Is Putin really ready to “ditch” Iran?
8
June, 2018
[This
analysis was written for the Unz Review]
The
topic of Russian actions in Syria still continues to fascinate and
create a great deal of polemics. This makes senses – the
issue is exceedingly important on many levels,
including pragmatic and moral
ones,
and today I want to stick strictly to the pragmatic level and set
aside, just for a while, moral/ethical/spiritual considerations.
Furthermore, I will also pretend, for argument’s sake, that the
Kremlin is acting in unison, that there are no Atlantic
Integrationists in the Russian government, no 5th column in the
Kremlin and that there is no Zionist lobby exerting a great deal of
influence in Russia. I
will deal with these issues in the future as there is no doubt in my
mind that time and events will prove how unfounded and
politically-motivated these denials are in reality.
But for the purpose of this analysis, we can pretend that all is well
in the Kremlin and assume that Russia is fully sovereign and freely
protecting her national interests.
So what do we know about
what is going on in Syria?
I
submit that it is obvious that Russia and Israel have made some kind
of deal. That there is an understanding of some kind is
admitted by both sides, but there is also clearly more happening here
which is not spelled out in full. The Israelis, as always, are
bragging about their total victory and posting articles like this
one: “In
Syria, Putin and Netanyahu Were on the Same Side All Along”
with the subheading reading “Putin
is ready to ditch Iran to keep Israel happy and save Assad’s
victory“.
Really?
The
chaotic world of contradictory declarations and statements
Let’s
look at that thesis from a purely logical point of view. First,
what were the Israeli goals initially?
As I have explained
it elsewhere,
initially the Israelis had the following goals:
- Bring down a strong secular Arab state along with its political structure, armed forces, and security services.
- Create total chaos and horror in Syria justifying the creation of a “security zone” by Israel not only in the Golan but further north.
- Trigger a civil war in Lebanon by unleashing the Takfiri crazies against Hezbollah.
- Let the Takfiris and Hezbollah bleed each other to death, then create a “security zone”, but this time in Lebanon.
- Prevent the creation of a Shia axis Iran-Iraq-Syria-Lebanon.
- Break up Syria along ethnic and religious lines.
- Create a Kurdistan which could then be used against Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran.
- Make it possible for Israel to become the uncontested power broker in the Middle-East and force the KSA, Qatar, Oman, Kuwait and all others to have to go to Israel for any gas or oil pipeline project.
- Gradually isolate, threaten, subvert and eventually attack Iran with a wide regional coalition of forces.
- Eliminate all centers of Shia power in the Middle-East.
Now let’s stop right
here and ask a very simple question: if Putin and Netanyahu were on
the same side all along, what should Putin have done to aid the
Israelis? I submit that the obvious and indisputable answer is:
absolutely nothing. By the time the Russian
initiated their (very limited but also very effective) intervention
in Syria those plans were well under way towards full realization!
The undeniable truth is
that Putin foiled the initial Israel plan for Syria.
In
fact, Hezbollah and Iran had already intervened in Syria and were
desperately “plugging holes” in a collapsing Syrian front.
So, if anything, Putin has to be the one to be credited for forcing
the Israelis to give up on their “plan A” and go to plan
“B” which
I described here and
which can be summarized as follows:
Step one, use your propaganda machine and infiltrated agents to re-start the myth about an Iranian military nuclear program. (…) If Trump says that the JCPOA is a terrible deal, then this is so. Hey, we are living in the “post-Skripal” and “post-Douma” era – if some Anglo (or Jewish) leaders say “highly likely” then it behooves everybody to show instant “solidarity” lest they are accused of “anti-Semitism” or “fringe conspiracy theories” (you know the drill). So step one is the re-ignition ex nihilo of the Iranian military nuclear program canard. Step two is to declare that Israel is “existentially threatened” and (…) and let the dumb Americans fight the Iranians.
As
I have explained it in
great detail here,
Russia does not have any moral obligation to protect anybody
anywhere, not in the Middle-East and most definitely not Syria and/or
Iran. I have also explained in great detail here why
Putin also has a lot of pragmatic internal reasons for not getting
Russia involved in a major war in the Middle-East.
Finally,
as I have explained
here,
the Israelis are clearly baiting Iran by striking Iranian (or, more
accurately, Iranian-linked or Iranian-supported) targets in Syria.
They hope that Iran’s patience will come to an end and that the
Iranians will retaliate with enough firepower to justify not only an
attack on (relatively low value) Iranian-linked targets in Syria but
on Iran proper, thus leading to a guaranteed Iranian retaliation on
Israel and The Big Prize: a massive US attack on Iran.
Now let’s look at
Russian actions once again. If Putin was “on the same side
with Netanyahu all along”, he would be helping the Israelis do what
they are doing, that is baiting the Iranians, right? But what
did Putin really do?
It
all began with a statement by Foreign Minister Lavrov who declared
that all foreign forces must leave Syria. It is my understanding that
no direct quote exists from Lavrov’s initial statement,
only interpreted
paraphrases.
Lavrov also made some clarifying comments later, like this
one.
But let’s not get bogged down in trying to decide which was an
off-the-cuff comment and which one was “official”, but let us
begin by noticing this: even before Lavrov’s
comment on “all foreign forces” the same Lavrov also
said that “all
US forces must leave Syria after the defeat of the terrorist
forces“.
May I also remind everybody here that Israel has been illegally
occupying the Syrian Golan for years and that the IDF exactly fits
into the definition of “foreign force in Syria”? It gets better,
according to the Syrians and, frankly according to common sense and
international law, the
Syrians say that
all foreign forces must leave Syria except
those legally requested to stay by the Syrian government.
So when the Russians say that all foreign forces including
Iranians (assuming
Lavrov really said that) must leave Syria they have absolutely no
legal or other authority to impose that, short of a UNSC Resolution
endorsing that demand. Considering that the Israelis and the
USA don’t give a damn about international law or the UNSC, we might
even see a day when such a resolution is passed, enforced on the
Iranians only, and ignored by the Israelis. The trick here is
that in reality there are rather few Iranian “forces” in Syria.
There are many more “advisors” (which would not be considered a
“force”) and many more pro-Iranian forces which are not really
“Iranian” at all. There is also Hezbollah, but Hezbollah
is not going anywhere,
and they are Lebanese, not Iranian anyway. No doubt the
Israelis would claim that Hezbollah is an “Iranian force” but
that is basically nonsense. And just to add to the confusion,
the Russians are now being cute and saying: “of
course, the withdrawal of all non-Syrian forces must be carried out
on a mutual basis, this should be a two-way street“.
I suggest that we can stop listing all the possible paraphrases and
interpretations and agree that the Russians have created a holy (or
unholy) mess with their statements. In fact, I would even submit
that, what appears to be a holy (or unholy) mess, is
a very deliberate
and crafty ambiguity.
According
to numerous Russian sources, all this rhetoric is about the southern
part of Syria and the line of contact (it ain’t a border legally
speaking) between Syria and Israel. The deals seem to be this: the
pro-Iranian forces and Hezbollah get out of the south, and in
exchange, the Israelis let the Syrians, backed by Russian airpower
and “advisors” regain control of southern Syria but without any
attempts to push the Israelis out of the Golan which they illegally
occupy. Needless to say, the
Syrians are also insisting that
as part of the deal, the US forces in southern Syria must pack and
leave. But, frankly, unless the US plans to have tiny (and
useless) US enclaves inside Syrian controlled territory I don’t see
the point of them staying. Not only that, but the Jordanians
seem to be part of this deal too.
And here is the best part: there is some pretty good evidence
that Hezbollah
and Iran also are part of the deal.
And, guess what? So
are the Turks.
This
sure looks like some kind of major regional deal has been hammered
out by the Russians. And if that is really the case, then that would
also explain the tense denials in Israel and Iran,
followed by more
confirmations (also here)
And, just to make things even more confused, we now have Stoltenberg
(of all people!) saying that NATO
would not assist Israel in case of an Iranian attack which,
considering that the NATO Secretary General has no power, that NATO
is about 80%+ made up of the USA and that the
US now has permanent a “tripwire” force inside Israel and
could claim to be under attack, is utter nonsense, but still amusing
to note as “adding to the chaos”.
And
then there is the
apparent Syrian plan to kick out the US from northern Syria which,
predictably, Uncle
Sam don’t like too much.
So the
two sides are talking again.
If all this looks to you
like evidence for the thesis that “Putin and Netanyahu were on the
same side all along”, then I wonder what it would take to convince
you otherwise because to me this looks like one of three things:
- some kind of major regional deal has been made or
- some kind of major regional deal is in the process of being hammered out or
- some kind of major regional deal has been made but nobody trusts anybody else and everybody wants to make that deal better for itself
and, of course, everybody
wants to save face by either denying it all or declaring victory,
especially the AngloZionists.
So let’s ask the key
question: is there any evidence at all that Putin
and/or Assad is/are “ditching Iran”?
Away
from the realm of declarations and statements and back to the world
Let’s begin with a
simple question: What does Iran want above all else?
I
submit that the overwhelming number one priority of Iran is to avoid
a massive US attack on Iran.
Conversely,
triggering such an attack on Iran is the number one objective of the
Israelis.
They are rather open about that too. They latest idea is to
create a “military
coalition against Iran”
while trying to please NATO by joining
anti-Russian exercises in Europe.
Not
because of a non-existing Iranian nuclear program threatening Israel,
but because Iran offers a most successful, and therefore dangerously
competing, alternative civilizational model to both the AngloZionist
Empire and the Saudi-Wahabi version of Islam. Furthermore,
unlike (alas!) Russia, Iran dares to openly commit the “crime of
crimes”, that is, to publicly denounce Israel as a genocidal,
racist state whose policies are an affront to all of civilized
mankind. Finally, Iran (again unlike Russia, alas!) is
a truly sovereign
state which has successfully dealt with its 5th columnists and which
is not in the iron claws of IMF/WB/WTO/etc types (I wrote
about that last week so
I won’t repeat it here).
I
also submit that Iran also has as a top priority to support all the
oppressed people of the Middle-East. Resisting oppression and
injustice is a Quranic imperative and I believe that in
its Iranian interpretation this
also extends to non-Shia Sunnis and even Christians and Jews, but
since I know that this will trigger all sorts of angry accusations of
being naive (or even a Shia propagandist) I will concede that helping
the oppressed Shia in the region is probably more important to the
Iranian leaders than helping all the other oppressed. In secular
terms, this means that Iran will try to protect and assist the Shia
in Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon and I see absolutely nothing wrong with
that at all. In fact, considering the amazing
mercy shown by Hezbollah to the SLA in southern Lebanon in
2000, and the fact that currently, the Syrian security forces are
acting with utmost restraint in the parts of Syria which have
accepted the Russian deal (this even has some
Russian analysts outright worried)
I think that Iranian-backed forces liberating Syria from Daesh are
the best thing which anybody could hope for.
Furthermore, the truth is
that for all its other faults, the Ba’athist regime in Syria was
tolerant of minorities and that Hezbollah has always been protective
of absolutely all the Lebanese people regardless of confession or
ethnicity (others might disagree with me, but having studied
Hezbollah and Iran for several decades now I come to the conclusion
that they, unlike most other political actors, are actually truthful
when they state their intentions).
So who is the biggest
threat to the Shia and, I would argue, to all the people of the
Middle-East? The Takfiris of Daesh of course.
And what do all the
variants of the possible “big regional deal” have in common?
The elimination of Daesh & Co. from Syria.
So how is that against
the Iranian interests?!
It isn’t, of course.
The truth is that I see
absolutely no evidence at all for “Putin and Netanyahu working
together all along”. What I do see is that some kind of deal
is being worked out between numerous parties in which everybody is
probably trying hard to cheat everybody else, Realpolitik at
its worst and most cynical – yes. But hardly a betrayal of
Iran by Russia.
What
everybody seems to be doing is what blacksmith Vakula did in Gogol’s
Christmas Story “The
Night Before Christmas“:
to trick the devil. In Russia, the devil is known as “лукавый”
which does not just mean “evil” but also
sly/wily/deceitful/wickedly clever. To try to trick the devil is a
very, very dangerous and difficult task and I also find it morally
very questionable. But in keeping up with our modern value-neutral
“realistic” Zeitgeist,
we can also debunk the “Putin betrays Iran” on purely cynical and
“pragmatic” reasons with no need to appeal to any higher values
at all.
For those who have not
seen it yet, I highly recommend this (English subtitled) video of
Ruslan Ostashko discussing what Israel can, or cannot, offer Russia
and Putin:
Ostashko is absolutely
right. The truth is that Israel, unlike Iran, has very little
to offer Putin or Russia. This does not mean that
Israel does not have influence over the Kremlin, it most
definitely does, but that influence is all “stick”, no “carrot”
(which is one of the conceptual flaws in the position of those who
deny the existence of a Zionist 5th column in Russia – they are
denying the existence of the “stick” while producing no “carrot”
thus making Russian policies appear both contradictory and
unexplainable: hence a need for all sorts of mental contortions to
try to explain them).
But
Israel’s “stick”, while undeniably big, is dwarfed by Iran’s
“carrot”: not only immense resources and billions of
Dollars/Rubles/Rials/Euros to be made in energy and weapons and also
many sectors of the economy. There is also the fact that Iran is
truly the number one regional power in the entire Middle-East: maybe
not big enough to impose its will on all others, but definitely big
enough to bring down any major plan or policy it does not approve of.
Furthermore, now that the international sanctions against Iran have
been officially lifted (the USA’s reneging on its signature
notwithstanding), Iran
can join and become an influential member of the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (along
with, possibly, other Middle-Eastern countries). All this makes the
Iranian “carrot” very attractive to Russia. There is also a
conceptual Iranian “stick”: if Israel gets its way and Iran is
massively and viciously attacked by the AngloZionist Empire, and
either chaos or a severe crisis result, what would be the impact on
Russia and her allies? And, while I don’t think for a second that
this is possible, let’s say the Empire puts a pro-AngloZionist
regime in power in Tehran and overthrows the Islamic Republic –
what would that do to the Russian national security? It would be an
absolute nightmare, wouldn’t it?
Look at the relationship
between Russia and Turkey before the coup attempt
against Erdogan. Surely that relationship was much worse than the
relationship currently enjoyed between the Islamic Republic and
Russia, right? And yet, when the US attempted to topple Erdogan, what
did Russia do? Russia gave Erdogan her fullest support and even,
according to some rumors, physical protection during a few key
hours. If Russia sided with Erdogan against the Empire, why
would Russia not side with the Islamic Republic, even if we consider
only arguments of Russian self-interest?
For
an excellent Iranian analysis of the Russia-Iran alliance, check
out this
article by
Aram Mirzaei.
Conclusion
The simple truth is that
regardless of declarations and political statements, China, Russia,
Iran, Syria and Hezbollah are all dependent on each other and cannot
afford to truly betray anybody lest the Empire take them out one by
one. To use Franklin’s expression – they all must hang (i.e.
stand) together or most assuredly they will all “hang separately”?
That does not mean that they all love each other, or always share the
same goals? They might also play against each other to some degree,
and even try to get some sweet deal “on the side” with the
AngloZionists (remember, Assad used to torture for the CIA!), but the
facts on the ground and the correlation of forces in the Middle-East
will limit the scope of such “mini-betrayals”, at least for the
foreseeable future.
True,
there is the Saudi factor to take into account. Unlike the
Israelis, the Saudis are offering a lot of “carrot”. But
the Saudis are way too arrogant, they are already messing with
Russian interests not only in Syria, but also
in Qatar,
and their
brand of Islam is truly a mortal danger for Russia.
Right now the Atlantic Integrationists and Eurasian Sovereignists
have achieved somewhat of an equilibrium in the Kramlin. The former
is trying to split the EU from the USA and make lots of money, while
the latter are left in charge of national security issues, especially
towards the South, but this equilibrium is inherently unstable and
would be immediately threatened by any meaningful AngloZionist
attack. So yes, there is a Zionist Lobby in Russia and yes, it does
act as a 5th column, but not, most emphatically no, it is not strong
enough to completely disregard the financial interests of the Russian
business elites or, even less so, fundamental Russian national
security interests. That is the one of biggest difference
between the USA and Russia: Russia, while only partially sovereign,
is far from being an Israeli protectorate or colony. And as
long as Russia retains her even partial sovereignty she will not
“ditch” Iran, regardless of Israeli whining and threats.
My
personal evaluation is that Putin is playing a very complex and
potentially dangerous game. He is trying to trick not one, but many
“devils”, all at the same time. Furthermore, if the US
Americans have been недоговороспособны (“not
agreement capable”) already
since Obama,
Trump and his Neocon masters have made that even worse. As for
the Israelis, they would make Satan himself look honest and are
ideologically incapable of honesty (or even decency). Frankly,
I don’t trust Erdogan one bit and I don’t think that the Russians
will ever trust him either. Call me naive, but I think that
Assad has been changed by this war and even if he did, indeed,
collaborate with the CIA in the past, I think that he will be a
pretty good ally for Russia in the future. As for Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei and Hassan Nasrallah, I see them both as men of honor who
will uphold any alliance they formally enter into (informal
understandings and temporary mutual interests are a different deal).
I also see them as brilliant and wise geostrategists: they fully
realize that Iran and Hezbollah *need* Russia to survive. So
Putin’s policy, while dangerous, is not doomed to failure at all:
he is trying to save Syria from the AngloZionsts while avoiding a
regional war. Time is on his side as Trump’s erratic (and
that is putting it mildly) policies (or, really, lack thereof) are
inflicting tremendous damage on the Empire on a daily basis (see
Dmitri Orlov’s excellent analysis here).
I honestly don’t know
if Putin’s dangerous strategy will work or not. I don’t
think anybody else does either (except ignorant cheerleaders, of
course). But I do know that even if the sight of Bibi Netanyahu
in Moscow with a Saint George ribbon was nauseating to my conscience,
this absolutely does not indicate that Netanyahu and Putin are
working together or that Russia is “ditching Iran”. As
always, the Israelis feel almighty and brazenly display their
arrogance. Let them. Just remember the inevitable outcome
from that kind of Zionist hubris in the past and wait for the
inevitable “oy vey!“.
Finally,
there is the single most important fact: the AngloZionist
Empire and Russia remain at war,
and have been so for at least four years or more. That war is
still about 80% informational, 15% economic and 5% kinetic, but it
this is a very real war nonetheless, and it is escalating. As
long as Russia will retain even partial sovereignty and as long as
she will offer an alternative civilizational model, even an imperfect
one, she will remain an existential threat to the Empire and the
Empire will remain an existential threat for the entire Russian
civilizational realm. While hugely important to Israel, the
entire Iranian issue is just a sideshow to the transnational leaders
of the Empire who see Russia and China as the real main competitors,
especially when joined in a symbiotic relationship as they are
today. Hence the crises in the Ukraine and on the Korean
Peninsula, hence the constants warnings of a possible full-scale
nuclear war (see Eric Zuesse latest article here or
Paul Craig Roberts numerous article on his
website;
also check out Dan Glazebrook’s excellent analysis of Trump’s
attempt to repeat the “Rambouillet ruse” in Korea here).
Even if Putin succeeds in moving the EU closer to Russia and away
from a (clearly insane) USA, and even if he succeeds in preventing
the AngloZionists from directly attacking Iran, this will only
further convince the AngloZionist leaders of the Empire that he,
Putin, and Russia, are the ultimate evil which must be eliminated.
Those who hope for some kind of modus
vivendi between
the Empire and Russia are kidding themselves, because the very
nature of the Empiremakes
this impossible. Besides, as Orlov correctly pointed it out –
the Empire’s hegemony is collapsing, fast. The Empire’s
propaganda machine denies and obfuscates this, and those who believe
it don’t see it – but the leaders of the Empire all understand
this, hence the escalation on all fronts we have seen since the
Neocons re-took power in the White House. If the Neocons
continue on their current course, and I don’t see any indication
whatsoever that they are reconsidering it, then the question is only
when/where this will lead to a full-scale war first. Your guess
is as good as mine.
The Saker
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