By The Saker
March 07, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
Following 6 hours of grueling negotiations,
including direct negotiations between Putin and
Erdogan, the parties have finally
agreed to the following:
- A ceasefire will begin at midnight.
- Russia and Turkey will jointly patrol the M4
highway (M5 now belongs to Damascus). A 6km
buffer zone will have to be created and enforced
on each side of M4 by the March 15th (see
map above)
- Both parties have reaffirmed their
commitment to Syria’s sovereignty and
territorial integrity.
- Both parties have reaffirmed their
commitment to a create the conditions for a
return of the refugees.
- Both parties have reaffirmed that this
conflict as no military solution.
Furthermore, there was a lot
of things which were left unsaid, but understood by
all:
- The recent military gains of the Syrian
military will not be disputed and otherwise
challenged. The new line of contact has now
become official.
- Russia and Syria will continue to fight all
the organizations which the UNSC has declared
“terrorist” (al-Nusra, al-Qaeda, and all their
franchises irrespective of any “rebranding”).
- Moscow remains as committed to the
protection of the legitimate Syrian government
as ever.
From the above we can also
deduce the following:
- Erdogan’s Blitzkrieg has failed. Initially,
the Turkish drones inflicted major damage on the
Syrian forces, but the latter adapted extremely
quickly which resulted in what the Russians
jokingly referred to as “dronopad” which can
roughly be translated as “dronerain”.
- The Turks were clearly shocked by the
Russian decision to bomb a Turkish battalion.
What apparently happened is this: two Syrian
Su-22 (old Soviet aircraft) bombed the convoy to
force it to stop, then a pair of Russian Su-34
(the most modern Russian all-weather supersonic
medium-range fighter-bomber/strike aircraft)
dropped heavy ordinance on the convoy and
surrounding buildings killing scores of Turkish
special forces). Both sides decided to “blame”
the Syrians, but they don’t fly Su-34, and
everybody knows that.
- Erdogan understood that he either had to
double down or declare victory and leave. He
wisely chose the latter, at least as a temporary
measure.
- Neither NATO nor the EU showed any signs of
wanting to join Turkey’s war on Syria (because
that is what we are really dealing with here),
and neither did the US. Since I cannot call that
decision “wise” (there is no wisdom of any kind
left in western regimes), I will call it simply
“prudent” as Russia was not about to allow
Turkey to invade Syria.
- Iran, Hezbollah, and Libya all declared
their willingness to fight the Turks for as long
as needed and anywhere where needed.
In spite of these
developments, it is pretty clear that internal
Turkish politics will continue to force Erdogan to
engage in what is politely called “neo-Ottoman”
policies aka phantom pains for a lost empire. The
obvious solution for Russia is to further arm the
Syrians, especially with modernized versions of the
Pantsir SAMs which have proven very effective
against drones, MLRS rockets and even mortars.
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The main Syrian
problem is a lack of numbers. Until more
forces are equipped, trained, deployed and
engaged, the Russians need to provide a much
stronger air defense capabilities to Syria.
The Syrians have done miracles with old,
frankly outdated, Soviet equipment (which,
considering its age and lack of proper
maintenance, has performed superbly), but
now they need much better Russian gear to
defend not only against Turkey, but also
against the Axis of Kindness (US+Israel+KSA).
Furthermore, it is my opinion
that the Russian task force in Khmeimim and Tartus
is too big and not well balanced. Khmeimin needs
many more Su-25SM3 and a few more Su-35S/Su-30SM to
protect them. The naval base at Tartus lacks ASW
capabilities, as does much of the Russian naval task
force in the eastern Mediterranean. And while the
Russian Navy has a number of ships with “Kalibr”
cruise missiles onboard, their numbers are, again,
inadequate, which means that the Russian Aerospace
Forces need to deploy as many Kalibr-capable
aircraft in southern Russia as possible. Both Tartus
and Khmeimim are pretty close to the Idlib province
(that is also were the “good terrorist” tried to
strike Russian forces from which, thanks to the
successful Syrian offensive, they now cannot do
anymore!). This suggests to me that Russia ought to
declare a larger exclusive air control zone over
both of this locations, and beef up the numbers of
missiles and launchers the Russian air defenses will
have to enforce it.
Finally, I think that Erdogan
has outlived his utility for Russia (and for Turkey,
for that matter!). He clearly is a loose cannon
which, according to some rumors, even the Turkish
public opinion is getting fed up with. Russia should
not neglect that public opinion. Then there are the
Libyans, “Field Marshal” Khalifa Belqasim Haftar,
whose forces seems to have been extremely successful
against the Turkish forces in Libya. The Russians
are, quietly, supporting Haftar who, while not
exactly an ideal ally for Russia, can prove useful.
What the Russians need to do next is to explain two
things to Erdogan and his ministers:
- If you attack again in Syria, you will be
defeated, possibly worse than the first time
around
- If you mess with our geostrategic interests,
we will mess with yours
The only party which the
Russians should never arm are the Kurds, who are
even more unreliable than Erdogan and who are
basically an Israeli asset to destabilize Turkey,
Iraq, Syria and Iran. Russia should, however, talk
to the Kurds (all factions) and convince them to
accept a large cultural autonomy inside Syria, Iraq
and Iran. Turkey could be added to this list, but
only once a trustworthy government comes to power in
Ankara. Under no circumstances should Russia arm the
Kurds.
Right now, the best Russian
ally in the region is Syria. This is the country
which Russia needs to make safe by creating a truly
modern air defense network. The Russians have
already done a lot towards this goal, including
integrating their combat management and EW systems,
but that is not enough. While Russian aid and Syrian
skills have forced the Israelis to conduct mostly
symbolic and ineffective air strikes, often with
missiles shot from outside the Syrian airspace, and
while many (most) Israeli missiles were destroyed by
the Syrian air defenses, it is pretty clear that
both the Turks and the Israelis feel that if they
launch missiles from long distance they are
relatively safe. That perception needs to be
changed, not only to force the Turks and the
Israelis to shoot from even further and accept even
more losses, but also to show the US, NATO and
Europe that the Syrian air defenses are capable of
making anything short of a massive attack pointless
(and a massive attack costly).
We should also note that the
Turkish propaganda machine has been very effective.
Yes, a lot of what they said was self-evidently
“feelgood” nonsense (thousands of dead Syrians,
hundred of tanks, etc.) , but their footage of a
Turkish drone striking a Pantsir in Libya did, at
least initially, impress those who don’t understand
air defense warfare (destroying a single isolated
first-generation Pantsir is not that hard,
especially from right above it, but destroying a
Pantsir position in which launchers protect each
other is quite different. And if that Pantsir
position is protected “below” (AA+MANPADS) and
“above” (medium to long range SAMs), then this
becomes extremely difficult).
This war is not over and it
won’t be until Erdogan is removed from power.
Frankly, Russia needs a stable and trustworthy
partner on her southern border, and that won’t
happen until the Turks ditch Erdogan. The problem
here is that God only knows who might succeed him,
should the Gulenists seize power, that will not be
good for Russia either.
And here we come back to the
murder of General Suleimani. Frankly, the Iranians
are spot on: the two things which made the
Middle-East into the bloody mess it has been for
decades are 1) Israel and 2) the US. The end goal
for the former is a one-state solution, whether
accepted or imposed. The intermediate goal ought to
be to get the US out of Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria
and, possibly, Turkey. Erdogan is crazy and
desperate enough (not to mention vengeful) to at
least bring this intermediate goal one step closer
by alienating the US and NATO. So the Russian game
plan ought to be obvious: first, use military means
to “contain Erdogan inside Turkey” and, next, engage
in long term efforts to prepare for a post-Erdogan
Turkey. Then let the SOB destroy himself.
I don’t believe that peace is
possible between a secular Syria and a Takfiri-backing
Turkey. And I sure don’t believe that the Takfiris
can be remolded into any kind of “democratic
opposition”. Thus the real end-goal for Russia and
Syria will always be military victory, not “peace”
(assuming that concept of “peace with the Takfiris”
makes any sense at all, which it doesn’t). The
Russians know that, even if they won’t admit it.
For the time being, what we
see is the first phase of the Turkey-Syria war
ending and for the next couple of weeks we shall see
a transition into some other phase which will
probably be one in which, surprise surprise, the
Turks fail to remove all the Takfiri nutcases from
Idlib which will then give Syria and Russia a legal
reason to take direct action again. In theory, at
least, Erdogan could decide to pour the Turkish
armed forces across the border, but the closer they
will get to Khmeimim and/or Tartus, the more
dangerous the stakes for Turkey and for Erdogan
personally.
The key to success for the
Axis of Resistance is to make Syria too tough to
crack. I hope that Russia, Iran, Syria and Iraq will
continue to work together, hopefully with Chinese
aid, to create such a Syria.
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