In the
crucial Pipelineistan arena, the Turkish Stream
project has been suspended (but not canceled).
Eurasia integration – the key 21st century
project for both China and Russia – is severely
hampered.
Meanwhile,
what passes for the Obama administration’s
“strategy” is more slippery than a Japanese eel.
US Think Tank land interprets it as an “effort”
to “de-conflict the battlefield” even as the
main NATO planks acting in Syria (US, UK,
France, Germany, plus Turkey) gear up for an
alleged “large offensive” against Islamic State
(ISIS). “Alleged” because the whole op involves
prime shadow play. And “de-conflict” could
rather mean “re-conflict.”
It’s no
wonder President Putin interpreted Sultan
Erdogan’s downing of the Russian Su-24 as
supremely illogical. Reasons, of course, include
the Russian Air Force’s pounding of the Turkmen
– Ankara’s fifth column in northern Syria. And
the relentless Russian assault on the stolen
Syrian oil racket, which involves collusion
between some pretty prominent Turkish figures
and ISIS.
It gets
even more illogical when we look at the crucial
energy sphere. Ankara depends at a rate of 27
percent on oil, and 35 percent on natural gas.
Last year, Turkey bought 55 percent of its
natural gas from Russia, and 18 percent from
Iran.
Because
of its manifold infrastructure problems, Iran
simply won’t be a strong competitor to Gazprom
for supplying natural gas to Turkey – and Europe
– anytime soon. Assuming it will be restarted in
the future, Turkish Stream would be a very good
deal for both Turkey and central and southern
Europe.
Spin me a
coalition
The
current shadow play – which includes the
deployment of US Special Forces to northern
Syria – opens the possibility that Turks and
Americans are about to launch a major offensive
to expel Islamic State from the crucial
Jarabulus crossroads. Erdogan’s pretext is well
known: to block by any means the attempt by YPG
Syrian Kurds to unite their three cantons in
northern Syria. In this corridor, Erdogan wants
to install a dodgy, hazy bunch of Turkmen – his
proxies – mixed with unspecified Sunni “moderate
rebels,” keeping all lines of communication (and
smuggling) with Turkey open.
Syrian
Kurds, on the other hand, want to get there
first. With American air support. And with
Russian air support. This is one of the few
things Team Obama and the Kremlin do agree on in
Syria – to the absolute despair of the Sultan.
The inside word from Ankara is that Turkey would
be ready for a ground push on Jarabulus but only
under American cover. Quite absurd, considering
Washington and Ankara hardly are looking for the
same endgame.
Meanwhile, discussing Syria in Moscow, US
Secretary of State John Kerry was forced to
agree, on the record, with Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov that “the Syrian people,”
via elections, must themselves decide the future
of Assad. So even the Obama administration now
seems to convey the impression “Assad must go”
may be six feet under.
Not so
fast. Shadow play firmly remains part of the
equation. After all, the famous Top Ten
Terrorist List now being haggled upon by all
players must be approved by… Turkey and Saudi
Arabia, who continue to weaponize all manner of
desert snakes, as long as they hiss “Assad must
go.”
Into
this snake pit crawls the joke of the holiday
season; the 34-nation, Riyadh-led anti-terrorism
coalition “from all over the Islamic world.” The
perpetrator of the war on Yemen, Deputy Crown
Prince and Defense Minister Mohammed bin Salman,
even pledged this hazy new racket to “stop the
flow of funds” to terrorists. As if the House of
Saud would decapitate their own, indigenous
wacko imams and pious, wealthy “financiers.”
This
“coalition” inbuilt in the already existing,
US-led, monstrously ineffectual Coalition of the
Dodgy Opportunists (CDO) is undiluted spin.
Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE)
have done absolutely nothing against ISIS since
summer. They’d rather merrily bomb Yemen. Their
“armies” are mercenary-infested. No mercenaries,
no Saudi army. Pakistan and Egypt do have
armies, but they are consumed by dire local
problems and would not relocate troops to the
“Syraq” quagmire even if bribed by a mountain of
petrodollars.
With
this spin, concocted by their savvy Edelman
lobbyists, Riyadh believes it can change the
subject from how it’s trying hard to break up
Syria.
A
breakdown of Syria’s population, including the
masses of refugees, would yield something like
14 percent Alawite Shi’ites, 5 percent
Christians, 3 percent Druze, 1 percent twelver
Shi’ites, 10 percent Kurds – the absolute
majority leftist - and around 40 percent Sunnis,
mostly secular and many of them leftists, not to
mention comfortably linked to the Damascus and
Aleppo business elite, that is, accommodated
with the government for generations.
Riyadh’s – and Ankara’s - belief that a small
bunch of Salafi-jihadist, from whatever
persuasion, would be able to disrupt such a
complex balance, not to mention rule a whole
nation, does defy any logical explanation.
The break for
the border
So
everything now hinges on the break for the
border. Syrian Kurds have been loudly announcing
something along the lines that “Real Kurds go to
Jarabulus.” Jarabulus is, in a nutshell,
Turkey’s last stand in Syria (the Russian Air
Force has all but exterminated the Turkmen fight
column in northern Latakia).
Imagine
a Kurdish unification corridor – running from
Afrin to the rest of Rojava. This means Turkey
cut off from Syria; crucially, the end of the
Jihadi Highway; the end of Turkish secret
services offering lavish logistical support for
Daesh, from Big Macs to holidays in Turkey; the
end of the Syrian stolen oil Daesh Highway. Not
to mention the YPG – allied with the PKK –
controlling a semi-autonomous province with the
status of a proto-state.
Make no
mistake: the Sultan will go no holds barred to
prevent it. ISIS was never an “existential
threat” to Ankara. On the contrary; it was
always a very useful indirect “ally.” Ankara
will continue to plug the myth that the road to
Daesh’s defeat goes through Assad regime change.
Russia
exposed the bluff. Yet the lame duck Obama
administration is still uncertain; should we use
Erdogan even as he recklessly tries to pit NATO
directly against Russia? Or should we dump him?
The answer lies in who, and how, wins the break
for the border.
Pepe Escobar’s new book it out:
You
can get it on Amazon here:
www.amazon.com/2030-Pepe-Escobar/dp/1608880354/
- A nomadic political analyst realizes he will
soon become a grandfather. So he decides to
write a digital letter to his grandson-to-be; an
intangible legacy, encompassing some lessons he
learned from life. The letter can only be
“opened” in 2030, when the grandson will be a
teenager in a world in turmoil. The author
shares his experience and wisdom in a deeply
cultured and tremendously moving ode to the
beauty and richness of past and future worlds. A
wonderful gift for any seeker. The book is short
and an absolutely wonderful read and I highly
recommend it to you all! - The Saker