The Race To Raqqa Is On - To Keep
Its Unity Syria Must Win
By Moon
Of Alabama
February
12, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Moon
Of Alabama"
- The
race to Raqqa is on. Syria and its allies are
competing with the U.S. and its allies to snatch
east Syria from the Islamic State.
Raqqa in
eastern Syria is held by the Islamic State as are
the other cities along the Euphrates towards Iraq.
To defeat the Islamic State in Raqqa, Deir Ezzor and
other eastern Syrian towns and to liberate them is
the aim of all purported enemies of the Islamic
State. But this question has to be seen in a larger
context.
Could the
U.S. and its allies capture Raqqa or Deir Ezzor and
with it parts of eastern Syria it could use them as
a bargaining chip to gain some negotiation power
with Syria and its allies over the future of Syria.
Alternatively it create a Sunni state in east-Syria
and west-Iraq. Mosul would be part of such a Sunni
state and it would probably be put under the
tutelage of Turkey. There have been U.S.
plans for such a "Sunnistan"
and a revision of the Sykes-Picot borders for some
time.
For Syria
and its allies the upholding of the unity of Syria
is a major objective. To leave Raqqa and the eastern
oil fields to the U.S. would be a devastating loss.
Syria and its allies have therefore to beat the U.S.
and its allies in the race to Raqqa and the larger
east Syria.
According
to Southfront
Syria just made the first major move. A brigade of
the Syrian Arab Army attacked the positions of the
Islamic State along the Ithriyah to Raqqa road. The
town Tal Abu Zayhn has been taken on the way to the
first objective, the Tabaqah military airport.
Additional supporting forces from various allied
groups are assembling in Ithriyah to later support
the attack.
The U.S.
move towards east-Syria is still in preparation. The
first U.S. plan was to use the Syrian-Kurdish YPG
forces of north-east Syria. These were labeled
Syrian Democratic Forces after attaching a few
fighters from Arab tribes. These forces would have
attacked Raqqa from the north. But the Kurds did not
want to invade the Arab lands they would not be able
to hold. Their aim is to connect to the Kurdish
enclave in north-west Syria along the Turkish
border.
The U.S. is
coming up with a new plan. There are only sketches
visible so far and the following is just somewhat
informed speculation.
The U.S.
has
extended the runway of the agricultural
Rumeilan/Abu Hajar airfield (map) in the Kurdish
held area in north east Syria to be able to supply
larger operations in the wider area:
This
location has been chosen because it's just 100
miles (160 kilometers) from ISIS frontline
positions and some of its lucrative oil fields,
but well within territory held by Kurdish
fighters known as the YPG. The runway is being
nearly doubled in length from about 2,300 feet
to 4,330 feet (700 to 1,320 meters) -- long
enough, say, to receive C130 transport planes. A
small apron is also being paved.
Some U.S.
special operation forces are said to already operate
from there. This is the vanguard on a reconnaissance
mission.
It was
publicly
disclosed that one brigade if the U.S. 101st
Airborne Division would go to Iraq to train, advise
and assist the Iraqi forces for an attack on Mosul.
Some 1,800
soldiers from the 101st’s Headquarters and its
2nd Brigade Combat Team will deploy soon on
regular rotations to Baghdad and Irbil to train
and advise Iraqi army and Kurdish peshmerga
forces who are expected in the coming months to
move toward Mosul, the Islamic State group’s de
facto headquarters in Iraq.
But Col.
Pat Lang
was told that two brigades of
the 101st would deploy:
I was told
today that two brigades of the 101st Airborne
Division are going to Iraq, not just one.
This probably is related to the Saudi
Juggernaut. pl
The Saudi
"juggernaut" was the recent announcement that the
Saudis would be willing to send troops to Syria.
Nobody was, at first, taking that serious but it now
starts to make some sense. The Saudis today
confirmed their intent:
Saudi’s
decision to send troops to Syria in an attempt
to bolster and toughen efforts against militants
is “final” and “irreversible,” the Saudi
military spokesman announced on Thursday.
Brig. Gen. Ahmed Al-Assiri, said that Riyadh is
“ready” and will fight with its U.S.-led
coalition allies to defeat ISIS
militants in Syria, however, he said Washington
is more suitable to answer questions on further
details about any future ground operations.
...
The statement
comes as Saudi Arabia’s Deputy Crown Prince and
Defense Minister Mohammed bin Salman visited
NATO headquarters in Brussels to discuss the
Syrian civil war.
The Saudis
would fight under the control of the one brigade of
the 101st airborne that was not announced to go for
Mosul. The Saudis would deploy from Saudi Arabia
likely via a U.S. controlled airstrip in west Iraq
towards Syria while the brigade from the 101st would
probably deploy from the Kurdish area in north Iraq
through the Kurdish areas in north-east Syria
towards Raqqa. Raqqa would thereby be attacked from
a north-eastern and a south-eastern. The airport of
Rumeilan/Abu Hajar would be one of the major supply
bases.
Such a move
of forces would be quite large and over relative
long distances. But most of the area is desert and
modern motorized military equipment could easily
cover those distances in a day or two. This would
put Saudi troops into Syria. If they would take
Raqqa or Deir Ezzor and the eastern Syrian oilfields
they would NEVER let go of it unless Syria would
bend to the Saudi demand of introducing an Islamist
led government.
The plan
is workable but it would also instigate a large
mobilization of Shia forces and could lead to a
bigger conflict. The Russian Prime Minister Medvedev
warned today that new Arab forces entering the
Syrian war could spark a much wider war.
The Saudi
operation was said today to start within two month.
The Syrian government forces and their allies will
now have to rush to the east to protect the unity of
the country. The U.S. for its part may want to
hinder the Syrian advantage by whatever means it
has, including - possibly - some "erroneous"
bombing.
The race
for Raqqa, and Syria's future, is on. |