A Dramatic
Escalation Appears Imminent
Week
Eighteen of the Russian Intervention in Syria
The Saker
February 15, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Unz
Review
" - The situation in Syria has reached a
watershed moment and a dramatic escalation of the
war appears imminent. Let’s look again at how we
reached this point.
During the
first phase of the operation, the Syrian armed
forces were unable to achieve an immediate strategic
success. This is rather unsurprising. It is
important to remember here that during the first
weeks of the operation the Russian did not provide
close air support to the Syrians. Instead, they
chose to systematically degrade the entire Daesh
(Note: I refer to *all* terrorist in Syria as “Daesh”)
infrastructure including command posts,
communication nodes, oil dumps, ammo dumps, supply
routes, etc. This was important work, but it did not
have an immediate impact upon the Syrian military.
Then the Russians turned to two important tasks: to
push back Daesh in the Latakia province and to hit
the illegal oil trade between Daesh and Turkey. The
first goal was needed for the protection of the
Russian task force and the second one hit the Daesh
finances. Then the Russians seriously turned to
providing close air support. Not only that, but the
Russians got directly involved with the ground
operation.
The second
phase was introduced gradually, without much
fanfare, but it made a big difference on the ground:
the Russians and Syrians began to closely work
together and they soon honed their collaboration to
a quantitatively new level which allowed the Syrian
commanders to use Russian firepower with great
effectiveness. Furthermore, the Russians began
providing modern equipment to the Syrians, including
T-90 tanks, modern artillery systems,
counter-battery radars, night vision gear, etc.
Finally, according to various Russian reports,
Russian special operations teams (mostly Chechens)
were also engaged in key locations, including deep
in the rear of Daesh. As a result, the Syrian
military for the first time went from achieving
tactical successes to operational victories: for the
first time the Syrian began to liberate key towns of
strategic importance.
Finally,
the Russians unleashed a fantastically intense
firepower on Daesh along crucial sectors of the
front. In northern Homs, the
Russians bombed a sector for 36 hours in a row.
According to the
latest briefing of the Russian Defense Ministry,
just between February 4th and February 11th,
the Russian aviation group in the Syrian Arab
Republic performed 510 combat sorties and engaged
1,888 terrorists targets. That kind of ferocious
pounding did produce the expected effect and the
Syrian military began slowly moving along the
Turkish-Syrian border while, at the same time,
threatening the Daesh forces still deployed inside
the northern part of Aleppo. In doing so, the
Russians and Syrian threatened to cut off the vital
resupply route linking Daesh to Turkey. According to
Russian sources, Daesh forces were so demoralized
that they forced the local people to flee towards
the Turkish border and attempted to hide inside this
movement of internally displaced civilians.
This
strategic Russian and Syrian victory meant that all
the nations supporting Daesh, including Turkey,
Saudi Arabia and the USA were facing a complete
collapse of their efforts to overthrow Assad and to
break-up Syria and turn part of it into a
“Jihadistan”. The Americans could not admit this, of
course; as for the Saudis, their threats to invade
Syria were rather laughable. Which left the main
role to Erdogan who was more than happy to provide
the West with yet another maniacal ally willing to
act in a completely irresponsible way just to deny
the “other side” anything looking like a victory.
Erdogan
seems to be contemplating two options. The first one
is a ground operation into Syria aimed at restoring
the supply lines of Daesh and at preventing the
Syrian military from controlling the border. Here is
a good illustration (taken
from a SouthFront video) of what this would look
like:
According
to various reports, Erdogan has 18,000 soldiers
supported by aircraft, armor and artillery poised
along the border to execute such an invasion.
The second
plan is even simpler, at least in theory: to create
a no-fly zone over all of Syria. Erdogan personally
mentioned this option several times, the latest one
on Thursday the 11th.
Needless to
say, both plans are absolutely illegal under
international law and would constitute an act of
aggression, the “supreme international
crime”
according to the Nuremberg Tribunal, because “it
contains within itself the accumulated evil of the
whole.” Not that this would deter a megalomaniac
like Erdogan.
Erdogan,
and his backers in the West, will, of course, claim
that a humanitarian disaster, or even a genocide, is
taking place in Aleppo, that there is a
“responsibility to protect” (R2P) and that no UNSC
is needed to take such clearly “humanitarian”
action. It would be “Sarajevo v2” or “Kosovo v2” all
over again. The western media is now actively busy
demonizing Putin, and just recently has offered the
following topics to ponder to those poor souls who
still listen to it:
- Putin
‘probably’ ordered the murder of Litvinenko.
- Putin
ordered the murder of Litvinenko because
Litvinenko was about to reveal that Putin was a
pedophile (seriously, I kid you not – check
for yourself!).
- WWIII
could start by
Russia invading Latvia.
-
According
to the US Treasury, Putin is a corrupt man.
-
According to George Soros,
Putin wants the “disintegration of the EU” and
Russia is a bigger threat than the Jihadis.
- Russia
is so scary that
the Pentagon wants to quadruple the money for
the defense of Europe.
- The
Putin is strengthening ISIS in Syria and
causing a wave of refugees.
There is no
need to continue the list – you get the idea. It is
really Bosnia, Kosovo, Iraq, Libya all over again,
with the exact same “humanitarian crocodile tears”
and the exact same rational for an illegal
aggression. And instead of Sarajavo “martyr city
besieged by Serbian butchers” we would now have
Aleppo “martyr city besieged by Syrian butchers”. I
even expect a series of false flags inside Aleppo
next “proving” that “the world” “must act” to
“prevent a genocide”.
The big
difference, of course, is that Yugoslavia, Serbia,
Iraq and Libya were all almost defenseless against
the AngloZionist Empire. Not so Russia.
In purely
military terms, Russia has taken a number of crucial
steps: she declared a large scale “verification” of
the “combat readiness” of the Southern and Central
military districts. In practical terms, this means
that all the Russian forces are on high alert,
especially the AeroSpace forces, the Airborne
Forces, the Military Transportation Aviation forces
and, of course, all
the Russian forces in Crimea and the Black Sea Fleet.
The first practical effect of such “exercises” is
not only to make a lot of forces immediately
available, but it is also to make them very
difficult to track. This not only protects the
mobilized forces, but also makes it very hard for
the enemy to figure out what exactly they are doing.
There are also report that Russian Airborne Warning
and Control (AWACS) aircraft – A-50M – are now
regularly flying over Syria. In other words,
Russia has taken the preparations needed to go to
war with Turkey.
Needless to
say, the
Turks and the Saudis have also announced joint
military exercises. They have even announced
that
Saudi aircraft will conduct airstrikes from the
Incirlik air base in support of an invasion of Syria.
At the same
time,
the Russians have also launched a peace initiative
centered around a general ceasefire starting on
March 1st or even, according to the
latest leaks, on February 15th. The goal
is is transparent: to break the Turkish momentum
towards an invasion of Syria. It is obvious that
Russian diplomats are doing everything they can to
avert a war with Turkey.
Here again
I have to repeat what I have said already a million
times in the past: the small Russian contingent in
Syria is in a very precarious position: far away
from Russia and very close (45km) to Turkey. Not
only that, but the Turks have over 200 combat
aircraft ready to attack, whereas the Russians
probably has less than 20 SU-30/35/34s in total.
Yes, these are very advanced aircraft, of the 4++
generation, and they will be supported by S-400
systems, but the force ratio remains a terrible
1:10.
Russia
does, however, have one big advantage over Turkey:
Russia has plenty of long-range bombers, armed with
gravity bombs and cruise missiles, capable of
striking the Turks anywhere, in Syria and in Turkey
proper. In fact, Russia even has the capability to
strike at
Turkish airfields, something which the Turks
cannot prevent and something which they cannot
retaliate in kind for. The big risk for Russia, at
this point, would be that NATO would interpret this
as a Russian “aggression” against a member-state,
especially if the (in)famous
Incirlik air base is hit.
Erdogan
also has to consider another real risk: that, while
undoubtedly proficient, the Turkish forces might not
be a match for the battle-hardened Kurds and
Syrians, especially if the latter are supported by
Iranian and Hezbollah forces. The Turks have a
checkered record against the Kurds whom they
typically do overwhelm with firepower and numbers,
but whom they never succeeded in neutralizing,
subduing or eliminating. Finally, there is the
possibility that Russians might have to use their
ground forces, especially if the task force in
Khmeimim is really threatened.
In this
regard, let me immediately say that the projection
of, say, an airborne force so far from the Russian
border to protect a small contingent like the one in
Khmeimim is not something the Airborne Forces are
designed for, at least not “by the book”. Still, in
theory, if faced with a possible attack on the
Russian personnel in Khmeimin, the Russians could
decide to land a regimental-size airborne force,
around 1,200 men, fully mechanized, with armor and
artillery. This force could be supplemented by a
Naval Infantry battalion with up to another 600 men.
This might not seem like much in comparison to the
alleged 18,000 men Erdogan has massed at the border,
but keep in mind that only a part of these 18,000
would be available for any ground attack on Khmeimin
and that the
Russian Airborne forces can turn even a much larger
force into hamburger meat (for a look at modern
Russian Airborne forces please see
here). Frankly, I don’t see the Turks trying to
overrun Khmeimin, but any substantial Turkish ground
operation will make such a scenario at least
possible and Russian commanders will not have the
luxury of assuming that Erdogan is sane, not after
the shooting down of the SU-24. After that the
Russians simply have to assume the worst.
What is
clear is that in any war between Russia and Turkey
NATO will have to make a key decision: is the
alliance prepared to go to war with a nuclear power
like Russia to protect a lunatic like Erdogan? It is
hard to imagine the US/NATO doing something so crazy
but, unfortunately, wars always have the potential
to very rapidly get out of control. Modern military
theory has developed many excellent models of
escalation but, unfortunately, no good model of how
de-escalation could happen (at least not that I am
aware of). How does one de-escalate without
appearing to be surrendering or at least admitting
to being the weaker side?
The current
situation is full of dangerous and unstable
asymmetries: the Russian task force in Syria is
small and isolated and it cannot protect Syria from
NATO or even from Turkey, but in the case of a
full-scale war between Russia and Turkey, Turkey has
no chance of winning, none at all. In a conventional
war opposing NATO and Russia I personally don’t see
either side losing (whatever ‘losing’ and ‘winning’
mean in this context) without engaging nuclear
weapons first. This suggests to me that the US
cannot allow Erdogan to attack the Russian task
force in Syria, not during a ground invasion and,
even less so, during an attempt to establish a
no-fly zone.
The problem
for the USA is that it has no good option to achieve
its overriding goal in Syria: to “prevent Russia
from winning”. In the delusional minds of the
AngloZionist rulers, Russia is just a “regional
power” which cannot be allowed to defy the
“indispensable nation”. And yet, Russia is doing
exactly that both in Syria and in the Ukraine and
Obama’s entire Russia policy is in shambles. Can he
afford to appear so weak in an election year? Can
the US “deep state” let the Empire be humiliated and
its weakness exposed?
The latest
news strongly suggests to me that the White House
has taken the decision to let Turkey and Saudi
Arabia invade Syria.
Turkish officials are openly saying that an invasion
is imminent and that the goal of such an
invasion would be to
reverse the Syrian army gains along the boder and
near Aleppo. The latest reports are also
suggesting that
the Turks have begun shelling Aleppo. None of
that could be happening without the full support of
CENTCOM and the White House.
The Empire
has apparently concluded that Daesh is not strong
enough to overthrow Assad, at least not when the
Russian AeroSpace forces are supporting him, so it
will now unleash the Turks and the Saudis in the
hope of changing the outcome of this war or, if that
is not possible, to carve up Syria into ‘zones of
responsibility” – all under the pretext of fighting
Daesh, of course.
The Russian
task force in Syria is about to be very seriously
challenged and I don’t see how it could deal with
this new threat by itself. I very much hope that I
am wrong here, but I have do admit that
a *real* Russian intervention in Syria might happen
after all, with
MiG-31s and all. In fact, in the next few days,
we are probably going to witness a dramatic
escalation of the conflict in Syria.
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