Erdogan talked tough, but in the end had to
surrender gains to Moscow and Damascus.
By Scott
Ritter
March 10, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
When the history
of the Syrian conflict is written, the fighting
that took place between the Syrian Army and its
allies on the one side, and the Turkish military
and Turkish-backed Syrian rebels on the other,
from early February through early March 2020 in
and around the Syrian town of Saraqib, will go
down as one of the decisive encounters of that
war.
Representing
more than a clash of arms between the Syrian and
Turkish militaries, the Battle for Saraqib was a
test of political will between Turkish President
Recep Erdogan and his Russian counterpart,
Vladimir Putin. History will show Turkey lost on
both accounts.
The Battle for
Saraqib had its roots in fighting that began
back in December 2019, in the form of
an offensive
carried out by the Syrian Army,
supported by the Russian Air Force, against
pro-Turkish opposition forces in and around
Idlib province. The Syrian-Russian offensive
represented the collapse of the so-called
Sochi Agreement
of September 17, 2018, which established what
were known as “de-escalation zones” separating
the Syrian Army from anti-government rebel
forces in Idlib. As part of the Sochi Agreement,
Turkey set up a dozen
“observation
posts”—in
reality, fortified compounds housing several
hundred troops and their equipment—throughout
the Idlib de-escalation zone.
In exchange
for legitimizing the existence of fortified
Turkish observation posts, the Sochi Agreement
mandated specific actions on Turkey’s part,
including overseeing the establishment of a
“demilitarized zone” within the de-escalation
zone where tanks, artillery and multiple rocket
launchers were to be excluded, and from which
all “radical terrorist groups” would be removed
by October 15, 2018. Moreover, Turkey was
responsible for restoring transit traffic on two
strategic highways linking the city of Aleppo
with Latakia (the M4 highway) and Damascus (the
M5 highway.)
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While
Turkey established its fortified observation
posts,
it failed to
live up to any of its commitments
under the Sochi Agreement—no demilitarized
zones were created, no heavy equipment
evacuated, and no “radical terrorist groups”
removed from the de-escalation zone. This
last point was of particular note, since the
most prominent of these “radical terrorist
groups”—Hayat
Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS—was
also the largest and most effective of the
anti-Assad groups operating in Idlib
province.
The
objective of the
December 2019 Syrian military offensive
was to achieve through force of arms what Turkey
had failed to do—restore transit traffic
capability for both the M4 and M5 highways and,
in doing so, evict HTS and other anti-Assad
rebel groups from the de-escalation zones. By
early February 2020 the Syrian Army had, through
its advances,
surrounded a
number of Turkish observation posts,
putting Turkey in the politically difficult
situation of sitting and watching while the
anti-Assad forces it had helped create, train
and equip were being defeated on the field of
battle.
Turkey sought
to blunt the Syrian advance on Feb. 3, by
reinforcing its observation post located near
the strategic town of Saraqib, which overlooked
the juncture of the M4 and M5 highways. Whomever
controlled Saraqib likewise controlled both
highways.
When a large
Turkish military convoy
heading toward Saraqib was brought under Syrian
artillery fire, killing five Turkish soldiers
and three Turkish civilian contractors, Turkey
responded by shelling Syrian Army positions,
killing scores of Syrian soldiers. This was the
opening round of what would become the Battle
for Saraqib and represented the first
large-scale combat between the Syrian and
Turkish militaries since the Syrian crisis began
in 2011.
The Syrian
attack on the Turkish Army in Idlib was a red
line for President Erdogan, who in
a statement made
before Turkish parliamentarians
on Feb. 5, warned that “if the Syrian regime
will not retreat from Turkish observation posts
in Idlib in February, Turkey itself will be
obliged to make this happen.” Erdogan backed up
his rhetoric by deploying tens of thousands of
Turkish troops, backed up by armor and
artillery, to its border with Syria, while
continuing to dispatch reinforcements to its
beleaguered observation posts inside Idlib.
On Feb. 6,
the Syrian Army
captured Saraqib.
Four days later, on Feb. 10, Turkish-backed
rebels, backed by Turkish artillery, launched a
counterattack against Syrian Army positions
around Saraqib, which was beaten back by heavy
Syrian artillery fire. In the process, the
Turkish observation near the village of Taftanaz
was hit by Syrian shells,
killing five
Turkish soldiers and wounding five others.
The Turks responded by striking Syrian Army
positions throughout Idlib province with
sustained artillery and rocket fire.
Speaking to
Turkish parliamentarians after the attack on
Taftanaz,
Erdogan declared
that “we will strike regime forces everywhere
from now on regardless of the Sochi deal if any
tiny bit of harm comes to our soldiers at
observation posts or elsewhere,” adding that“We
are determined to push back (regime forces)
behind the borders of the Sochi deal by the end
of February.”
The capture of
Saraqib and the vital M4-M5 highway juncture
allowed the Syrian Army to seize control of the
entire M5 highway for the first time since 2012.
The Syrian Army then proceeded to push west,
toward the city of Idlib, closing to within
eight miles of the provincial capital. In order
to blunt the Syrian advances,
Turkey deployed
hundreds of Special Forces
who integrated into the ranks of the anti-regime
units,
helping
coordinate their attacks
with Turkish artillery and rocket supporting
fires. Starting Feb. 16, the rebel fighters,
supported by Turkish Special Forces, launched a
relentless attack against Syrian Army positions
in and around the village of Nayrab, located
mid-way between Idlib and Saraqib.
Nayrab eventually
fell
on the night of Feb. 24.
The cost,
however, was high—hundreds
of rebel fighters were killed, along with two
Turkish soldiers.
The Turks and
their rebel allies then turned their sights on
Saraqib itself, pushing out of Nayrab and
securing a foothold in Saraqib’s eastern suburbs
and cutting the M5 highway in several locations.
The Syrian Army had shifted most of its
offensive power to the southwest, where they
were advancing toward the M4 highway. The
Syrians called in fighters from Hezbollah and
pro-Iranian militias to help stabilize the
Saraqib front. The Turkish military, in an
effort to break up Russian and Syrian aerial
attacks,
began employing
man-portable air defense systems
(MANPADS), firing more than 15. While none of
these hit their targets, they did cause the
Russians and Syrian to abort their attacks and
leave the area.
In retaliation
for the Turkish employment of MANPADS,
Russia and Syrian
aircraft struck a Turkish mechanized battalion
operating in southern Idlib on Feb. 27, killing
more than 33 Turkish soldiers, and wounding some
60 more. This attack sent shock waves through
Turkey, with Erdogan threatening to punish all
parties responsible, including the Russians (who
denied their involvement in the attack, despite
evidence to the contrary.)
On March 1
President Erdogan ordered Turkish forces to
carry out a general offensive in Idlib, named
Operation Spring
Shield,
intended to drive Syria and its allies back to
the positions they held at the time of the Sochi
Agreement in September 2018. The combined
Turkish-rebel offensive immediately stalled in
the face of steadfast Syrian resistance, backed
by Russian air strikes. The Syrian Army
recaptured Saraqib and took control of the
entire M5 highway, reversing the earlier Turkish
gains.
By March 4,
the
situation facing
the Turkish-backed rebel fighters was so dire
that they gave up all pretense of independent
operations, and instead intermixed themselves
within the Turkish outposts to avoid being
targeted by the Russian Air Force. Erdogan,
recognizing that the game was up,
flew to Moscow on
March 5 for an emergency summit
with Russian President Vladimir Putin, where
they negotiated the terms of a new ceasefire
agreement.
The Moscow
Summit was a bitter pill for Erdogan to swallow.
Although
formulated as an
“additional protocol” to the existing September
2018 Sochi Agreement,
the deal struck between Erdogan and Putin in
Moscow was very much a document of surrender for
the Turks. His fiery rhetoric and threats to
push the Syrian Army and its allies out of Idlib
the contrary, Erdogan was compelled to accept a
new “de-escalation” zone defined by the
frontlines as they stood on March 6.
Moreover, the
Turks were now compelled to share enforcement
and monitoring of a 12-kilometer “demilitarized
zone” straddling the M4 highway with Russian
military patrols. Lastly, adding insult to
injury, the Turks were denied a no-fly zone over
Idlib, ceding control of the air to the Russian
Air Force, while still being required to disarm
and remove all persons belonging to terrorist
organizations, which in this case meant HTS, the
most numerous and effective of the anti-Assad
rebel groups. In short, Russia secured for Syria
all its hard-won victories, while ceding nothing
to Turkey save a face-saving ceasefire.
For Syria and
Russia, the Battle of Saraqib was about
restoring Syrian sovereignty over the totality
of Syrian territory; for Turkey, it was about
securing lasting Turkish control and influence
over the northwestern Syrian province of Idlib.
Turkey lost on both accounts. While Turkey has
been allowed to maintain its chain of fortified
“observation posts”, the vast majority of these
are surrounded by the Syrian Army, and of no
military value.
Moreover, the
dismal performance of the Turkish Army and its
anti-Assad allies against the Syrian Army and
its allies, including the Russian Air Force, in
the Idlib campaign as a whole, and the Battle of
Saraqib in particular, have put to rest any
thoughts Erdogan might have retained about
imposing Turkey’s will on either Damascus or
Moscow; Turkey now knows that there will not be
a Turkish military solution to the problem of
Idlib.
Scott Ritter is a former Marine Corps
intelligence officer who served in the
former Soviet Union implementing arms
control treaties, in the Persian Gulf during
Operation Desert Storm, and in Iraq
overseeing the disarmament of WMD. He is the
author of several books, most
recentlyDeal
of the Century: How Iran Blocked the West’s
Road to War (2018). -
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