Can Syria
Survive?
By Robert Fisk
June 13, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Independent"
-
It’s a dangerous equation in the Syrian war that the
further you are from Damascus, the more Bashar
al-Assad’s regime seems doomed. And the more you drive
around the vast area still held by government forces –
and I’ve just completed around 1,100 miles of mountains,
desert and battle fronts – the more you realise that the
war will go on. And on. And that the Syrian army,
outgunned and at times frighteningly outnumbered by its
Islamist enemies, is not about to collapse.
But here are a few grim facts. Isis
and Jabhat al-Nusra are now attacking the Syrian
military in rows of suicide trucks, and along fronts so
wide that the army often doesn’t have the manpower to
withstand them. Rebel logistics are hi-tech and better
than the Syrian army’s, and a lot of their
communications systems are American. The insurgents have
hundreds of anti-armour wire-guided TOW and Milan
anti-tank missiles and can afford to fire three – even
four – rockets at a single Syrian tank, knocking out its
fire-control circuits so that its ammunition explodes
and its soldiers are burnt to death.
At
Palmyra, in Homs province, between 1,800 and 2,000
Isis fighters were confronted by an army which could not
withstand their constant attacks. In the two days before
they retreated, Syrian troops smashed their way briefly
into forward Isis positions, only to discover piles of
“tactical vests” – advanced body armour – thermal
missiles, stacks of Muslim prayer books in Russian
(apparently belonging to Chechen fighters), enough
sidearm ordnance for each rebel to carry 10,000 rounds
of ammunition each, and stacks of Snickers chocolate
bars. Even Isis, it seems, marches on its stomach.
The
Syrian army often finds itself outgunned by the
insurgent groups
American “experts” talk glibly now of
how the Syrian army will make a “planned retreat” to the
mountains of the Alawites, the Shia sect of President
Assad, and try to keep open the road from Damascus to
the Mediterranean coast via Homs.
Syrian “experts” – a lot closer to the
battle than the think-tank boyos in Washington – speak
of a more political strategy. What the regime must do,
they say, is hold on to the major cities in a line from
Aleppo south through Hama and Homs to Damascus (Deraa in
the south may or may not be included in the plan) and
deprive either Nusra or Isis of a potential capital in
Syria. Isis’s present capital, Raqqa, is a fag-end of a
city in the desert and even Palmyra, symbolic though its
loss has been, is no metropolis from which rebels can
claim national sovereignty.
Timeline: The emergence of
Isis
1 of 24
But the loss of
Aleppo would give them a capital worthy of the name,
the largest city in Syria, albeit the second metropolis
after
Damascus. Thus Aleppo is important, not because the
Syrian government must keep it – which it must – but
because its enemies must be deprived of it. The newly
combined “Army of Conquest”, a Nusra-led and Nusra-cloaked
alliance of Islamist satellite groups, is the greatest
threat to date. And execution is as important to the
rebels as the suicide bomb.
Army sources in Damascus say that 250
army families were taken for execution when Palmyra
fell. One of the last government supporters to leave the
city showed me a picture he took on his phone, of a
smiling little girl, the daughter of an officer, who
believed she was safe. “We know her father was
slaughtered,” he said. “We don’t know what happened to
her.” But as one Syrian officer put it to me last week:
“I tell my soldiers that, yes, Isis can kill you – but
that you are just as capable of killing Isis.”
Members
of the Syrian Red Crescent transport the bodies of
reported regime fighters from rebel-held area into
regime-held area
No wonder, then, that Iranian military
personnel can be found – as I came across them this
month – scattered in twos and threes around the
battlefield, learning rather than fighting, no doubt
tapping into the battle tactics used by their fathers in
the titanic eight-year war between Iran and Iraq after
Saddam’s 1980 invasion of the Islamic Republic. They are
smart, well-educated; one of them, beside fields set
alight by shellfire, cheerfully apologised to me in
fluent English for not being able to speak. “Wrong place
– wrong time!” he laughed.
But the Iranians are in Syria at the
right time for Bashar al-Assad, and so are the Afghan
Shia fighters brought in from Kabul, some of whom were
queuing to visit the Umayyad mosque in Damascus last
week, several dressed in military fatigues. With perhaps
50,000 dead, the Syrian army needs men. Conscripted
troops now serve indefinitely. And if that army falters
or ceases to exist, no other force is capable of holding
Syria together. No wonder President Assad uses much of
his speechifying to praise the army and its tens of
thousands of “martyrs”.
It was thus necessary last week to
make a pilgrimage to the Starship Galactica foreign
ministry in Damascus to listen to Dr Faisal Mekdad – he
is a medical doctor as well as deputy foreign minister –
to find out just how confident the regime claims to be.
How does he feel about the Iranians fighting on his
side? And the Lebanese Hezbollah? Or is it true what the
American “experts” say, that there is a “planned
retreat” to the coast, to cling on to Damascus and
Latakia and create a “rump” Syria?
Visiting Dr Mekdad is a bit like going
to the dentist. It can be very painful – but you feel
better afterwards. Or at least for a while. “It is our
right to have anyone fight for us,” he says. “Whoever is
ready to come and help us is welcome... The other party
is a party of terrorists, and now we have every credible
information that the French and the British will go to
the EU and say that the Nusra Front is a ‘moderate’
group – they will try to rehabilitate Nusra, even though
Nusra is a part of al-Qaeda...
“Of course, losing any small village
is a big loss for us. Every square inch of Syria is
important to us. But Aleppo is the second major city of
Syria and losing it would be a big loss. But we have
never – ever – in our [cabinet] meetings doubted that we
will hold it. All our strategic planning now is to keep
the way open to Aleppo, to allow our forces to defend
it.”
Syrian
army soldiers and Hezbollah members flashing the
'Victory' sign in their positions overlooking the Flita
height in the Qalamoun mountains
That the Syrian cabinet discusses
Aleppo is proof of the city’s political as well as
military importance – “all our strategic planning” is a
dramatic phrase to hear in the mouth of any Syrian
minister. I travelled the dangerous main supply route
north of Aleppo months ago, with tracer rounds criss-crossing
the road from both sides. The highway south can be
attacked at any time. Nusra uses mountain bikes to
spring out of the desert on lonely checkpoints at night.
“A few months ago,” Dr Mekdad
complained, “before direct intervention to help Daesh
[Isis] and Nusra by Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, we
were about to achieve a historic advance. The occupation
of Idlib [city] would never have taken place without
direct Turkish intervention – thousands of Turks,
Chechens, huge forces were brought in, which attacked
Idlib and Jisr al-Shugour. When we were preparing to
liberate Idlib, we lost Jisr al-Shugour. We have to
prepare for losses and gains. This is war.”
Ministers have a habit of saying
things like this when the chips are down. Bashar
al-Assad has said pretty much the same thing. But what
Dr Mekdad was to say next was of a different dimension.
“It is clear now that without re-energising
the army, reorganising it and enabling its central
command to implement all its decisions, then we will not
be able to achieve what we are planning to achieve.” Dr
Mekdad spoke of new weapons for the army – it sorely
needs them to replace the clapped-out Warsaw Pact tanks
that litter Syria, however much the minister’s promise
was born of hope rather than signed contracts. But
Aleppo returned to our conversation like a persistent
mosquito.
“I agree when you speak about our
cities from the strategic and humanitarian point of
view. Yes, Idlib matters, Deir ez-Zour [where Syria’s
surrounded army still holds out] matters, Raqqa matters
– but they are not as important as Aleppo is. Once you
have a strong central presence [in the country], you
have every chance that the smaller towns could be
brought back naturally, both militarily and
politically... but in no way can we sacrifice a
millimetre of our territory by ‘prioritising’ – it would
absolutely be a big loss if Aleppo was not in our hands.
We have confidence we can defend it.”
What was important for the government,
Dr Mekdad said, “is whether Syria will survive or not.
President Assad has not put himself as the No 1. He will
work for Syria – and the most important thing is for
Syria to survive.”
This is familiar territory, of course.
The country must be reformed through a “political
process” – we all know who that involves – or “Syria
will be there no more – I am confident that things will
not come to the second option. If it comes, many
countries in the region will disappear.”
Which is what Bashar al-Assad has been
saying since the start of the war. But when I go through
my notes of my long journeys across Syria these past
days, I come across individual stories. Of the army
checkpoints facing armoured vehicles driven by suicide
bombers, of the Syrian missiles which can only hit them
at 300 yards – too close for the defending soldiers to
survive the explosion. Of suicide “packs” of Isis men
who fight to the last minute and only then blow
themselves up. Of the Syrian MI-35 helicopters which run
out of rockets and ammunition before they can destroy
all their targets. “Once Isis are close to you, it’s
over,” one former Syrian officer remarked bleakly to me.
“You must kill them before they get to you. Out-gunned,
you don’t have a chance.”
The further you travel from Syria, the
more imaginative become the stories to convince you of
its destruction. The Americans have done a deal with the
Russians to ship Assad off to exile in Moscow. The
Iranians will “close down” the Syrian war if the nuclear
talks are successful. The Iranians don’t have confidence
in the Syrian army. The most extraordinary theory
suggests that the “moderate” rebels will destroy both
Isis and Assad.
There is no point in romanticising any
side in this war. The government militias and the
barrel-bombers and the torture chambers eliminate the
use of pink eye-shades. But if you have to draw up a
list of priorities for the Syrian regime to survive the
coming weeks and months, they are easy to identify. It
does not involve the Baath Party. Nor, for that matter,
President Assad. The answer is simple: the Syrian army.
New guns. New tanks. Aleppo.