By Pepe Escobar
October 18, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
What is
happening in Syria, following yet another
Russia-brokered deal, is a massive geopolitical
game-changer. I’ve tried to
summarize it in
a single paragraph this way:
“It’s a quadruple win.
The U.S. performs a face saving withdrawal, which
Trump can sell as avoiding a conflict with NATO ally
Turkey. Turkey has the guarantee – by the Russians –
that the Syrian Army will be in control of the
Turkish-Syrian border. Russia prevents a war
escalation and keeps the Russia-Iran-Turkey peace
process alive. And Syria will eventually regain
control of the entire northeast.”
Syria may be the
biggest defeat for the CIA since Vietnam.
Yet that hardly begins
to tell the whole story.
Allow me to briefly
sketch in broad historical strokes how we got here
It began with an
intuition I felt last month at the tri-border point
of Lebanon, Syria and Occupied Palestine; followed
by a subsequent series of conversations in Beirut
with first-class Lebanese, Syrian, Iranian, Russian,
French and Italian analysts; all resting on my
travels in Syria since the 1990s; with a mix of
selected bibliography in French available at
Antoine’s in Beirut thrown in.
The Vilayets
Let’s start in the 19thcentury
when Syria consisted of six vilayets — Ottoman
provinces — without counting Mount Lebanon, which
had a special status since 1861 to the benefit of
Maronite Christians and Jerusalem, which was a
sanjak (administrative division) of Istanbul.
The vilayets did
not define the extremely complex Syrian identity:
for instance, Armenians were the majority in the
vilayet of Maras, Kurds in Diyarbakir – both
now part of Turkey in southern Anatolia – and the
vilayets of Aleppo and Damascus were both
Sunni Arab.
Nineteenth century
Ottoman Syria was the epitome of cosmopolitanism.
There were no interior borders or walls. Everything
was inter-dependent.
Then the Europeans,
profiting from World War I, intervened. France got
the Syrian-Lebanese littoral, and later the
vilayets of Maras and Mosul (today in Iraq).
Palestine was separated from Cham (the “Levant”), to
be internationalized. The vilayet of
Damascus was cut in half: France got the north, the
Brits got the south. Separation between Syria and
the mostly Christian Lebanese lands came later.
There was always the
complex question of the Syria-Iraq border. Since
antiquity, the Euphrates acted as a barrier, for
instance between the Cham of the Umayyads and their
fierce competitors on the other side of the river,
the Mesopotamian Abbasids.
James Barr, in his
splendid “A Line in the Sand,” notes, correctly,
that the Sykes-Picot agreement imposed on the Middle
East the European conception of territory: their
“line in the sand” codified a delimited separation
between nation-states. The problem is, there were no
nation-states in region in the early 20thcentury.
The birth of Syria as
we know it was a work in progress, involving the
Europeans, the Hashemite dynasty, nationalist
Syrians invested in building a Greater Syria
including Lebanon, and the Maronites of Mount
Lebanon. An important factor is that few in the
region lamented losing dependence on Hashemite
Medina, and except the Turks, the loss of the
vilayet of Mosul in what became Iraq after
World War I.
In 1925, Sunnis became
the de facto prominent power in Syria, as the French
unified Aleppo and Damascus. During the 1920s France
also established the borders of eastern Syria. And
the
Treaty of Lausanne,
in 1923, forced the Turks to give up all Ottoman
holdings but didn’t keep them out of the game.
The Turks soon started
to encroach on the French mandate, and began
blocking the dream of Kurdish autonomy. France in
the end gave in: the Turkish-Syrian border would
parallel the route of the fabled Bagdadbahn —
the Berlin-Baghdad railway.
In the 1930s France
gave in even more: the sanjak of
Alexandretta (today’s Iskenderun, in Hatay province,
Turkey), was finally annexed by Turkey in 1939 when
only 40 percent of the population was Turkish.
The annexation led to
the exile of tens of thousands of Armenians. It was
a tremendous blow for Syrian nationalists. And it
was a disaster for Aleppo, which lost its corridor
to the Eastern Mediterranean.
To the eastern steppes,
Syria was all about Bedouin tribes. To the north, it
was all about the Turkish-Kurdish clash. And to the
south, the border was a mirage in the desert, only
drawn with the advent of Transjordan. Only the
western front, with Lebanon, was established, and
consolidated after WWII.
This emergent Syria —
out of conflicting Turkish, French, British and
myriad local interests —obviously could not, and did
not, please any community. Still, the heart of the
nation configured what was described as “useful
Syria.” No less than 60 percent of the nation was —
and remains — practically void. Yet, geopolitically,
that translates into “strategic depth” — the heart
of the matter in the current war.
From Hafez to
Bashar
Starting in 1963, the
Baath party, secular and nationalist, took over
Syria, finally consolidating its power in 1970 with
Hafez al-Assad, who instead of just relying on his
Alawite minority, built a humongous,
hyper-centralized state machinery mixed with a
police state. The key actors who refused to play the
game were the Muslim Brotherhood, all the way to
being massacred during the hardcore 1982 Hama
repression.
Secularism and a police
state: that’s how the fragile Syrian mosaic was
preserved. But already in the 1970s major fractures
were emerging: between major cities and a very poor
periphery; between the “useful” west and the Bedouin
east; between Arabs and Kurds. But the urban elites
never repudiated the iron will of
Damascus: cronyism, after all, was quite profitable.
Damascus interfered
heavily with the Lebanese civil war since 1976 at
the invitation of the Arab League as a “peacekeeping
force.” In Hafez al-Assad’s logic, stressing the
Arab identity of Lebanon was essential to recover
Greater Syria. But Syrian control over Lebanon
started to unravel in 2005, after the murder of
former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri, very
close to Saudi Arabia, the Syrian Arab Army (SAA)
eventually left.
Bashar al-Assad had
taken power in 2000. Unlike his father, he bet on
the Alawites to run the state machinery, preventing
the possibility of a coup but completely alienating
himself from the poor, Syrian on the street.
What the West defined
as the Arab Spring, began in Syria in March 2011; it
was a revolt against the Alawites as much as a
revolt against Damascus. Totally instrumentalized by
the foreign interests, the revolt sprang up in
extremely poor, dejected Sunni peripheries: Deraa in
the south, the deserted east, and the suburbs of
Damascus and Aleppo.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
What was not
understood in the West is that this “beggars
banquet” was not against the Syrian nation,
but against a “regime.” Jabhat al-Nusra, in
a P.R. exercise, even broke its official
link with al-Qaeda and changed its
denomination to Fatah al-Cham and then Hayat
Tahrir al-Cham (“Organization for the
Liberation of the Levant”). Only ISIS/Daesh
said they were fighting for the
end
of Sykes-Picot.
By 2014, the
perpetually moving battlefield was more or less
established: Damascus against both Jabhat al-Nusra
and ISIS/Daesh, with a wobbly role for the Kurds in
the northeast, obsessed in preserving the cantons of
Afrin, Kobane and Qamichli.
But the key point is
that each katiba (“combat group”), each
neighborhood, each village, and in fact each
combatant was in-and-out of allegiances non-stop.
That yielded a dizzying nebulae of jihadis,
criminals, mercenaries, some linked to al-Qaeda,
some to Daesh, some trained by the Americans, some
just making a quick buck.
For instance Salafis —
lavishly financed by Saudi Arabia and Kuwait —
especially Jaish al-Islam, even struck alliances
with the PYD Kurds in Syria and the jihadis of Hayat
Tahrir al-Cham (the remixed, 30,000-strong al-Qaeda
in Syria). Meanwhile, the PYD Kurds (an emanation of
the Turkish Kurds’ PKK, which Ankara consider
“terrorists”) profited from this unholy mess — plus
a deliberate ambiguity by Damascus – to try to
create their autonomous Rojava.
That Turkish
Strategic Depth
Turkey was all in.
Turbo-charged by the neo-Ottoman politics of former
Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, the logic was to
reconquer parts of the Ottoman empire, and get rid
of Assad because he had helped PKK Kurdish rebels in
Turkey.
Davutoglu’s
Strategik Derinlik (“Strategic Depth’),
published in 2001, had been a smash hit in Turkey,
reclaiming the glory of eight centuries of an
sprawling empire, compared to puny 911 kilometers of
borders fixed by the French and the Kemalists. Bilad
al Cham, the Ottoman province congregating Lebanon,
historical Palestine, Jordan and Syria, remained a
powerful magnet in both the Syrian and Turkish
unconscious.
No wonder Turkey’s
Recep Erdogan was fired up: in 2012 he even boasted
he was getting ready to pray in the Umayyad mosque
in Damascus, post-regime change, of course. He has
been gunning for a safe zone inside the Syrian
border — actually a Turkish enclave — since 2014. To
get it, he has used a whole bag of nasty players —
from militias close to the Muslim Brotherhood to
hardcore Turkmen gangs.
With the establishment
of the Free Syrian Army (FSA), for the first time
Turkey allowed foreign weaponized groups to operate
on its own territory. A training camp was set up in
2011 in the sanjakof Alexandretta. The
Syrian National Council was also created in Istanbul
– a bunch of non-entities from the diaspora who had
not been in Syria for decades.
Ankara enabled a de
facto Jihad Highway — with people from Central Asia,
Caucasus, Maghreb, Pakistan, Xinjiang, all points
north in Europe being smuggled back and forth at
will. In 2015, Ankara, Riyadh and Doha set up the
dreaded Jaish al-Fath (“Army of Conquest”), which
included Jabhat al-Nusra (al-Qaeda).
At the same time,
Ankara maintained an extremely ambiguous
relationship with ISIS/Daesh, buying its smuggled
oil, treating jihadis in Turkish hospitals, and
paying zero attention to jihad intel collected and
developed on Turkish territory. For at least five
years, the MIT — Turkish intelligence – provided
political and logistic background to the Syrian
opposition while weaponizing a galaxy of Salafis.
After all, Ankara believed that ISIS/Daesh only
existed because of the “evil” deployed by the Assad
regime.
The Russian
Factor
The first major
game-changer was the spectacular Russian entrance in
the summer of 2015. Vladimir Putin had
asked the
U.S. to join in the fight against the Islamic State
as the Soviet Union allied against Hitler, negating
the American idea that this was Russia’s bid to
restore its imperial glory. But the American plan
instead, under Barack Obama, was single-minded:
betting on a rag-tag Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF),
a mix of Kurds and Sunni Arabs, supported by air
power and U.S. Special Forces, north of the
Euphrates, to smash ISIS/Daesh all the way to Raqqa
and Deir ez-Zor.
Raqqa, bombed to rubble
by the Pentagon, may have been taken by the SDF, but
Deir ez-Zor was taken by Damascus’s Syrian Arab
Army. The ultimate American aim was to consistently
keep the north of the Euphrates under U.S. power,
via their proxies, the SDF and the Kurdish PYD/YPG.
That American dream is now over, lamented by
imperial Democrats and Republicans alike.
The CIA will be after
Trump’s scalp till Kingdom Come.
Kurdish Dream
Over
Talk about a cultural
misunderstanding. As much as the Syrian Kurds
believed U.S. protection amounted to an endorsement
of their independence dreams, Americans never seemed
to understand that throughout the “Greater Middle
East” you cannot buy a tribe. At best, you can rent
them. And they use you according to their interests.
I’ve seen it from Afghanistan to Iraq’s Anbar
province.
The Kurdish dream of a
contiguous, autonomous territory from Qamichli to
Manbij is over. Sunni Arabs living in this perimeter
will resist any Kurdish attempt at dominance.
The Syrian PYD was
founded in 2005 by PKK militants. In 2011, Syrians
from the PKK came from Qandil – the PKK base in
northern Iraq – to build the YPG militia for the PYD.
In predominantly Arab zones, Syrian Kurds are in
charge of governing because for them Arabs are seen
as a bunch of barbarians, incapable of building
their “democratic, socialist, ecological and
multi-communitarian” society.
One can imagine how
conservative Sunni Arab tribal leaders hate their
guts. There’s no way these tribal leaders will ever
support the Kurds against the SAA or the Turkish
army; after all these Arab tribal leaders spent a
lot of time in Damascus seeking support from Bashar
al-Assad. And now the Kurds themselves have
accepted that support in the face of the Trukish
incursion, greenlighted by Trump.
East of Deir ez-Zor,
the PYD/YPG already had to say goodbye to the region
that is responsible for 50 percent of Syria’s oil
production. Damascus and the SAA now have the upper
hand. What’s left for the PYD/YPG is to resign
themselves to Damascus’s and Russian protection
against Turkey, and the chance of exercising
sovereignty in exclusively Kurdish territories.
Ignorance of
the West
The West, with typical
Orientalist haughtiness, never understood that
Alawites, Christians, Ismailis and Druze in Syria
would always privilege Damascus for protection
compared to an “opposition” monopolized by hardcore
Islamists, if not jihadis. The West also did not
understand that the government in Damascus, for
survival, could always count on formidable Baath
party networks plus the dreaded mukhabarat —
the intel services.
Rebuilding
Syria
The reconstruction of
Syria may cost as much as $200 billion. Damascus has
already made it very clear that the U.S. and the EU
are not welcome. China will be in the forefront,
along with Russia and Iran; this will be a project
strictly following the Eurasia integration playbook
— with the Chinese aiming to revive Syria’s
strategic positioning in the Ancient Silk Road.
As for Erdogan,
distrusted by virtually everyone, and a tad less
neo-Ottoman than in the recent past, he now seems to
have finally understood that Bashar al-Assad “won’t
go,” and he must live with it. Ankara is bound to
remain imvolved with Tehran and Moscow, in finding a
comprehensive, constitutional solution for the
Syrian tragedy through the former “Astana process”,
later developed in Ankara.
The war may not have
been totally won, of course. But against all odds,
it’s clear a unified, sovereign Syrian nation is
bound to prevail over every perverted strand of
geopolitical molotov cocktails concocted in sinister
NATO/GCC labs. History will eventually tell us that,
as an example to the whole Global South, this will
remain the ultimate game-changer.
Pepe Escobar
is correspondent-at-large at
Asia Times.
His latest book is
2030. Follow him on
Facebook.
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