Israel, Saudi Arabia and the US Are About to Invade Syria - Brace For Impact
"
... as ISIS intensifies its operations, Syrian forces have little to
no air support ... That is why both Syrian and Iranian forces
have been suffering extremely high losses lately. ... while
pro-Damascus forces keep surrendering territories and positions.
"It
is clear that the morale of all of these people is extremely low."
22
December, 2017
The
Russian Defense Ministry recently announced that the United States is
training a new armed force at the former refugee camp in El Khaseq
province, citing the Center for Syrian Reconciliation.
It’s believed that this force will be used in an attempt to topple the the Syrian government led by President Bashar al-Assad. What is even more curious is that militants of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and Jabhat al-Nusra are going to form the backbone of this military force.
The
Western coalition led by the United States carries on its attempt to
utilize radical militant groups in Syria, in spite of repeated
statements that it is supposedly engaged in the region to fight such
militants. According to the details provided by the Center for Syrian
Reconciliation, American special forces instructors are forming new
armed units from previously dissociated groups of militants. Local
residents report that the Western coalition has been using what used
to be a refugee camp for six months to create a new armed force,
bringing militants to El Khaseq from various parts of Syria.
According
to the Russian Defense Ministry, some 750 terrorists arrived from
Raqqa, Deir ez-Zor, Abu Kamal and the territories to the east of the
Euphrates. The newly formed backbone of the gang consists of more
than 400 battle-hardened ISIS militants, who, due to the support of
the United States left Raqqa last October with little effort. It is
expected that this armed unit will soon be deployed in southern Syria
to engage government forces. Earlier, Russia’s media announced that
the spokesman for the Russian Defense Ministry, Igor Konashenkov
accused the Pentagon of lying to the international community
regarding Washington’s plans to withdraw American forces from
Syria. According to the head of the US Department of Defense, James
Mattis, ISIS forces are defeated in Syria, but the war with them is
not over yet.
It’s
curious that as far as similar training camps for militant forces
across Syria and beyond its borders are concerned, there are well
over a dozen, with a number of them operating in Jordan. Those camps
are being used by various intelligence agencies, including Iranian,
American, and even Turkish organizations. Each agency pursues its own
objectives. This unfolds against the backdrop of the recent statement
made by Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Khmeimim military
base regarding Moscow’s intended reduction of its military
presence in Syria. In turn, Washington is busy preparing “its own”
militants to fight Assad, taking advantage of what it hopes is a
security vacuum once Russia withdraws.
Moreover,
Saudi Arabia and Israel make no secret of their plans to strike
Iranian and Hezbollah forces in southern Syria simultaneous with
the launch of a military operation into southern Lebanon. It is
expected that Washington is going to support these actions by
providing close air support to Saudi and Israeli forces in Syria.
That is why militants of the so-called Free Syrian Army, formed by
deserters from the Syrian army, were being trained in Jordan. The
strikes inside Syrian territory are to be launched from several
directions – from the area of the Golan Heights occupied by Israel,
across the Lebanese border once Lebanon is infiltrated by Israeli
forces, and across the Jordanian border. It’s curious that there
are no more than 60 miles to cover from the Jordanian-Syrian border
to Damascus, and over a half of this territory is already occupied by
armed opposition forces.
It
cannot be ruled out that pro-US SDF Kurdish forces will strike
Damascus from the east, although this step can provoke outrage in
Ankara which seeks to impede any form of Kurdish expansion in Syria.
Spontaneous attacks may also be launched from refugee camps, where
ISIS militants are being trained, as has been announced by Russia’s
Ministry of Defense.
Should
events start unfolding along this scenario with Russia’s air corps
departing, Damascus is going to find itself trapped by its opponents.
After all, the Free Syria Army have recently reached 30,000 in
number. There are another 25,000 ISIS militants are scattered along
the Euphrates and hiding in Idlib. In the southwest, there are
another 10,000 anti-government militants prepared for action. As for
Damascus, it has no more than 40,000 soldiers at its disposal,
supported by up to 40,000 Iranian soldiers and Shia militiamen from
Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
As
for the Syrian Air Force, it has been seriously depleted by the
ongoing conflict, while the US, Israel, and Saudi Arabia maintain
formidable air power. Moreover, Riyadh is building up a military
coalition against Syria from a long list of Arab countries, including
the UAE, Jordan and Egypt. This leaves the Syrian government clearly
in a disadvantageous position, together with Iran and Hezbollah.
In
fact, the announcement made by the Russian Defense Ministry hardly
contained any groundbreaking news, except for the announcement that
those camps were recruiting militants. All states engaged in the
Syrian conflict have been pursuing their own interests between
2011-2015, before the arrival of Russian forces. This struggle
entailed the training of forces fighting as proxies for external
players. Syria’s opponents were better funded, armed, and
organized, able to make efficient use of a vast amount of foreign
resources on hand. That is why the scales began tipping against
Damascus three years ago. In 2015, Russia entered the war, breaking
the back of anti-government militants, but this success does not
automatically equate to victory. In fact, victory is a long way off
for Damascus. What Moscow could do toward this end is destroy the
black market economy created by anti-government forces, which could
make the struggle against Damascus both extremely costly and highly
unprofitable. War is a business, even if it’s a bloody one, and
removing the profit from it removes the motive driving it.
In
fact, the Soviet Union was fully aware of the fact that if one wants
to have strong allied countries, a strong economic foundation was
required for those allies to build upon. Back in the day, a number of
Arab, African and Asian nations would receive economic assistance in
order to have sustainable military forces. Due to a variety of
reasons, this work hasn’t always been highly successful, but the
advantages of such a strategy are simply undeniable. Modern Russia
hasn’t spent a lot of time doing this, largely due to the lack of a
common ideology, since back in the Soviet days Moscow believed it was
its duty to support national liberation movements aimed at achieving
certain social benefits for a government and its people. But even
today Moscow is trying to make its allies highly self-sufficient, but
the problem is that without direct Russian support they are yet
unable to survive economically.
Here,
in fact, lies the answer to various kinds of questions and statements
regarding the end of the war in Syria. Undoubtedly, the United
States, the West as a whole and local regional players like Saudi
Arabia, Israel, Iran and Turkey will continue to pursue their
policies, including through proxy forces. It is only possible to
oppose such a game through a symmetrical policy of strengthening the
Assad government or to create in its place a more capable one that
would enjoy more popular support. If there is no such policy, then
calling attention to illegal US actions is merely a distraction from
Syria’s larger problems. The United States behaves as it sees fit,
as it is fighting for its own interests, disinterested in
international norms or international law.
As
a matter of fact, international law was trampled by Washington
itself, first in Yugoslavia, then mortally wounded in Iraq and then
finally buried under the “color revolutions” of Egypt, Yemen,
Libya, Syria, Georgia, Ukraine and Moldova. This means that the US is
going to recklessly pursue its interests in Syria and the Middle
East. Understandably, Washington is desperate to keep the leading oil
and gas producing region of the planet under its control, to keep its
control over the main sea routes from the Indian Ocean to the
Atlantic, keeping its hand on the flow of goods from Europe to Asia
and vice versa. That is why the US is going to oppose in every
possible way growing Russian influence in the Middle East.
This
means it will be blocking the supply of Russian gas to the EU by land
from the south – through Turkey, Syria, whether it is the “Turkish
flow” or the “southern stream” through Azerbaijan, Iran, Iraq
and Syria to the Mediterranean coast and further to Greece and Italy.
But there is no ideological struggle, only one of pure, self-serving
pragmatism. As long as Russia is in Washington’s way, it will not
be able to resist China, derailing such project as the One Belt, One
Road.
And
as President Putin tries to withdraw from the Syrian conflict as soon
as possible, the task of the West is the opposite – to drag Moscow
into Middle Eastern affairs, in Syria, Egypt, Libya and Sudan, while
attaining its own goals, among which includes the overthrow of
President Assad. This explains the perpetual failure of the Geneva
negotiations. It is no accident that Russian Deputy Foreign Minister
Gennadiy Gatilov has commented regarding the statement of the Syrian
opposition calling for the mandatory resignation of the
President of the Syrian Arab Republic. According to Gatilov, the
opposition of Syria continues to insist on the resignation of
President Assad, despite the fact that earlier all parties agreed
that there would be no preconditions to the negotiations. Deputy
Foreign Minister of the Russian Foreign Ministry noted that this is a
serious embarrassment. In Gatilov’s opinion, it is unclear what
kind of reaction the Syrian opposition expects in this case from the
Syrian delegation. Therefore, in part, the talks took place without
the participation of the Syrian government, as it described the
opposition’s demands as unacceptable. So the games in the peace
process are over. Renewed war is unavoidable.
The
commanders of the Syrian “Tigers,” a special forces unit
that remains the best at Assad’s disposal, didn’t try to
conceal their irritation when the militants of the pro-Damascus
Fatemiyoun Brigade and Liwa al-Quds surrendered a number of positions
between Mayadin and Abu Kamal, that had previously been liberated by
the Tigers at the expense of huge losses. And one can easily
understand their position, as ISIS intensifies its operations, Syrian
forces have little to no air support to rely on. That is why both
Syrian and Iranian forces have been suffering extremely high losses
lately. In just two days they have lost more than 100 men, while
pro-Damascus forces keep surrendering territories and positions.
Iran
assembled two divisions, the Fatemiyoun Brigade and Zeynabiyun with
Shia fighters from Afghanistan and Pakistan, respectively. The
leadership and training of these units is entrusted to the Iranian
special forces of the al-Quds division of the Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps under General Kasem Sulejmani. Within the territory of
Iran, there are up to a million refugees from Afghanistan and
Pakistan, and the Iranian leadership is trying to employ these
people. The war in Iraq and Syria requires huge human resources, that
is why Afghan and Pakistani refugees have found themselves involved.
In dire situations, people are usually forced to agree to sign a
contract. Iranian citizens also serve as mercenaries, and a large
part of them go to war in about the same way: among them, there are
many ordinary criminals. It is clear that the morale of all of these
people is extremely low, and therefore they are fighting badly. What
is worse is that Syrians of non-Alawite origin are not as eager to
fight, so the impending beginning of a new anti-Damascus campaign
does not hold much hope for peace in this war-torn country.
Source: New
Eastern Outlook
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