A Failing Empire: Russia and China's
Military Strategy to Contain the US
By Federico Pieraccini
September 25,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
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Looking
at the global political landscape over the last
month, two trends are becoming more apparent. The
infamous military and economic power at America’s
disposal is declining, whereas in the multipolar
field, an acceleration has occurred in the creation
of a series of infrastructures, mechanisms and
procedures to contain and limit the negative effects
of America’s declining unipolar moment. This series
of three articles will focus firstly on the military
aspect of these ongoing changes, then the economics
at play, and finally, how and why smaller countries
are transitioning from the unipolar camp to the
multipolar field.
One of the most tangible consequences
of the decline of US military power can be observed
in the Syrian conflict. Over the past few weeks, the
Syrian Arab Army (SAA) and its allies have completed
the historic and strategic liberation
of Deir ez-Zor,
a city besieged for more than five years by
Islamists belonging to Al Qaeda and Daesh. The focus
has now shifted to
the oilfields south of the liberated city, with a
frantic rush by both the US-supported Syrian
Democratic Forces (SDF) and the SAA to free
territories still held by Daesh. The final goal is
to claim Syria's resources and strengthen a weak US
position (the US is not even part of the Astana
peace talks) in future negotiations concerning the
country's future. To understand how much the US
dream of partitioning
Syria is
failing, one only need note repeated US
failures as
seen in the liberation of Aleppo and then Deir
Ez-Zor, and now the crossing
of the Euphrates river.
In spite of American intimidation, threats, and
sometimes even direct aggression, the Syrian army
continued to work against Daesh in the province of
Deir Ez-Zor, advancing on oil
rich sites.
Thanks to the protection given by the Russian
Federation Air Force during the conflict, Damascus
has obtained a protective umbrella necessary to
withstand attempts by the US of balkanize the
country.
Further confirmation of Washington’s
failed strategy to divide the country a la
Yugoslavia appears evident from the strategic
realignment of the most loyal allies of Washington
in the region and beyond. In the course of the last
few weeks, several meetings have taken place in
Astana and Moscow between the likes of Putin and
Lavrov with their Turkish, Saudi,
and Israeli counterparts.
These meetings outlined the guidelines for Syria’s
future thanks to Moscow’s red lines, especially
regarding Israel’s desire to pursue regime change in
Syria and an aggressive attitude towards Iran. Even
the most loyal allies of the United States are
beginning to plan a future in Syria with Assad as
president. US allies have started showing a
pragmatic shift towards a reconciliation with the
factions that are clearly winning the war and are
going to call the shots in the future. The long-held
dreams and desires of sheikhs (Saudi-Qatar) and
sultans (Erdogan) to reshape Syria and the Middle
East in their image are over, and they know it.
Washington's allies have been let down, with the US
incapable of keeping its promises
of fulfilling a regime change
in Damascus. The consequences for the US have just
begun. Without a military posture capable of bending
adversaries and friends to her will, the US will
have to start dealing with a new reality that
involves compromise and negotiation, something the
US is not accustomed to.
An example of what can happen if
Washington decides to go against a former friend can
be seen with the Gulf
Crisis involving Qatar.
Since the beginning of the aggression against Syria,
the small emirate has been at the center of plots
and schemes aimed at arming and financing jihadists
in the Middle East and Syria. Five years later,
after billions of dollars spent and nothing to hold
onto in Syria, the Gulf Cooperation Council, as
expected, has plunged into a fratricidal struggle
between Qatar and other countries like Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, UAE and Egypt. The latter accuse Doha of
funding terrorism, an undeniable truth. But they
omit to acknowledge their own ties to the jihadists
(Egypt in this framework is excluded, fighting
continually with terrorists inspired by the Muslim
Brotherhood in the Sinai), showing a hypocrisy that
only the mainstream media can rival.
The
consequences of Riyad’s actions against Doha, backed
up by a large part of the American establishment,
seems, almost six months later, to have finally
pushed Qatar and Iran together, reopening
diplomatic ties.
These are two countries that have for years been on
opposite sides of many conflicts in the Middle East,
reflecting contrasts and divisions dictated by the
respective positions of Tehran and Riyadh. This
seems to be no more, with Doha
and Tehran coming closer and
circumnavigating sanctions and blockades, overcoming
common difficulties. This shift can only be
described as a strategic failure by Riyadh.
Looking
back six years, one of the reasons for the eruption
of the conflict in Syria has everything to do with
the famous
pipeline that
Iran intended to build connecting Iraq and Syria.
Incredibly, the end of the conflict will see a new
transport line emerging between countries that for
years have had opposing and diverging strategic
goals. Iran and Qatar are currently engaging in
trade agreements, and rumors have it that a joint
effort to build a new pipeline that
should cross Iraq and Syria, to end in the
Mediterranean, is in the making. The idea is to
jointly exploit the world's largest gas field, and
in so doing become a new supplier for a Europe that
is looking to diversify its energy imports. Riyadh
and Washington will have to take full responsibility
for this failure of epic proportions.
A clear sign of how fast things are
changing in the region and beyond comes from Israel.
Even the Jewish State has had to abandon any dream
of territorial expansion into Syria, despite several
attempts by Netanyahu to persuade Putin of the
existential danger that Israel faces with Iran’s
presence in Syria. A smart and pragmatic Putin is
able to let Israel know that any request to impose
conditions on Russian or its allies in Syria will be
firmly refused. But at the same time, Moscow and Tel
Aviv will continue to pursue good relations with
each other. Russian political figures are far to
smart to play double games with their long-standing
allies in Syria or to underestimate the capacity
that Israel has to disrupt the region and plunge it
into chaos. Furthermore, Assad has invited Russia
into Syria as well as Iran and Hezbollah. Even if
Putin were willing to help Netanyahu, which is
doubtful, international law prohibits this. If
anything is clear, it is that Moscow respects
international law as few nations do. All other
foreign nations operating in Syria, or flying over
Syrian skies, have no right to be there in the first
place, let alone to impose decisions over a
sovereign territory.
If Tel Aviv’s goal was to expand the
illegal border in the Golan Heights and proceed with
regime change, the situation has ended up totally
different six years later. Iran has expanded its
influence in Syria thanks to aid provided to
Damascus in combating terrorism. Hezbollah has
increased its battle experience and arsenal, as well
as expanded its network of contacts and sympathizers
throughout the Middle East. Hezbollah and Iran are
seen as Middle Eastern peacemakers, playing positive
roles in fighting the plague of jihadist terrorism
as well as against Israel and Saudi Arabia, states
that have tried in every way to assist terrorist
organizations with weapons and money. Washington,
Riyadh and Tel Aviv six years later find themselves
in a totally different environment, with hostile
neighbours, less collaborative friends, and in
general, a Middle East increasingly orbiting around
the Iranian and Russian spheres of influence.
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Another indicator of American
decline in military terms can be clearly seen on
the Korean peninsula. The DPRK has obtained a
full nuclear capability through a development
program that has paid scant attention to
American, South Korean and Japanese threats. The
imperative for Pyongyang was to create a nuclear
deterrent capable of dissuading the desire of
many US policymakers enact regime change in
North Korea. The strategic
importance of
a regime change in the DPRK follows the strategy
of containment and encirclement of the People's
Republic of China, a failed doctrine well known
as the Asian pivot.
Beside
its nuclear deterrent, the US is unable
to attack the DPRK because
of the conventional deterrent that Pyongyang has
patiently put in place. Trump and his generals
continue the rhetoric of fire and flames, dragging
Seoul and Tokyo into a dangerous game of chicken
between two nuclear powers. Not surprisingly,
Trump’s words worry everyone in the region,
especially the Republic of South Korea, which would
pay the heaviest price were war ever to break out.
In light of this assessment, it is worth pointing
out that the military
option is simply unthinkable,
with Seoul and perhaps even Tokyo ready to break
with its American ally in case of disastrous
unilateral action against Pyongyang.
Kim Jong-un, as well as Assad and
other world leaders facing pressure from Washington,
have fully understood and taken advantage of
America’s declining military power. Trump and his close
circle of generals are
full of empty threats, unable to change the course
of events in different regions around the world,
from the Middle East to the Korean peninsula.
Whether it is through direct action or through
proxies, little changes and the results remain the
same, showing a continuous failure of goals and
intents.
The underlying rule guiding US policy
makers is that if a country cannot be controlled,
such as with a Saudi-style regime serving only
American interests through something like the
petrodollar, than that country is useless and ought
to be destroyed in order to stop other peer
competitors from expanding their ties with that
country. The Libyan example is still fresh in
everyone's minds. Luckily for the world, Russia has
stepped in militarily, and on more than one occasion
has, together with her allies, sabotaged or deterred
the US military from taking reckless actions
(Ukraine, Syria and DPRK).
In this
sense, Hillary Clinton's defeat, more than Trump's
victory,
seems to have instilled some sense into this
declining empire, if one ignores the persisting
strong rhetoric. One can only shudder on imagining a
Clinton presidency in the current environment, with
her predictably careening at full speed towards a
conflict with Russia in Ukraine and Syria or a
nuclear standoff with the DPRK in Asia.
Trump and his generals are slowly
adapting to a new reality where it is not only
impossible to control countries, but where it is
increasingly difficult to destroy them. The old
doctrine of wreaking chaos on the world, with a view
to emerging once the dust settles down as the
world's hegemonic power, now seems like a distant
memory. Just looking at the Middle East, even Syria,
in spite of the unprecedented destruction, is on the
road to reconstruction and pacification.
Russian military power and Chinese
economic might have thus played an invaluable role
in restricting the US war machine. The DPRK even
took a further step by attaining a formidable
nuclear and conventional deterrent, effectively
blocking the United States from influencing domestic
events by bringing about destruction and chaos.
While this reality is difficult for
Washington to take, it must come to accept it.
After almost seventy years of imperialistic chaos
and destruction wrought all over the globe,
America’s friends and enemies are starting to react
to this situation. Washington is left with a
president full of sound and fury, but a credible
militarily posture is now but a thing of the past.
The
financial mechanisms that have allowed for this
indiscriminate military spending are based on an
intrinsic bond between dollar, oil, and the role of
American money as the world reserve currency. The
transition of the world order from a unipolar
reality to a multipolar one
is deeply tied to the economic and diplomatic
strategies of Russia and China. The next article
will explore the role of gold, investment, diplomacy
and the petroyuan, which are all decisive factors
that have accelerated the transformation and
division of power on a global scale.
This article was first published by
Strategic Culture Foundation
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