US Position
on Syria Tilts in Favour of Russian Intervention
By Gareth
Porter
February 09, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "
MEE"
- The major developments on the Syrian
battlefield in recent months have brought a
corresponding shift in the Obama administration’s
Syrian policy.
Since the
Russian military intervention in Syria upended the
military balance created by the victories of the
al-Qaeda affiliate al-Nusra Front and its allies
last year, the Obama administration has quietly
retreated from its former position that “Assad must
go”.
These
political and military changes have obvious
implications for the UN-sponsored Geneva peace
negotiations. The Assad regime and its supporters
are now well positioned to exploit the talks
politically, while the armed opposition is likely to
boycott them for the foreseeable future.
Supporters
of the armed opposition are already expressing anger
over what they regard as an Obama administration
“betrayal” of the fight against Assad. But the
Obama policy shift on Syria must be understood, like
most of the administration’s Middle East policy
decisions, as a response to external events that is
mediated by domestic political considerations.
The initial
Obama administration’s public stance on the Russian
air campaign in Syria last October and early
November suggested that the United States was merely
waiting for Russia’s intervention to fail.
For weeks
the political response to the Russian intervention
revolved around the theme that the Russians were
seeking to bolster their client regime in Syria and
not to defeat ISIS, but that it would fail. The
administration appeared bent on insisting that
Russia give into the demand of the US and its allies
for the departure of President Bashar al-Assad from
power.
But the
ISIS terror attacks in Paris focused the political
attention of Europeans and Americans alike on the
threat from ISIS terrorism and the need for
cooperation with Russia to combat it. That
strengthened the position of those within the Obama
administration – especially the Joint Chiefs of
Staff and the CIA – who had never been enamored of
the US policy of regime change in the first place.
In the aftermath of the Paris attacks, they pressed
for a rethinking of the US insistence on Assad’s
departure, as
suggested publicly at the time by former acting
CIA director Michael Morell.
The
political impact of the Paris attacks has now been
reinforced by the significant gains already made by
the Syrian army and its allies with Russian air
support in Latakia, Idlib, and Hama provinces.
The bombing
and ground offensives were focused on cutting the
main lines of supply between the areas held by ISIS
and the Nusra-led coalition and the Turkish border,
which if successful would be a very serious blow to
the armed opposition groups.
Dramatic
successes came in late January, when Syrian
government troops recaptured the town of Salma in
Latakia province, held by al-Nusra Front since 2012,
and the strategic al-Shaykh Maskin, lost to
anti-Assad rebels in late 2014, thus regaining
control of Daraa-Damascus highway. Even more
significant, the Syrian army has cut off the lines
of supply from Turkey to Aleppo, which is occupied
by al-Nusra and allied forces.
By the time
Secretary of State John Kerry met with the head of
the Syrian opposition delegation, Riyad Hijab, on 23
January, it was clear to the Obama administration
that the military position of the Assad regime was
now much stronger, and that of the armed opposition
was significantly weaker. In fact, the possibility
of a decisive defeat exists for the first time in
light of the Russian-Syrian strategy of cutting off
the supply lines of the al-Nusra front.
What Kerry
told Hijab,
as conveyed to the website Middle East Briefing,
reflected a new tack by the administration in light
of that political-military reality. He made it clear
that there would be no preconditions for the talks,
and no formal commitment that they would achieve the
departure of Assad at any point in the future. He
was unclear whether the desired outcome of the talks
was to be a “transitional government” or a “unity
government” – the latter term implying that Assad
was still in control.
The armed
opposition and its supporters have been shocked by
the shift in Obama’s policy. But they shouldn’t be.
The administration’s previous Syria policy had been
based in large part on what appeared to be a
favorable political opportunity in Syria. As
described by Washington Post correspondent Liz Sly’s
official US source, the policy was to put
“sufficient pressure on Assad’s forces to persuade
him to compromise but not so much that his
government would precipitously collapse….”
The Obama
administration had seen such an opportunity because
a covert operation launched in 2013 to equip
“moderate” armed groups with antitank missiles from
Saudi stocks had strengthened the Nusra Front and
its military allies. American Syria specialist
Joshua Landis
estimated last October that 60 to 80 percent of
the missiles had ended up in the hands of the Nusra
Front in Syria.
Those
weapons were the decisive factor in the Nusra-led
Army of Conquest takeover of Idlib province in April
2015 and the seizure of territory on the al-Ghab
plain in Hama province, which is the main natural
barrier between the Sunni-populated area inland and
the Alawite stronghold of Latakia province on the
sea. That breakthrough by al-Nusra and its allies,
which threatened the stability of the Assad regime,
was serious enough to provoke the Russian
intervention in September.
But given
the new military balance, the Obama administration
now recognizes that its former strategy is now
irrelevant. It has been supplanted with a new
strategy that is equally opportunistic. The idea now
is to take advantage of shared US-Russian strategic
interests regarding ISIS – and downgrade the
objective of forcing a change in the Syrian regime.
A signal
fact of the war against ISIS in Syria that has been
ignored in big media coverage is that the United
States and Russia have been supporting the same
military forces in Syria against ISIS. The Kurdish
Democratic Union Party (PYD) the leading party in
Syrian Kurdistan, controls a large swath of land
across northern Syria bordering Turkey. Its military
force, the Peoples Defense Units (YPG), has been the
most significant ground force fighting against ISIS.
But the YPG
has also fought against al-Nusra Front and its
allies, and has made no secret of its support for
Russian air strikes against those forces. Moreover,
the PYD has actively cooperated with the Syrian army
and Hezbollah in northern Aleppo province. It is
both the primary Syrian ally of the United States
against ISIS but also a strategic key to the
Russian-Syrian strategy for weakening al-Nusra and
its allies.
US NATO
ally Turkey has adamantly opposed the US assistance
to the PYD, insisting it is a terrorist
organization. The United States has never agreed
with that, however, and is determined to exploit the
strategic position of PYD in the fight against ISIS.
But that also implies a degree of US-Russian
cooperation against the main armed opposition to the
Assad regime as well.
The Obama
administration is no longer counting on a military
balance favorable to the armed opposition to Assad
to provide a reason for concessions by the regime.
Whether military success against the armed
opposition will be decisive enough to translate into
a resolution of the conflict remains to be seen. In
the meantime, the Syria peace negotiations are
likely to be at a standstill.
Gareth Porter, an investigative historian and
journalist specializing in U.S. national security
policy, received the UK-based Gellhorn Prize for
journalism for 2011 for articles on the U.S. war in
Afghanistan. His new book is
Manufactured Crisis: the Untold Story of the Iran
Nuclear Scare. He can
be contacted at
porter.gareth50@gmail.com. |