The Dark Saudi-Israeli Plot to Tip the Scales in Syria
The Saudis and the Turks are scaling up their support for Syrian jihadists
while the Israelis contemplate a new war with Hezbollah.
By Conn HallinanJune
09, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "FPIF"
- A quiet meeting this past March in Saudi
Arabia, and a recent anonymous leak from the Israeli military, set the stage
for what may be a new and wider war in the Middle East.
Gathering in the Saudi Arabian
capital of Riyadh were Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, newly crowned
Saudi King Salman, and the organizer of the get-together, the emir of Qatar.
The meeting was an opportunity for Turkey and Saudi Arabia to bury a hatchet
over Ankara’s support — which Riyadh’s opposes — to the Muslim Brotherhood,
and to agree to cooperate in overthrowing the Syrian government of Bashar
al-Assad.
Taking Aim at Assad
The pact prioritized the defeat of the Damascus regime
over the threat posed by the Islamic State and al-Qaeda, and aims to
checkmate Iranian influence in the region. However, the Turks and the
Saudis are not quite on the same page when it comes to Iran: Turkey sees
future business opportunities when the sanctions against Tehran end, while
Riyadh sees Iran as nothing but a major regional rival.
The Turkish-Saudi axis means that Turkish weapons, bomb
making
supplies, and intelligence — accompanied by lots of Saudi money — are
openly flowing to extremist groups like the al-Qaeda associated Nusra Front
and Ahrar al-Sham, both now united in the so-called “Army of Conquest.”
The new alliance has created a certain amount of
friction with the United States, which would also like to overthrow
Assad but for the time being is focused on attacking the Islamic State and
on inking a nuclear agreement with Iran.
This could change, however, because the Obama
administration is divided on how deeply it wants to get entangled in Syria.
If Washington decides to supply
anti-aircraft weapons to the Army of Conquest, it will mean the United
States has thrown in its lot with Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Qatar — and that
the “war on terror” is taking a backseat to regime change in Syria.
Not that the Americans are overly concerned about aiding
and abetting Islamic extremists. While the U.S. is bombing the Islamic State
in Iraq and Syria, the Obama administration is also
training Syrians to overthrow Assad, which objectively puts them in the
extremist camp vis-à-vis the Damascus regime. Washington is also aiding the
Saudis’ war on the Houthis in Yemen. Yet the Houthis are the most effective
Yemeni opponents of the Islamic State and the group called Al-Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula, against which the United States is waging a drone war.
The Turkish-Saudi alliance seems to have already made a
difference in the Syrian civil war. After some initial successes last year
against divided opponents, the Syrian government has suffered some
sharp defeats in the past few months and appears to be
regrouping to defend its base of support in the coastal regions and the
cities of Homs, Hama, and Damascus. While the Syrian government has lost
over half of the country to the insurgents, it still controls up to 60
percent of the population.
Turkey has long been a major conduit for weapons,
supplies, and fighters for the anti-Assad forces, and Saudi Arabia and most
of its allies in the Gulf Coordination Council, representing the monarchies
of the Middle East, have funneled money to the insurgents. But Saudi Arabia
has always viewed the Muslim Brotherhood — which has a significant presence
in Syria and in countries throughout the region — as a threat to its own
monarchy.
The fact that Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development
Party is an offshoot of the Brotherhood has caused friction with the Saudis.
For instance, while Turkey denounced the military coup against the elected
Muslim Brotherhood government in Egypt, Saudi Arabia essentially bankrolled
the takeover and continues to bail Cairo out of economic trouble.
But all that was water under the bridge when it came to
getting rid of Assad. The Turks and the Saudis have established a joint
command center in the newly conquered Syrian province of Idlib and have
begun pulling the kaleidoscope of Assad opponents into a cohesive force.
A War on Hezbollah?
Three years of civil war has
whittled the Syrian Army from 250,000 in 2011 to around 125,000 today,
but Damascus is bolstered by Lebanon’s Hezbollah fighters. The Lebanese
Shiite organization that fought Israel to a draw in 2006 is among the Assad
regime’s most competent forces.
Which is where the Israeli leak comes in.
The timing of
the story — published on May 12 in The New York Times — was
certainly odd, as was the prominence given a story based entirely on unnamed
“senior Israeli officials.” If the source was obscured, the message was
clear: “We will hit Hezbollah hard, while making every effort to limit
civilian casualties as much as we can,” the official said. But “we do not
intend to stand by helplessly in the face of rocket attacks.”
The essence of the article was that Hezbollah is using
civilians as shields in southern Lebanon, and the Israelis intended to blast
the group regardless of whether civilians are present or not.
This is hardly breaking news. The Israeli military made
exactly the same claim in its 2008-09 “Cast Lead” attack on Gaza and again
in last year’s “Protective Edge” assault on the same embattled strip. It is
currently under investigation by the United Nations for possible war crimes
involving the targeting of civilians.
Nor is it the first time Israel has said the same thing
about Hezbollah in Lebanon. In his
Salon article entitled “The ‘hiding among civilians’ myth,”
Beirut-based writer and photographer Mitch Prothero found that “This claim
[of hiding among civilians] is almost always false.” Indeed, says Prothero,
Hezbollah fighters avoid mingling with civilians because they know “they
will sooner or later be betrayed by collaborators — as so many Palestinian
militants have been.”
But why is the Israeli military talking about a war with
Lebanon? The border is quiet. There have been a few incidents, but nothing
major. Hezbollah has made it clear that it has no intention of starting a
war, though it warns Tel Aviv that it’s quite capable of fighting one. The
most likely answer is that the Israelis are coordinating their actions with
Turkey and Saudi Arabia.
Tel Aviv has essentially formed a de facto alliance with
Riyadh to block a nuclear agreement between Iran and the P5+1 — the United
States, Russia, China, Britain, France, and Germany. Israel is also
supporting Saudi Arabia’s attack on Yemen and has an informal agreement with
Riyadh and Ankara to back the anti-Assad forces in Syria.
Israel is taking wounded Nusra Front fighters across the
southern Syrian border for medical treatment. It’s also bombed Syrian forces
in the Golan Heights. In one incident, it killed several Hezbollah members
and an
Iranian general advising the Syrian government.
The Realm of Uncertainty
The Saudis have pushed the argument that Syria, Iraq, and
Yemen are really about Iranian expansionism and the age-old clash between
Sunni and Shiite Muslims. Hezbollah is indeed a Shiite organization, and the
majority of Iraqis are also members of the sect. Assad’s regime is closely
associated with the Alawites, an offshoot of Shiism, and the Houthis in
Yemen follow a variety of the sect as well.
However, the wars in the Middle East are about secular
power, not divine authority — although sectarian division is a useful
recruiting device. As for “Iranian aggression,” it was the Sunni-dominated
regime of Saddam Hussein, bankrolled by Saudi Arabia and supported by the
United States, that started the modern round of Sunni-Shiite bloodletting
when Iraq invaded Iran in 1981.
If the Israeli Army attacks southern Lebanon, Hezbollah
will be forced to bring some of its troops home from Syria, thus weakening
the Syrian Army at a time when it’s already hard pressed by newly united
rebel forces. In short, it would be a two-front war that would tie down
Hezbollah, smash up southern Lebanon, and lead to the possible collapse of
the Assad regime.
As Karl von Clausewitz once noted, however, war is the
realm of uncertainty. All that one can really determine is who fires the
first shot.
That the Israelis can pulverize scores of villages in
southern Lebanon and kill lots of Shiites, there is no question. They’ve
done it before. But a ground invasion may be very expensive, and the idea
that they could “defeat” Hezbollah is a pipe dream. Shiites make up 40
percent of Lebanon’s sectarian mélange and dominate the country’s south.
Hezbollah has support among other communities as well, in part because it
successfully resisted the 1982-2000 Israeli occupation and bloodied Tel Aviv
in the 2006 invasion.
An Israeli attack on Hezbollah, however, would almost
certainly re-ignite Lebanon’s civil war, while bolstering the power of
al-Qaeda and the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq. The Turks might think that
al-Qaeda is no threat to them, but recent history should give them pause.
Creating something like the mujahedeen in
Afghanistan and the anti-Gaddafi forces in Libya is not terribly difficult.
Controlling them is altogether another matter.
“It Always Seems to Blow Back”
“Every power in the Middle East has tried to harness the
power of the Islamists to their own end,” says
Joshua Landis, director of Middle Eastern Studies at Oklahoma
University. But “it always seems to blow back.”
The Afghan mujahedeen created the Taliban and
al-Qaeda, the U.S. invasion of Iraq spawned the Islamic State, and Libya has
collapsed into a safe haven for radical Islamist groups of all stripes.
Erdogan may think the Justice and Development Party’s Islamic credentials
will shield Turkey from a Syrian ricochet, but many of these groups consider
Erdogan an apostate for playing democratic politics in secular institutions.
Indeed, up to 5,000 Turkish young people have
volunteered to fight in Syria and Iraq. Eventually they will take the
skills and ideology they learned on the battlefield back to Turkey, and
Erdogan may come to regret his fixation with overthrowing Assad.
While it hard to imagine a Middle East more chaotic than
it is today, if the Army of Conquest succeeds in overthrowing the Assad
government, and Israel attacks Lebanon, “chaos” will be an understatement.
Foreign Policy In Focus columnist Conn Hallinan can be
read at
www.dispatchesfromtheedgeblog.wordpress.com and
www.middleempireseries.wordpress.com