Week Twelve
of the Russian Intervention in Syria:
By The Saker
December
29, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
In last
week’s review of the Russian military intervention
in Syria I wrote that Kerry had lost every single
negotiation he ever had with the Russians and that
he had a record of agreeing to A only to come back
to the US and then declare non-A. This time again,
the Americans did not change their modus operandi,
except that it was Obama himself who declared, yet
again, that Assad must go, resulting in some
commentators speaking of a “White
House Schizophrenia”.
Others, however, noted that this could be simply
a case of face saving denials. Personally, I think
that both of these explanations are correct.
There is no
doubt that Obama is an exceptionally weak, and even
clueless, President. The man has proven to have no
vision, no understanding of international relations,
his culture is minimal while his arrogance appears
to be infinite – he is all about form over
substance. This is the ideal mix to win a
Presidential election in the USA, but once in the
White House this is also a recipe for disaster. When
such a non-entity is placed at the top of the
Executive branch of government, the different part
of government do not get a clear message of what the
policy is and, as a result, they each begin doing
their own thing without worrying too much about what
the POTUS has to say. The recent article by Sy Hersh
“Military
to Military” is a good illustration of that
phenomenon. Being weak and lacking vision (or even
understanding) Obama’s main concern is conceal his
limitations and he therefore falls back on the
oldest of political tricks: he tells his audience
whatever it wants to hear. Exactly the sames goes
for Kerry too. Both of these man will say one thing
to the Russian rulers or during an interview with a
Russian journalist, and the exact opposite to an
American reporter. That kind of “schizophrenia” is
perfectly normal, especially in the USA.
To use the
expression coined by Chris Hedges, the USA is an “Empire
of Illusion”. The US society has an apparently
infinite tolerance for the fake as long as the fake
looks vaguely similar to the real thing. This is
true on all levels, ranging from the food Americans
eat, to the way they entertain themselves, to the
politicians they elect and to the putative
invincibility of the armed forces their taxes pay
for. It is all one gigantic lie, but who cares as
long as it is a fun, emotionally reassuring lie. In
the Syrian context, this ability to ignore reality
results in the support of terrorism in the name
democracy, the conduct of an “anti-Daesh” campaign
which results in Daesh dramatically increase it’s
territory, the accusation that Assad used chemical
weapons and now the “Assad can stay but he must go”
policy. This ability to completely decouple rhetoric
and reality can sometimes have a positive
side-effect. For example, even if this week saw a
Zag! From the US Administration in terms of
rhetoric, this does not necessarily mean that the
USA will continue to attempt to overthrow Assad. The
opposite is also true, however. The fact that the US
has said that Assad can stay in no way implies that
the US will stop trying to overthrow him.
The bottom
line is this: yes, there was definitely a Zag! this
week, but only time will tell how much of a zag we
are dealing with.
In this
context I highly recommend the recent article by
Alexander Mercouris entitled “Russian
diplomacy achieved a trio of Security Council
Resolutions over the last month which give Russia a
decisive advantage” in which he explains how
Russia has achieved victory after victory at the UN
Security Council. What is important here is that
with each of these Russian-sponsored Resolution the
number of available options for the USA are
gradually being reduced. Another factor also
reducing the US options are all the tactical
successes of the Syrian military whose progress is
slow, but steady. The intensive pace of Russian
airstrikes is having an effect on Daesh and the
Syrians are slowly advancing on all fronts. There
has been no Daesh collapse yet, but if the Syrians
continue to advance as they have done so far their
offensive will eventually reach a critical point
when the quantity of their small (tactical)
victories will end up triggering a qualitative
(operational) reaction and Daesh will begin to
collapse. Of course, the Daesh fighters will have
the option of finding safety in Turkey, Jordan, Iraq
and elsewhere, but the psychological impact of a
Daesh defeat in Syria will be huge.
So far
there are no signs of a possible Turkish invasion of
northern Syria, no signs that anybody is still
thinking about imposing a no-fly zone, and besides
the murder of Samir Kuntar in an Israeli airstrike
(which I discussed
here), it appears that the S-400s are achieving
the desired deterrent effect.
In other
words, while US leaders have their heads stuck deep
up into their own delusions, the events on the
ground are slowly but steadily reinforcing the
Russian position and vindicating Russia’s stance.
In the
meantime, the Syrian Christians who follow the
Gregorian Calendar are celebrating Christmas in the
streets of Latakia in a clear sign that a
multi-confessional Syria still exists and has a
future.
The Saker
This colums
was originally written for the Unz Review:
http://www.unz.com/tsaker/week-twelve-of-the-russian-intervention-in-syria-zag/
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