and is no longer hiding behind
Turkish intelligence.
Past
experience has taught Erdogan the
price of not keeping a promise to Putin. If
he is promising that this time the Jihadis really will leave Aleppo,
then he is once again putting his credit with Putin on the line.
Given
his past dealings with Erdogan it is doubtful that Putin places much
weight on what Erdogan tells him. Putin must also have
doubts as to what influence over the Al-Qaeda led Jihadis in eastern
Aleppo Erdogan really has.
Most
likely there will be another brief draw down in the fighting of a few
hours – though this will be a lot less than a ceasefire – to see
whether the Jihadis do actually agree to leave as Erdogan promises.
With
the Jihadis having lost more ground over the course of the day, and
with their situation becoming more
desperate by the hour,
Putin probably calculates he has nothing to lose by giving Erdogan
another chance.
This is from earlier
CONFIRMED: Russia rejects ceasefire in Aleppo, fighting resumes after Jihadis refuse to leave
Alexander
Mercouris
13
December, 2016
Fighting
resumes in Aleppo after Jihadis fail to act on Turkish promise to
withdraw from Aleppo and after Russia rejects ceasefire.
Reports
circulated throughout the evening of yesterday Tuesday 13th December
2016 of a supposed agreement between the Russian military and Turkish
military intelligence to evacuate the remaining Jihadi fighters and
civilians from eastern Aleppo.
I
have learnt through long experience to doubt the existence of any
agreement the Russians are supposed to have entered into until they
announce it.
In
the event the hours passed and no confirmation of the existence of
such an agreement came from Moscow or Damascus though in comments to
the UN Security Council Russia’s ambassador Vitaly Churkin did
appear to refer to it indirectly.
Instead
there was a temporary draw down in fighting in the evening of
yesterday, with the Syrian government’s green buses appearing in
eastern Aleppo this morning, apparently in order to take the Jihadis
away. None however came, Russian and Syrian reports say
the Jihadis fired at the buses, and the fighting has resumed in
earnest.
The
Russian military’s Reconciliation Centre at Khmeimim air base in
Syria is now saying that the Syrian military will continue its
offensive until all the Jihadi fighters in eastern Aleppo are either
dead or captured or give up.
What
happened?
Piecing
things together, it seems unlikely that there was any formal
agreement between the Russians and the Turks. However the
Russian and Turkish militaries have been in contact with each other
since September, and discussions
between them about the situation in Aleppo have been underway since
at least the first week of November.
it
seems that yesterday evening the Turkish military promised the
Russians that if there was a draw down in the fighting they would
arrange for the Jihadi fighters in eastern Aleppo to leave Aleppo
this morning.
The
Russians appear to have been skeptical, which is why they failed to
make a formal announcement yesterday, and as things turned out they
were right not to do so.
The
alternative theory, which is being promoted
by the Western media today,
is that the Syrian government and the Shiite militias in Aleppo
objected to the agreement, about which they were supposedly not
consulted, and it was this that led to the agreement breaking down
this morning.
However
the fact that there was indeed a draw down in the fighting last
night, and that the green buses appeared this morning, shows that
this claim is wrong.
This
episode illustrates a recurring problem of the Syrian war. Though
countries like the US and Turkey from time to time purport to enter
into agreements with the Russians on behalf of their Jihadi proxies
in Syria, their Jihadi proxies then invariably fail to honour them.
The
Jihadis refused to withdraw as the Turks promised for two likely
reasons:
1. Though
it is difficult to discuss the terms of an ‘agreement’ that was
never in fact reached, it seems that not all the Jihadis in eastern
Aleppo were to be allowed to leave. The Russians appear to
have insisted that the ringleaders and those who carried out the most
egregious crimes would not be allowed to leave but would instead be
arrested so that they can be put on trial by the Syrian authorities.
The
Russians have a sophisticated intelligence operation in Aleppo, and
by now they undoubtedly know who these people are, and everything
about them right down to their aliases. Indeed it is
likely they have provided Turkish intelligence with a list of these
people over the course of the discussions.
These
people are of course the same people who are the local Al-Qaeda
commanders in eastern Aleppo. Since the Russian demand
gives them no incentive to allow the other Jihadis to leave, and
since they are in a position of authority over the other Jihadis, the
Russian demand ensured that they would not allow the other Jihadis to
do so.
2. It
is doubtful the Jihadis in eastern Aleppo ever actually intended to
leave. Not only are some of them fanatical fighters, sworn
to die rather than leave, but their whole strategy is to manipulate
the diplomatic process to secure for themselves a ceasefire, which
will enable them to stay.
The
Russians have repeatedly complained about this, and about the US’s
collusion in assisting the Jihadis with this strategy, and Russian
Foreign Minister Lavrov did
so again this morning
“Every
time we agree on something, the Americans step back from the
agreements. It happened in September, then in December. We
are told: ‘Russia proposes to agree on humanitarian corridors so
that the militants will leave, but you should stop fighting first,
then, in some days, it will be possible to create such corridors.
No
one in Iraq, Libya, or Yemen demands a ceasefire, or a week or two of
complete ‘silence,’ before negotiations. But in Syria they call
for it.”
The
Al-Qaeda leadership in eastern Aleppo seems to have persisted with
this strategy yesterday by trying to use the draw down in the
fighting which resulted from the Turkish offer in order to hold out
for a ceasefire.
That
the Western powers are also still pursuing this strategy is shown by
what happened at the UN Security Council yesterday.
With
hindsight it now looks as if yesterday’s UN Security Council debate
– convened at France’s request – was timed to coincide with the
Turkish promise, and was held in order to pressure Russia into
agreeing to convert yesterday’s draw down in the fighting into a
ceasefire, with yesterday’s atrocity propaganda intended to
embarrass the Russians into agreeing to it.
In
the event the Russians have made it crystal clear this morning that
they are not prepared to agree to a ceasefire, and there is in fact
no ceasefire in place. Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov has
also rejected the atrocity propaganda, pointing out that as UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon admitted two days ago, it
is unverified
“I
receive information from independent humanitarian organisations
firsthand…. No one has confirmed claims about atrocities or
kidnappings.”
In
summary, last night’s Turkish offer – almost certainly instigated
by Turkish President Erdogan, who is coming under pressure from the
Islamist part of his political base to do something to help the
Jihadis in Aleppo – has bought the Jihadis in eastern Aleppo a few
more hours.
It
has not however gained them the ceasefire they wanted, and it is most
unlikely there will be any more interruptions in the fighting now.
Russian
Foreign Minister Lavrov is saying he expects the situation in eastern
Aleppo to be “resolved” within the next 2 or 3 days, and his
words suggest that he expects the issue to be resolved by fighting.
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