The
notion that Geneva may be able to
impersonate Damascus in a suit-and-tie
pantomime is ludicrous to begin with. Even
the UN envoy, the sartorially superb
Staffan de Mistura, admits the Sisyphean
task ahead - even if all relevant players
were at the table.
Then
we have Syrian “opposition figure” George
Sabra announcing that no delegation from the
Riyadh-based High Negotiations Committee
will be at the table in Geneva. As if
Syrians needed an “opposition”
instrumentalized by Saudi Arabia.
So
in the interest of providing context, here’s
an extremely concise recap of recent,
crucial facts on the Syrian ground which the
“new capital” Geneva may ignore at its own
peril.
Let’s start with last summer, when Iranian
Quds Force superstar commander Qasem
Soleimani laid down the law, in person, in
Moscow, establishing without a doubt the
grim situation across the Syrian theater of
war.
Essentially Soleimani told the Kremlin and
Russian intelligence that Aleppo might be
about to fall; that Jabhat al-Nusra was at
the doors of southern Damascus; that Idlib
had fallen; and Latakia – home to Russia’s
naval base at Tartus – would be next.
One
can imagine the effect of this jolt of
realpolitik on President Putin’s mind. That
clinched his resolution to stop the fall of
Syria, and prevent it from becoming a Libyan
remix.
The
Russian Air Force campaign turned out to be
the ultimate game-changer. It is in the
process of securing the Damascus-Homs-Latakia-Hama-Aleppo
network – the urban, developed Western Syria
that holds 70 percent of the country’s
population. ISIS/ISIL/Daesh and/or Jabhat
al-Nusra, a.k.a. al-Qaeda in Syria, have
zero chances of taking over this territory.
The rest is mostly desert.
Jaysh al-Islam – a motley crew weaponized by
Saudi Arabia – still holds a few positions
north of Damascus. That’s containable. The
country bumpkins in Daraa province, south of
Damascus, could only make a push towards the
capital in an impossible 1991 Desert Storm
context.
“Moderate rebels” – that Beltway concoction
– did try to hold Homs and Al-Qusayr,
cutting off the resupply of Damascus. They
were repelled. As for the gaggle of
“moderate rebels” who took all of Idlib
province, they are being pounded mercilessly
for four months now by the Russian Air
Force. Aleppo’s southern front is also being
secured.
Don’t bomb
“our” rebels
It’s easy to pinpoint who’s livid with all
the Russian action: Saudi Arabia, Turkey and
– last but not least – the ‘Empire of
Chaos’, all at the table in Geneva.
Jabhat al-Nusra - remote-controlled by Ayman
al-Zawahiri - is intimately linked to a
gaggle of Salafi-jihadists in the
Saudi-sponsored Army of Conquest, as well as
tactically allied with myriad outfits
nominally grouped in the nearly extinct Free
Syrian Army (FSA).
The
CIA, using the Saudis for plausible
deniability, fully weaponized “vetted” FSA
outfits, which received, among other things,
TOW anti-tank missiles. Guess who
“intercepted” virtually all the weapons:
Jabhat al-Nusra.
The
follow-up was nothing short of hilarious:
Washington, Ankara and Riyadh furiously
denouncing Moscow for bombing their
“moderate rebels” and not ISIS/ISIL/Daesh.
Slowly but surely, the Syrian Arab Army (SAA),
parallel to the Russian offensive, retook
the initiative. The “4+1” – Russia, Syria,
Iran (Special Forces, many of them from
Afghanistan), Iraq, plus Hezbollah – started
coordinating their efforts. Latakia Province
– which hosts not only Tartus but the
Khmeimim Russian airbase – is now under
total control by Damascus.
And
that brings us to Ankara’s nightmares.
Russian Air Force smashed most of Ankara’s
Turkmen proxies - heavily infiltrated by
Turkish fascists - in northwest Syria. That
was the key reason for Sultan Erdogan’s
desperate move of shooting down the Su-24.
It’s by now clear that the winners, as it
stands, on the ground, are the “4+1”, and
the losers are Saudi Arabia and Turkey. So
no wonder the Saudis want at least some of
their proxies at the negotiating table in
Geneva, while Turkey tries to change the
subject by barring the Syrian Kurds: these
are accused of being terrorists, much more
than ISIS/ISIL/Daesh.
Exit
Geneva, enter Jarabulus
As
if this was not messy enough, US ‘Think
Tankland’ is now spinning there is an
“understanding” between Washington and
Ankara for what will be, for all practical
purposes, a Turkish invasion of northern
Syria, under the pretext of Ankara smashing
ISIS/ISIL/Daesh in northern Aleppo.
This is utter nonsense. Ankara’s game is
three-pronged; prop up their heavily
battered Turkmen proxies; keep very much
alive the corridor to Aleppo – a corridor
that crucially includes the Jihadi Highway
between Turkey and Syria; and most of all
prevent by all means necessary that YPG
Kurds bridge the gap from Afrin to Kobani
and unite all three Syrian Kurd cantons near
the Turkish border.
None of this has anything to do with
fighting ISISL/ISIL/Daesh. And the nuttiest
part is that Washington is actually
assisting the Syrian Kurds with air support.
Either the Pentagon supports the Syrian
Kurds or Erdogan’s invasion of northern
Syria; schizophrenia does not apply here.
A
desperate Erdogan may be foolish enough to
confront the Russian Air Force during his
purported “invasion”. Putin is on the record
saying response to any provocation will be
immediate, and lethal. To top it off, the
Russians and Americans are actually
coordinating airspace action in northern
Syria.
This is bound to be the next big thing,
fully eclipsing the Geneva pantomime. The
YPG and its allies are planning a major
attack to finally seize the 100-kilometer
stretch of the Syria-Turkey border still
controlled by ISIS/ISIL/Daesh – thus
reuniting their three cantons.
Erdogan was blunt; if the YPG pushes west of
the Euphrates, it’s war. Well, looks like
war then. The YPG is getting ready to attack
the crucial towns of Jarabulus and Manbij.
Russia most certainly will aid the YPG to
reconquer Jarabulus. And that will directly
pit – once again - Turkey against Russia on
the ground.
Geneva? That’s for tourists; the capital of
the Syrian horror show is now Jarabulus.