Syria - "The regime will be
there" - U.S. Concedes Raqqa ... And The Syrian
East?
By
Moon Of Alabama
There are
strong
rumors that the
U.S. intends to launch an invasion of east-Syria
from Jordan with the aim of occupying the whole
eastern area. The Syrian army and its allies
launched a
move towards the east
(red)
to prevent such an outcome.
A new Wall Street
Journal piece, primarily about the ISIS held
city of Raqqa on the Euphrates,
casts doubt on
long term U.S. plans for such an occupation. Its
core quote:
"We
won’t be in Raqqa in 2020, but the regime
will be there."
There were already doubts that a big U.S. move
in east-Syria was really going to happen. Jordan
opposes any
such move. While the U.S. and Jordan have
trained, equipped and paid Syrian "rebels" to
hold a zone of control in south-west Syria,
little preparations have been seen for a large
move in the south-east. The U.S. has
so far vetted
and trained at most 2,000 local Arab fighters in
the area. Fewer are ready to go. Even with U.S.
special forces embedded with them these forces
are way too small to take an ISIS defended city
or to capture or to hold a significant area. At
least ten to twenty thousand troops would be
needed (likely more) for such an endeavor. The
current force is probably only tasked with
taking a few border stations to close down the
border between Syria and Iraq. (A move that
Syrian
and Iraqi forces
will try to prevent.)
The
upcoming taking of Raqqa by U.S. forces and its
Kurdish proxies is now endorsed by the Syrian
government and its Russian allies. It seems that
an agreement has been made without any public
announcement. This agreement may well extend to
the other eastern areas south of Raqqa. From the
WSJ:
The
Kurd-dominated Syrian Democratic Forces
captured Tabqa Wednesday, a day after the
U.S. pledged to arm the fighters. On Monday,
the Damascus government for the first time
endorsed the group’s battle
against Islamic State, with Syrian
Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem
complimenting the SDF’s fight against
Islamic State at a press conference in
Damascus, describing the force as
legitimate.
The
SDF is now the only ground force
with both U.S. and Syrian government
approval in the fight against
Islamic State as the offensive on Raqqa
draws near. The group has long co-existed
with the Syrian government, unlike U.S.-
backed factions that Damascus deems
terrorists in light of their goal to oust
President Bashar al-Assad’s regime.
...
U.S. President Donald Trump has made clear
he opposes the expensive nation-building
missions that have historically accompanied
U.S. counterterrorism operations to support
local governments and prevent insurgents
from returning.
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For
these reasons, Western diplomats say the
post-capture plan is for the SDF to hand
over the administration of Raqqa to
a local civilian council friendly to the
Syrian regime. That council could
eventually transfer control of the
city back to the regime, these
diplomats said.
...
On Thursday, Russia’s Deputy Foreign
Minister Mikhail Bogdanov said
Moscow supports the formation of local
councils to administer territory taken from
Islamic State but said they
must not circumvent the Syrian government’s
authority, in comments carried by
Interfax news agency.
“The U.S. military will be
going in [to Raqqa] and trying to figure out
who the tribal leaders are,” said an
American official involved in the
anti-Islamic State campaign. “The
regime knows these details.
They have a natural
home-field advantage and have a way of
slowly getting back in. We won’t be in Raqqa
in 2020, but the regime will be there.”
Those
are unexpected words under two aspects. First -
a U.S. government official acknowledges, for the
first time, that control of the area will go
back to the Syrian government and second -
Syrian and Russian officials are informed of and
agree with these U.S. plans.
A
member of the currently selected Raqqa civilian
council
denied that the
Syrian government will take charge but I doubt
that she would be informed of such a high level
issue.
It is
likely that this scheme extends to other parts
of south-east-Syria and even to the
north-eastern Kurdish held areas. U.S. Gulf
allies and Israel would like the U.S. to occupy
the east and to "block" a "Shia crescent" that
reaches from Iran through Iraq and Syria to
Hizbullah in Lebanon. But any U.S. position
there would be a hostile occupation which would
have to fight off Syrian government forces,
local Arab resistance, remnants of ISIS and Shia
militia from Iraq. The "Shia crescent" is anyway
a chimera. Iran was well able to supply
Hizbullah in Lebanon even as Iraq was occupied
by U.S. forces. At that time the road from Iran
to Syria was blocked, the alleged "Shia
crescent" was interrupted but supplies to
Hizbullah still flowed unhindered. Turkey, a
U.S. NATO ally, will never agree to a Kurdish
statelet in north-east Syria. Even a somewhat
autonomous Kurdish area will only be tolerated
if the Syrian government is in supreme control
of it. A U.S. occupied zone in the landlocked
Syrian east is of no strategic value to the U.S.
It is surrounded by potential enemies and it
would permanently require significant military
resources. A return to Syrian government control
is the best alternative.
But despite a likely agreement the Syrian
government forces will continue their moves
towards the east. The U.S. can not be trusted.
In September 2016 a ceasefire and cooperation
deal was agreed upon between Secretary of State
Kerry and the Russian government. The fight
against ISIS would be coordinate between all
countries, including Syria. The U.S. military
sabotaged the deal
by launching air attacks on Syrian government
forces in Deir Ezzor which were besieged by
ISIS. This enabled ISIS to take a significant
part of the government held areas there and to
nearly eliminate
all those forces. The U.S.-Russian agreement
fell apart.
Any agreement with the U.S. that ISIS areas in
Syria will fall back to government control,
independent of who liberated them, should be
welcome. Military hawks in the Trump
administration, the sectarian Gulf countries as
well as Israel will try to interrupt such a
move. The Syrian government and its allies must
therefore continue their own operations and
liberate as many ares as possible by themselves.
They must stay aware that a Trump administration
might, at any time, revert to the
old plan of
establishing a "Salafist principality" in the
area - even when such an unruly proxy would make
little sense for it.
This article was first published by
Moon
Of Alabama
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.
Reports: Unusual troop
movements in Jordan near Syrian border;
Tanks, armor, and other support equipment moved
to Jordanian compound 43 km from Syrian border
as US, Jordan launch major military exercise.