There are
plenty more indicators and warnings showing that an
escalation is possible: the Geneva negotiations have
been abruptly terminated, the Saudis are
threatening to invade Syria and there are signs
that the Syrian army is slowly but surely preparing
an operation to liberate Aleppo from the Takfiris,
creating a panic in Ankara and Riyadh (so much for
the stupid notions that the
Russians are not winning or that
the Syrian military does not exist).
I am not a
psychic or a prophet. I cannot tell what Erdogan is
really thinking, or whether the Turks will try to
invade Syria. But what I can do is to try to make
some educated guesses about possible Russian
responses to such an event.
First, two
basic principles:
1)
If Russian forces are attacked they will hit back.
Putin already gave them that authority and this will
happen almost automatically with only local
commanders making the final call. In other words,
such an exchange of fire would not automatically be
tantamount to a full-scale war between Turkey and
Russia.
2)
If Turkey invades Syria, Russia will act in
strict compliance with international law.
That means that she will demand an emergency meeting
of the UNSC and that much will depend upon what the
Council’s reaction will be. If the usual gangs of
puppets “covers” for Turkey (which is by no means
certain, in my opinion, at least not for very long,
maybe a week or so max) then the Russians will then
refer to their obligations to assist Syria under the
1980 “Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation”
between the two countries (Russia being today the
successor state to the USSR the treaty is still in
force) and the 2015 “Agreementbetween the Russian Federationand the Syrian ArabRepublic on thedeploymentof aviationgroupof
the Armed Forceson the
territory ofthe
Syrian Arab Republic“.
In other
words, Russia will retain a degree of flexibility to
interpret the situation in one way or another. That,
in turn, means that much will depend on what the
Turks really try achieve.
If we are
talking about the typical Turkish violation of a
national border to attack the Kurds, like what they
did many times in the past already, and if that
intervention is limited in depth, Russia will
probably chose non-military means to put pressure on
Turkey. Again, while the crazies in Turkey badly
want a war with Russia to internationalize the
conflict and force NATO to intervene, the Russians
have no interest at all in such an escalation. Just
as in the Donbass, the West is trying to bait Russia
into a war and Russia is refusing to take that bait.
The problem is that unlike the Ukronazis, the Turks
have a much more powerful military machine which the
Russian cannot ignore like they have ignored the
Ukronazi military and various death squads. So if
Erdogan’s goal is just to look macho and flex some
muscle, say like what Reagan did in Grenada, then he
can probably get away with it, at least for a short
operation. But if Erdogan is dead set in having a
conflict with Russia, the Russian won’t be able to
just hunker down and wait for him to calm down.
In the
latter case, Russia will have a number of escalatory
options.
The first
obvious options is to help the Syrians and Kurds
with intelligence. This is already taking place now
and will only intensify in the case of a Turkish
invasion.
The second
is to shoot Turkish fixed or rotary-wing aircraft
out of the skies. This is an easy option as the
Syrians already have some pretty good air defense
systems (including some Pantsir-S1, Buk-M1/2E,
Tunguskas 2K22 and a fairly robust early-warning
system) and a few more or less capable aircraft
(possibly including upgraded MiG-29s). The Kremlin
can thus enjoy a degree of what the CIA called
“plausible deniability”.
The third
option for Russia is to help the Syrians with the
artillery system she reportedly deployed in the
country including 52-millimeter MTSA-B guns, BM-27
Uragan and BM-30 Smerch rocket launchers.
All these
options would still fall short of a “full-scale” war
between Russia and Turkey. But if Erdogan is
determined to escalate further then a war will be
inevitable. If Turkey tries to attack Khmeimim
directly, then Russia will strike back, no doubt
about it.
What could
it look like?
The first
thing I would say is that neither country will try
to invade the other one. The notion of Turkey
invading Russia is self-evidently ludicrous, but
while Turkey does fall within the 1000km depth the
Russian military is trained to fight in, I don’t
believe that Russia would ever attempt this. For one
thing, and just as was the case with Georgia, nobody
in Russia really believes that the Turks, as a
nation, want war. If anything, Erdogan is much more
of a “Saakashvili v2″ then a Hitler and he will be
dealt with similarly. Furthermore, while during the
08.08.08 war Russia had to protect the Ossetians
from the quasi-genocidal Georgians, Russia has no
such obligations in Kurdistan.
A much more
likely scenario is a repeat what we have already
seen, but on a much larger scale: if Erdogan really
forces Russia into a war, what will happen will be
cruise and ballistic missile attacks on the
infrastructure supporting the Turkish invasion, the
sinking of any Turkish Navy ship involved in this
effort, and bomb and missile attacks on Turkish
force concentrations, ammo and fuel (POL)
dumps and, especially, airfields. The
goal of the Russian response will not be to “defeat”
Turkey militarily, but to push back the Turks long
enough to force some kind of a ceasefire upon
Erdogan. Even if the Russian military
is capable of completely defeating Turkey in a war,
the Kremlin also realizes that any war
between Turkey and Russia ought to be stopped as
soon as possible and that rather than “defeating
Turkey” the real Russian objective ought be to
defeat Erdogan.
For this
reason, the Russians, far from being trigger happy,
will undertake every imaginable effort to show that
they did not initiate the war, even if that means
letting Turkey enter into Syria, at least as long as
the Turks stay close to their border and do not
attempt to change the course of the war. If all the Turks want is a thin “security
zone” inside Syria, I don’t see the Russians using
military force to deny this to them.
They will protest, vehemently, on a diplomatic
level, and they will help the Syrians and Kurds, but
they will not directly attack the Turkish forces.
What about
the Saudis? Well, what about them? They can’t even
deal with the Houthis in Yemen, why would anyone
think that they could make a difference in Syria?
The Saudi military is a joke, a degenerate
repression force barely capable of engaging in
anti-Shia repression operations. They can make all
the threats they want, but if they try to move into
Syria the Syrians, Russians, Iranians and Hezbollah
will all try to race each other to be the first one
to finally get a hold of these SOBs in teach them a
lesson they shall not forget in a long time.
Frankly, I
simply don’t want to believe that Erdogan and his
advisors are crazy enough to try to trigger a war
with Russia or even to invade Syria. While Erdogan
himself is clearly a maniac, I cannot believe that
his entire staff is also composed of lunatics.
Furthermore, I cannot imagine that the US/NATO/EU
would actually support a Turkish invasion of Syria
or, even less so, an attack on Russia. Russophobia
is great only as long as it does not expose you to a
continental war, at which point your self-interest
and survival prevails over any ideological notions.
At least I hope so.
And maybe I
am naive, but I want to believe that the Turkish
people are not going to just sit back and do nothing
while their leader is dragging their country towards
a war with Russia.
In
conclusion, I want to mention one disturbing thing.
A
Greek elder, a monastic named Paisios, whom the
Greek Orthodox Church has glorified as a saint, was
known for his prophetic visions. One of the most
famous one was his prediction that Turkey and Russia
would have a major war which would result in a
complete break-up of Turkey and the liberation of
Constantinople from the Ottoman yoke (if you are
interested by the details, click
here and
here). Now I quite realize that in our times
most people will immediately dismiss such things as
meaningless nonsense, obscurantism, superstition,
wishful thinking on the part of a “resentful Greek”,
religious gobbledygook etc. But please keep in mind
that between the 15th and the 20th century,
Russia and Turkey have already fought 12 wars
(!). That over 2 wars (2.4 exactly) per century and
that the last one happened a century ago.
So whether
you look at prophecies, past experience or
statistics, things look very, very scary, at least
to me. And, as Ghassan Kadi and Pepe Escobar have
explained, Erdogan is now cornered. That also makes
him very dangerous.
The
AngloZionists are experts at unleashing crazed
ideologues (Wahabis in the Middle-East and Nazis in
the Ukraine) but that they always seem to eventually
somehow lose control over them. I just hope that the
American ‘cover’ of the Turkish regime did not
result in the unleashing of yet another rabid
ideology – Ottoman Imperialism – or, if it has, that
it is not too late for the US to rein in this
lunatic before it is too late.
Erdogan and
his regime are a threat to regional and even world
piece. I don’t really care who removes him, the
Turkish people or the White House, but I sure hope
that his days in power are numbered because as long
as he is in power a catastrophe of major proportions
can happen.
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