Russia and The US Close to War
Israeli News LIve
S.Korea
on Emergency Alert When U.S. Bombers Buzzed
NLL
South
Korean warships and fighter jets were on standby south of the land
and sea border on the night of Sept. 23, when U.S. B-1B strategic
bombers and F-15C fighter escorts buzzed the North Korean maritime
border, it emerged on Thursday.
This
suggests they worried that the situation was touch-and-go and could
have resulted in armed conflict if North Korea tried to shoot the
fighter jets down.
According
to a senior military officer, South Korean F-15K and KF-16 fighter
jets were scrambled at dead of night and began flying patrol near the
demilitarized zone and the Northern Limit Line, the de facto border
in the East Sea.
At
the same time, several Navy vessels were on standby south of the NLL.
It was an unusually heavy presence at a time when South Korea and the
U.S. were not staging any joint exercise. They were preparing for an
emergency, the officer added.
The
Joint Chiefs of Staff here were watching the situation from the
underground command and control room in Yongsan, Seoul. But the
emergency alert was lifted as there was no response from the North.
The U.S. bombers and fighters returned to their bases in Guam and Okinawa without incident.
PLEASE NOTE: I have left formatting with links and references out
2
years of Russia in Syria: ISIS shrinking, Iran & Turkey linking,
conflict risk with US lurking
RT,
30
September, 2017
This
Saturday marks the end of the second year of Russia’s military
operation in Syria. It’s seen some setbacks, a few major victories,
the potential to end the bloody conflict and the risk of rapid
descent into a conflict between Russia and the US.
Russia’s
campaign in Syria was officially launched on September 30, 2015,
following several weeks of preparing a base of operations near
Latakia and transporting military assets there.
Acting
on a request from the Syrian government, Moscow said its involvement
was necessary to prevent jihadist forces from taking over the country
and turning it into a major hotbed of terrorism, which would threaten
Russia as well as other countries.
RT
takes a look at major events that happened over the second year of
the Syria campaign.
Capture
of Aleppo
In
September 2016, Syrian government forces with Russian air support
began an operation to capture Aleppo, once Syria’s manufacturing
capital. The city at the time was divided into roughly equal parts,
with the western half controlled by Damascus forces and the eastern
part held by several armed groups opposing them. Among the militants
on the so-call ‘rebel’ side was a significant presence of
hardcore jihadists from the group best-known as Al-Nusra Front.
The
intermingling of the groups was a constant source of tension between
the US and Russia, with Washington accusing Moscow of targeting
“moderate” groups in Aleppo, and Moscow complaining that the US
was unable to pressure “good” rebels to stay clear of “bad”
terrorists. This failure was cited by Russia as a major factor
leading to a collapse of a ceasefire agreed by the two nations under
the Obama administration, which led to the Aleppo offensive.
The
nature of urban fighting combined with the rebel groups’ reluctance
to allow civilians to leave their part of the city resulted in a
heavy death toll. The blame for the civilian casualties was squarely
laid on Russia by Western politicians and mainstream media, with
terms like “war crimes” and “barbarism”used liberally.
The
accusatory coverage or operation rose to a crescendo in December
2016, when so-called ‘civilian journalists’ bombarded Western
audiences with ‘last goodbyes from the Russia-destroyed Aleppo’.
The desperate call proved to be ridiculous, as days or weeks later
the same people were safely evacuated from the city.
The
reality of Aleppo months after its capture by the Syrian Army is that
hundreds of thousands of displaced people returned there, despite
residual problems any city that endured years of battles would have.
Palmyra
loss & recapture
While
gaining ground in the west of Syria, Damascus forces suffered a
setback in Palmyra, an ancient and culturally-significant city in the
central part of the country. The terrorist group Islamic State (IS,
formerly ISIS/ISIL) amassed a strong force and took back the city,
which it had lost in March 2016.
The
liberation of Palmyra was a key achievement for Russia’s campaign
in 2016, so losing Palmyra back to the same jihadists was a
humiliation, even if it only lasted for several months. In March,
Damascus was able to free up enough forces previously engaged in the
Aleppo siege to push IS out of Palmyra.
The
current focus for Damascus and Russia is Deir ez-Zor governorate in
the east of Syria. The eponymous provincial capital remained under IS
siege for years, with the militants controlling the rural part of the
province and outskirts of the city, and the government loyalists
holding the center. With supply lines cut by the blockade, the
garrison had to rely on high-altitude airdrops to continue fighting.
The
blockade was finally lifted in early September 2017, a development
that Russia considers a turning point for defeating IS in Syria. At
the moment, some 87 percent of the Syrian territory is under control
of Damascus, according to the estimate of the Russian Defense
Ministry.
The
Islamist group still controls parts of Raqqa, a city considered its
‘Syrian capital’, but it is expected to fall in the hands of
US-backed predominantly Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) before
year’s end.
The
Deir ez-Zor offensive also marked the most significant loss by the
Russian military in its modern history. Lieutenant-General Valery
Asapov, the senior member in the group of Russian advisers helping
the Syrian Army, was killed along with two aides in shelling. This
increased the number of Russian troops killed during the operation
reported by the Defense Ministry to 35.
While
IS remains a credible threat in some parts of Syria and does not
hesitate to poke both troops loyal to Damascus and the Kurdish
militias, the group’s attention has apparently shifted to other
parts of the world such as Libya. And with this common enemy all but
defeated, the future becomes uncertain over whether other parties of
the conflict can overcome their differences, especially with the
Americans joining the action full-swing.
US
boots on the ground
US
President Donald Trump’s many broken election promises included
changing the Obama-era policy on Syria and striking a deal with
Russia to defeat IS together. What happened instead is more US
involvement in Syria and an increasing risk of an armed conflict with
Russia.
The
new US administration’s Syria campaign started with an incident in
Khan Shaykhun, a small town in Idlib governorate controlled by the
rebels.
The
incident was described by the White House as a chemical weapons
attack by the Syrian government, with the media uncritically
supporting the narrative while dismissing evidence and arguments to
the contrary. So far, no on-site inspection of the alleged attack
site by international inspectors has been conducted.
Trump
milked the incident to get a moment of almost universal domestic
praise, when he ordered a barrage of Tomahawk missiles to obliterate
the airbase from which the supposed attack was launched. He even
bragged about it to visiting Chinese President Xi Jinping, who didn’t
comment on whether he appreciated the after-dinner entertainment.
The
Tomahawk show of force reportedly had a minimal effect on Damascus
military capabilities. It also paved the way for much stronger US
presence on the ground in Syria. Under Obama it was limited to
small-scale missions of special operations forces, but Trump allowed
the Pentagon to send in the US Marines along with artillery and other
heavy weapons, de facto occupying part of Syria.
It’s
not like the flights of the American-led coalition through Syrian
airspace were any more legal, but the mew deployment made US
disregard for international law even more glaring.
Conflict
with Russia looming
The
Americans are propping up the Syrian Democratic Force, a coalition of
militias dominated by Kurdish fighters, which the US chose over Turks
to lay a siege on Raqqa. The decision further strained Washington’s
relations with its NATO ally, which sees any empowerment of Kurds in
Syria or Iraq as an indirect support of Kurdish guerrillas in its own
territory. American support of Kurdish militias is nothing new, but
Trump’s move seems to have alienated Ankara enough for it to imply
that Turkey may need to shoot down American-made warplanes.
America’s
support of militias in Syria goes beyond just arms and training. Over
the past few months, American forces have attacked troops loyal to
Damascus on several occasions for allegedly violating borders of
US-controlled zones.
More
importantly, the SDF has its own agenda, which goes beyond defeating
IS, and it puts it at odds with the Syrian Army. Oilfields in Deir
ez-Zor governorate may still be under jihadist control, but whichever
side manages to capture them will have better chances of keeping them
and profiting from extraction in the future.
The
tension between the local players apparently spills out on their
foreign backers. The tone of the Russian Defense Ministry reports on
the Syrian campaign has been turning increasingly hostile towards the
US this month. Moscow laid the blame on Washington for triggering
last week’s surprise jihadist offensive from Idlib governorate,
which put three dozen Russian military police troops at risk of being
captured or killed.
Russian
media reported that the accusation came after intelligence on the
units’ positions, which Russia reported to the US, was shared with
a “moderate” group and later leaked to the Islamists.
The
Russian military said SDF shellings of positions of the Syrian army
in Deir ez-Zor endangered Russian military advisors embedded there
and threatened retaliation. And a senior Russian diplomat attributed
the death of the Russian General to American “hypocrisy”, with
Washington rejecting the assentation.
Some
reports indicate that American troops on the ground could have been
killed by Russian warplanes, an allegation that Moscow denies.
Nevertheless,
the risk of a direct military confrontation between Russia and the US
in Syria seems to be rising.
Peace
is possible
On
the bright side, dramatic changes in attitudes are possible in the
Syrian conflict, as evidenced by Russia’s rapprochement with
Turkey. Last year the two nations seemed to be on the brink of a
shooting war, after Turkey shot down a Russian warplane in November
2015. Now Moscow and Ankara seem to have overcome their differences
and are working together with Iran on stopping the war in Syria.
The
spectacular transformation was evidenced during the last days of the
battle for Aleppo. It was the trilateral agreement between Russia,
Turkey and Iran that allowed the negotiation of an end to hostilities
there and an evacuation of those unwilling to live under Damascus
control.
Later
the same deal-makers negotiated so-called de-escalation zones, an
ongoing mechanism meant to curb violence in Syria and eventually lead
to a country-wide truce.
The
plan is progressing, with some rough moments like the latest jihadist
offensive from Idlib, but it seems to have succeeded in curbing the
violence in Syria. Some observers say it amounts to a partitioning of
the country, an allegation that Moscow strongly denies.
Russia
says stopping the violence and reducing humanitarian suffering is
necessary to give the Syrians a chance to talk out how they want to
live.
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