Week Six of the Russian Intervention in Syria: A
First Major Success For The Syrian Armed Forces
By The Saker
November 17, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Unz
Review" - Finally.
After weeks of gruelling combat the Syrian armed forces have
liberated the Kuweyres air base in northern Syria. This is a huge
victory for the Syrians because during the 2,5 year long siege of
the airbase it had become an important symbol of the Syrian
determination to resist the Takfiris in general and, especially,
Daesh which had deployed its best fighters to maintain the siege of
the base and prevents its liberation. In fact, the Takfiris did
resist with everything they had up to the last moment. For those of
you interested in video and photos of the combats and liberation of
Kuweyres I would recommend the site of Colonel Cassad and
specifically these posts: (in Russian)
http://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/2472071.html
http://colonelcassad.livejournal.com/2470426.html
Many of these images and videos are for a “mature
audience” only, but they do convey the sense of victory for the
Syrian side and I highly recommend watching them. Up to this moment
all the successes of the Syrian armed forces were limited in
importance whereas the liberation of Kuweyres not only represents a
huge moral victory for the Syrians, but it also has an “operational
significance” meaning that it actually changes the shape and dynamic
of the front (click
here for a high resolution map of the area). Put simply: the
Syrian have now seized the initiative from Daesh and they are now on
the offensive. As for Daesh, they now have to allocate their forces
to prevent the Syrians from further exploiting their success in
Kuweyres. Most observers,
including myself, were hoping for, or even expecting, such a
development, but now it has finally happened. This is very, very
good news.
There was, by the way, an interesting if little
noticed side story to this event: according to the Russian military,
the “moderate opposition” gave key intelligence to the Russian to
target the “terrorists” around the airbase. Here is what
RT reported about that:
Syrian government forces received intelligence on
terrorist positions around the besieged Kweires airbase from
opposition sources, which helped them lift the two-year blockade,
the Russian Defense Ministry has revealed. “This airfield had
been surrounded by ISIS [the former name of the Islamic State
terrorist group] for two years,” Major General Igor Konashenkov,
spokesman for the Russian defense ministry, said in a daily
briefing. “Intelligence on the locations of the terrorist fire
positions and support points around Kweires was provided by the
Syrian opposition and cleared by the communication center in Baghdad.”
Lifting the siege on the airbase in Aleppo provinces has been one of
the biggest victories for Damascus since Russia started providing
air support for Syrian government forces. The opposition also
provided data to help target a big weapons depot of the Nusra Front,
the Syrian branch of Al Qaeda, near the village Mheen in the Homs
province, Konashenkov revealed.
For one thing, as far as I know, the so-called
“moderate opposition” is mostly a myth, and to the degree that it
does exist, it is in Turkey and in London. Furthermore, I don’t
remember the so-called FSA playing any major role around Kuweyres.
So what is going on here?
Well, maybe the Russians just made up this
putative intelligence sharing in order to show that they are working
hand-in-glove with the “moderate opposition” or, which is far more
likely, some folks associated with Daesh felt that the tide was
turning and decided to re-brand themselves as “moderates” and gave
the Russians some intel in exchange for money and life. This kind of
sudden “coat turning” is typical of the Takfiris and the Russians
saw plenty of that in Afghanistan. If my guess is correct, then this
further goes to show that Daesh is beginning to seriously hurt under
the combined effects of the Russian and Syrian offensives. Again,
this is very good news indeed.
Hassan Nasrallah, the Secretary General of
Hezbollah, also immediately
declared that the liberation of the Kuweyres airbase “resilience,
strength, determination, and vigor of the soldiers and officers of
the Syrian Arab Army”. He is right.
There is no overstating the heroism of the Syrians
who fought and refused to surrender even though they had no meds and
minimum food and supplies. But then, since they would not surrender,
their only options were to fight to the end or die. And they fought,
alone, for over two years. This is why the first Russian reporter
who got into Kuweyres wrote “У сирийцев теперь есть свой Сталинград”
(the Syrians now have their own Stalingrad).
Having taken Kuweyres, the Syrian army continued
its offensive and, according to
the latest reports, the Syrians have no also liberated the towns
of al-Hader and al-Heis. Following this latest Syrian victory, a
Takfiri commander
blamed it on the Russian Air Force and declared
“The heavy
aerial bombardment of Al Hader and the surrounding area gave us no
choice but to retreat, but these are to-and-fro battles, where we
win ground one day and the next day we lose it“. Maybe.
Still, it is way too early to celebrate. Following
weeks of intense fighting and only tactical victories, the Syrians
have now achieved their first operational breakthrough, but they
will need several more before they can contemplate a strategic
offensive against Daesh. This is something which the USA and, even
more so, Turkey and Qatar are going to try to prevent with
everything they got. Here again, it is important to repeat, that the
very small Russian force in Syria does not have the means to, for
example, prevent Turkey from moving its forces into Syria.
At this point in time, I would judge Turkey and
Qatar as even more dangerous than the USA. Why? Because they both
put way too much prestige and, especially, money into ousting Assad
and building a
pipeline across Syria to link their two countries and they know
that as long as Assad or any other secular regime remains in power
in Damascus they can forget about it. In fact, if the
Russian-Iranian-Syrian-Iraqi-Hezbollah alliance is successful in
flushing out Daesh from Syria, were will all the Takfiri freaks go?
The risk here is not only for Turkey, but even for the Saudis!
In contrast, Obama will soon be gone anyway and
its not like the USA has a real national strategic interest in Syria
(unless you assume that pleasing AIPAC is such a vital goal). Yes,
it would be humiliating for the “indispensable nation” to miserably
fail only to have a “local power” like Russia brilliantly succeed,
but this humiliation can always be blamed on the outgoing
Administration and used to get more votes. As for the US “deep
state”, it knows that it can work with Assad only because it used to
work with him very nicely before it decided to dump him (Assad even
tortured “rendered” suspects on behalf of the CIA!). So keeping
Assad in power might be humiliating but not much more than all the
other humiliation the AngloZionst Empire already had to suffer at
the hands of Putin.
Speaking of Putin, he made an important statement
this week: while initially Russian officials had declared that the
Russian military operations would last approximately 3 months,
Putin has now declared that “the duration of stay of our
military will be determined solely depending on the time this
objective is achieved”. This could indicate a far longer
Russian involvement.
I might be mistaken, in fact, I hope that I am,
but I don’t see how Daesh could be defeated without an increase of
the size of the Russian military force in Syria and, especially, an
increase in the number of Iranians supporting the Syrians on the
ground. Nobody will be happier than me if I am proven wrong, believe
me.
Final event this week: it appears that the
Russians are further digging in and that
they
have now deployed S-400 missile system on their base in Khmeimim.
Depending on how you look at it, this either doubles the air defense
capabilities of the Russian naval task force off the Syrian coast,
or frees the guided missile cruiser Moskva for other tasks.
Curiously,
Russian officials have denied that S-400s are deployed in Syria.
Either way, this is good news as the the deeper the Russian dig in
into their positions, the harder it will be to threaten them. All in
all, a very good week for the resistance to Empire and there is real
possibility that the next couple of weeks will see even bigger
progress.