May 10, 2023:
Information Clearing House
-- "The
Cradle" --
West Asia is a region that is currently experiencing a great deal
of geopolitical activity. Recent diplomatic efforts, initiated by Russia
and overseen by China, secured a long-elusive Iranian and Saudi Arabian
rapprochement, while Syria’s
return to the Arab League
has been welcomed with great fanfare. The diplomatic flurry signals a
shift away from the Imperial “Divide and Rule” tactics that have been
used for decades to create national, tribal, and sectarian rifts
throughout this strategic region.
The proxy war in Syria, backed by
the Empire and its terror outfits – including the occupation of
resource-rich territories and mass theft of Syrian oil – continues to
rage on despite Damascus having gained the upper hand. That advantage,
weakened in recent years by a barrage of western economic killer
sanctions, is now growing exponentially: the Syrian state was further
bolstered by Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi’s
recent official visit –
pledging to expand bilateral ties – on the eve of Syria’s return to the
Arab League.
“Assad must go” – a
meme
straight out of collective western hubris – in the end, did not go.
Imperial threats notwithstanding, those Arab states that had sought to
isolate the Syrian president came back to praise him all over again, led
by Moscow and Tehran.
Syria is extensively discussed
in informed circles in Moscow. There’s a sort of consensus that Russia,
now concentrated in the “all or nothing” proxy war against NATO, will
not currently be able to impose a Syrian peace solution, but that
doesn’t preclude the Saudis, Iranians, and Turks fronting a Russian-led
deal.
Had it not been for the
aggressive behavior of Straussian neo-cons in the Washington Beltway, a
comprehensive multi-territorial peace could have been achieved,
including everything from Syria’s sovereignty, to a demilitarized zone
in the Russian western borderlands, stability in the Caucasus, and a
degree of respect for international law.
However, such a deal is
unlikely to materialize, and instead, the situation in West Asia is
likely to worsen. This is due in part to the fact that the North
Atlantic has already shifted its focus to the South China Sea.
An impossible ‘peace’
The collective west appears to
lack a decisive leader, with the Hegemon currently being “led” by a
senile president who is remote-controlled by a pack of polished-faced
warmongers. The situation has devolved to the point where the much-hyped
“Ukrainian counter-offensive” may actually be the prelude to a NATO
humiliation that will make Afghanistan look like Disneyland in the Hindu
Kush.
Arguably there may be some
similarities between Russia-NATO now and Turkiye-Russia before March
2020: both sides are betting on some crucial military breakthrough on
the battlefield before sitting at the negotiating table. The US is
desperate for it: even the 20th century ‘Oracle’ Henry Kissinger is now
saying that
with China involved,
there will be negotiations before the end of 2023.
Despite the urgency of the
situation, Moscow does not appear to be in a hurry. Its key military
strategy, as seen in Bakhmut and Artemyovsk, is to use a combination of
the snail technique and the mincing machine. The ultimate goal is to
demilitarize NATO as a whole rather than just Ukraine, and so far, it
appears to be working brilliantly.
Russia is in it for the long
haul, anticipating that one day the collective west will have an
“Eureka!” moment and realize it is time to abandon the race.
Now let’s assume, by some
divine intervention, that negotiations would start in a few months, with
China involved. Moscow – and Beijing – both know they simply cannot
trust anything the Hegemon says or signs.
Moreover, the crucial US
tactical victory has already been conclusive: Russia sanctioned,
demonized and separated from Europe, and the EU cemented as a
de-industrialized, inconsequential lowly vassal.
Presupposing there is a
negotiated peace, it will arguably resemble a Syria 2.0, with a massive
“Idlib” equivalent right on Russia’s door, which is something entirely
unacceptable to Moscow.
In practice, we will have
Banderista terror outfits – the Slav version of ISIS – free to roam
across the Russian Federation in car bombing and kamikaze drone sprees.
The Hegemon will be able to switch the proxy war on and off at will,
just as it continues to do in Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan with its
terror cells.
The Security Council in Moscow
knows very well, based on the Minsk farce acknowledged even by former
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, that this will be Minsk on steroids:
the Kiev regime, or rather the post-Zelensky regime will continue to be
weaponized to death with brand new NATO gimmicks.
But then the other option –
where there is nothing to negotiate – is equally ominous: a Forever War.
Indivisibility of
Security
The real deal to be negotiated
is not “pawn in their game” Ukraine: it’s the indivisibility of
security. Exactly what Moscow was sensibly trying to convince Washington
via those
letters sent in December 2021.
In practice, what Moscow is
currently doing is realpolitik: pounding NATO on the battlefield until
they are weakened enough to accept a Strategic Military Objective (SMO).
The SMO would necessarily include a demilitarized zone between NATO and
Russia, a neutral Ukraine, and no nuclear weapons stationed in Poland,
the Baltics, or Finland.
However, given that the Hegemon
is a declining superpower and “non-agreement capable,” it is uncertain
whether any of this would hold, especially considering the Hegemon’s
obsession with infinite NATO expansion. “Non-agreement capable”
(недоговороспособны), incidentally, is a term Russian diplomats coined
to describe their American counterparts’ inability to stick to any deal
they sign – from Minsk to the Iran nuclear agreement.
This incandescent mix gets even
more complex with the introduction of the Turkish vector.
Turkish Foreign Minister
Cavusoglu has already made it plain that if President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan retains power in the 14 May
presidential
elections, Ankara will
neither impose sanctions on Russia nor violate the Montreux Convention,
which forbids the passage of warships to and from the Black Sea in
wartime.
Risks of Ankara’s
geopolitical shift
Erdogan’s chief security and
foreign policy adviser, Ibrahim Kalyn, has aptly pointed out that there
is no war between Russia and Ukraine; rather, it’s a war between Russia
and the west with Ukraine serving as the proxy.
This is why the collective west
is heavily invested in an “Erdogan must go” campaign, which is lavishly
funded to propel an oddly-matched coalition into the presidential seat.
In case the Turkish opposition wins – and their payment to the Hegemon
begins – sanctions and violations of Montreux may be on the cards again.
Yet Washington may be in for a
surprise. Turkish opposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu has implied there
will be a more or less
continued balanced posturing of
Ankara’s foreign policy tilt, while some observers believe that even if
Erdogan is ousted,
there will be limits to
Turkiye’s pivot back to the west.
Erdogan, profiting from the
state apparatus and his immense network of patronage, is going
no-holds-barred to secure re-election. Only then might he shift from
hedging his bets continuously toward making a move to become a real
player in Eurasian integration.
Ankara under Erdogan, as it
stands, is not pro-Russian; essentially, it tries to profit from both
sides. The Turks sell Bayraktar drones to Kiev, have clinched military
deals, and at the same time, under the “Turkic States” mantle, invest in
separatist tendencies in Crimea and in Kherson.
At the same time, Erdogan badly
needs Russian military and energy cooperation. There are no illusions in
Moscow about “the Sultan,” or about where Turkiye is leading. If
Ankara’s geopolitical turn is hostile, it’s the Turks that will end up
losing prime seats in the Eurasian high-speed train – from
BRICS+ to the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO)
and all spaces in between.