February
25, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Unz
Review"
-
The recent agreement between the USA and Russia
really solves nothing, it does not even end the war,
and both sides are expressing a great deal of
caution about its future implementation. And yet,
this is a huge victory for Russia. While it is too
early to say that “the Russian won in Syria”, I
think that it is now fair to say that the
Russian
position on Syria has won. Here is
why:
First: nobody is suggesting anymore that
Assad will be ousted or Damascus taken. That, in
turn, means that everybody has now
recognized that Syrian Arab Republic, backed by
Russia, has successfully repelled the aggression of
the huge coalition the AngloZionists built to
overthrow Assad.
Second: Russia has forced the UNSC and the USA to
admit that the vast majority of those who fight
Assad today are terrorist. Of course, this is not
how this was declared, but if you look at the
organizations which the UNSC has already declared as
‘terrorists’ then you already have an absolute
majority of the anti-Assad forces. This means that
the moral and legal legitimacy of the
anti-Assad forces is lies in tatters.
Third: regardless of what Erdogan does actually
try to do next, there are now clear signs that
neither NATO, nor the EU nor even the Turkish high
military command want a war with Russia. And that
means that Erdogan’s gamble has not paid off
and that his entire Syria policy is now
comprehensively dead. Keep in mind that
following the treacherous attack on the Russian
Su-24 the Kremlin made it a policy goal to
“Saakashvilize” Erdogan. This goal is now almost
reached and Erdogan’s future looks very, very bleak:
everybody ( except maybe the Saudis) is sick and
tired of this maniac. The best thing which could
happen to Turkey now would for the military to get
rid of Erdogan and to replace him with somebody
willing to repair all the damage he did.
Fourth: all the threats to impose a
no-fly zone or to occupy Syria have now been
invalidated by an agreement which basically
declares that anybody not respecting the cease-fire
is a legitimate target for engagement and
destruction.
Fifth: the USA had to accept the
humiliation of having to agree to all of the Russian
terms for the current ceasefire. Yes, of
course, the USA can, and probably will, try renege
on part, or all, of this agreement, but the
precedent has been set and it will be very
hard, if not impossible, for the USA to openly
return to the pre-2016 policies.
Sixth: does anybody still remember the rhetoric
of Hillary Clinton about Syria and Russia? Her
position was crystal clear: Assad must go and those
who support him “punished”. Even after the Russian
military offensive began, the US refused to tell the
Russians where the “good terrorists” were and where
the “bad terrorists” were. No exchange of
information with Russians was acceptable. Now the
Americans had to agree to work with the Russians on
a map of Syria designating where the participants of
the ceasefire and were those who were not included
in the ceasefire were deployed. In other words,
the US will now have to share with Russia
all the info it previously refused to shareand work with the Russians on a daily basis.
Seventh: Russia has basically co-opted
the so-called “Free Syrian Army”. How? By
basically forcing every single faction in Syria to
chose between one of two possible statuses: being a
‘terrorist’ (and a fair target for destruction) or
being a participant in a political process
entirely designed by Russia.
The Russians are now even opening a “Truce Center”
at the Khmeimin airbase near Latakia which will
now “render assistance” to all the parties to the
ceasefire.
This, for the time being, mainly a diplomatic
victory, of course, but a Russian diplomatic victory
made possible by a Russian military victory. A tiny
Russian military contingent has basically completely
neutralized the plans of an entire worldwide
Empire. That, in itself, is an amazing achievement.
The other big winner here are, in my opinion, the
Kurds who,
according to British officials, appear to be
coordinating their military operations with the
Syrian army and the Russian Aerospace Forces and who
now might well even achieve their dreams of joining
the Iraqi and Syria regions of Kurdistan. Which is
just about the worst nightmare for the Turks come
true, hence the still remaining risk of a Turkish
military operation ostensibly to create a ‘buffer
zone’ but really to save face. That kind of
intervention will remain a possibility for as long
as the Turks can continue to hope to commit
aggression against their neighbors under the
protection of NATO and the USA. And that ain’t
gonna change anytime in the future.
And then there are the Saudis. They are very,
very angry. They are angry to the point of making
not so subtle threats about using nuclear weapons to
deal with their adversaries. See for yourself:
Actually, since Pakistan got The Bomb, I would
not dismiss any Saudi claims of having a number of
nuclear devices. But what does that really mean?
Absolutely nothing.
It is quite possible that the Saudis have the
know how for a nuclear device. And it is quite
possible that they even got their hands on enough
nuclear materials for a few bombs. They might even
have succeeded in purchasing a few nuclear devices
from the Pakistanis or Israelis. But even if that
is true, the reality is that the Saudis don’t even
have the military capability to deal with the
poorest Arab country on the planet (Yemen) and that
they most definitely don’t have the military
capability to engage their nuclear devices in a way
which would allow them to achieve any kind of
military advantage. After all, what are we talking
about here? Using nuclear weapons against the
Syrian military? Against Iran? Against Russia?
This is absolutely ridiculous. The reality is that
whatever nuclear capabilities the Saudis might or
might not have, the fact that they would make
nuclear threats is just a sign of weakness and fear,
not a sign of strength. This is why nobody is
impressed by these statement, least of all the
intended targets of such threats.
While it is quite true that the latest agreement
between the USA and Russia does not mark the end of
the war in Syria, it is a turning point, a kind of a
Minsk-2 Agreement which nobody really wants to
comply with, but which seals the defeat of the
AngloZionist plans in Syria as much as Minsk-2 meant
the defeat of the Ukronazi dream.
Time is now on the Russian/Syrian side. With
each passing day the Russian task force in Syria
will become more powerful, as will the Syrian Armed
Forces. That, by itself, will not be enough to
defeat Daesh, and we can expect a stiff resistance
from the Takfiri crazies, but the writing is on the
wall for all to see: the more the Russians and the
Americans become directly and jointly involved, the
less Turkey and Saudi Arabia will be able to
determine the outcome of the war. In other words,
while this is far from being the end of Daesh, it is
the beginning of the end for Daesh in Syria.
Yet again the nay-sayers and Putin-haters have
been proven wrong. To be honest, so have I: I
would never have guessed that the Russians could
have achieved so much with so little and yet they
did pull off this extremely dangerous gamble and
they won. Only an extremely skillful combination of
military, economic, diplomatic and political means
could have yielded such a remarkable result but
Putin, apparently, found this perfect mix. The path
ahead remains extremely dangerous, for sure, but the
outcome of the 20 week long Russian military
intervention in Syria is nothing short of
remarkable.
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