Putin
Shuns Syrian ‘Quagmire’
Gambling that President Obama will cooperate in
seeking peace for Syria, Russian President Putin
called back much of Russia’s military force
dispatched to Syria last fall.
By Ray
McGovern
March 15,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News
"- -
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s abrupt
announcement that Russia would begin “the withdrawal
of the main part” (????? ???????? ?????) of its
military “contingent” (???????????) from Syria has
been widely seen not only as a welcome surprise, but
also as a hopeful fillip to serious negotiations to
end the carnage in what is left of that beleaguered
country.
As always,
a modicum of skepticism is warranted the “morning
after,” but the pledge to pull out the bulk of the
Russian force seems genuine and, at this writing,
the withdrawal is already under way. Putin’s
announcement appears to mark the beginning of the
end of Russia’s key but limited military
intervention – the
game-changer that started on Sept. 30,
2015, with Russian air strikes that enabled the
Syrian army to regain lost ground, sever jihadist
supply lines to Turkey, and drive rebels from
hundreds of towns and cities.
Putin was
clear in noting the Russian military presence that
will remain in Syria, but was not so clear on its
future use: “Our naval base in Tartus and airbase at
Khmeimim will operate ‘as usual’ (? ??????? ??????).
They are to be safely protected from land, sea, and
air.”
This
formulation presumably would allow for continued
airstrikes on designated terrorist groups like the
Islamic State and Al Qaeda’s Nusra Front, including
during the current “cessation of hostilities”
negotiated by the U.S. and Russia. (Putin’s phrasing
may also be viewed as a warning against Turkey
and/or Saudi Arabia not to act on recent threats to
invade Syria.)
That said,
many knowledgeable observers have expressed surprise
that the partial cease-fire that went into effect on
Feb. 27 has largely held. Plus, the rate of
airstrikes reportedly has plunged since then.
A
New Future
With all
due respect to Yogi Berra’s dictum – “It’s tough to
make predictions, especially about the future” –
Putin’s withdrawal order constitutes Part II of the
game-changer put in play five and a half innings ago
last September. Thus, it is now doubly the case that
“The future ain’t what it used to be.” In essence,
the ball is now bouncing around in President Barack
Obama’s infield.
A great
deal will depend on whether he will risk incurring
the wrath of “allies”-cum-wealthy-arms-customers
like Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Israel, as well as
unpredictable Turkey – an actual NATO ally
(sans-quotation-marks), by applying unstinting
pressure to get them to stop supporting terrorists
in Syria.
On Monday,
Putin said he considered the tasks given to the
Russian defense ministry last September, “as a
whole” (? ?????), fulfilled. He had
defined those tasks on Oct. 11, 2015, on
Russian TV: “Our objective is to stabilize the
legitimate authority [in Syria] and create
conditions for a political compromise.”
Russia’s
armed intervention did strengthen the position of
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, but – not
surprisingly – political compromise toward peace
remains elusive. Still, the altered circumstances
have advanced the peace process, in part, because
Moscow’s intervention last fall was met with a
clear-headed response from President Barack Obama,
who chose to see a glass-half-full in Russia’s
intervention.
It was no
secret that one key Russian aim was to rescue Assad
from a possible defeat at the hands of the jihadist
“Army of Conquest” freshly armed by Saudi Arabia and
Turkey, including with U.S.-made TOW missiles. But
even benighted White House advisers seemed able to
discern that the devil-they-knew (Assad) might be
preferable to the cutthroats of Islamic State (also
known as ISIS or ISIL) or Al Qaeda’s affiliate,
Nusra Front.
To his
credit, Obama bet on the possibility that Russian
airstrikes would also help thwart further ISIS gains
and perhaps even help lead to serious negotiations.
Thus, Obama instructed Secretary of State John Kerry
to (1) forgo the poison-pill “Assad-must-go”
precondition to talks on Syria’s future; (2) set a
place for Iran at the table; and (3) collaborate
closely with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov,
to “deconflict” airstrikes over Syria and redouble
efforts to get serious negotiations under way.
With
uncommon speed, a meeting attended by
representatives of 19 regional and global powers
(including Iran) was held in Vienna on Oct. 30,
2015, one month after the Russian airstrikes began;
on Dec. 18, the UN Security Council unanimously
approved a road map and timeline for talks on Syria;
and on Feb. 1, 2016, indirect talks between Syrian
government and opposition leaders took place in
Geneva, mediated by UN Special Envoy for Syria,
Staffan de Mistura.
Those
Geneva talks made zero progress; they were quickly
suspended and resumption was put off for several
weeks. They got under way again on Monday, which was
not only the day Putin chose to announce the Russian
withdrawal, but also the day that unarmed street
protests broke out five years ago in Syria and were
cruelly crushed by Assad’s security apparatus.
Will Talks Make Progress?
Just as
Moscow’s military intervention put Assad back on his
feet, the Russian pullout is likely now to make him
wobblier, and Moscow may hope the withdrawal will
put additional pressure on him to be more willing to
compromise. One positive sign has come from those
Syrian opposition leaders who have already voiced
cautious praise for the Russian withdrawal.
The
telephone conversation between President Obama and
President Putin on Monday evening suggests that they
remain willing to build on the cessation of
hostilities and lean on their respective clients to
negotiate in good faith, even though the obstacles
remain formidable.
For
example, Foreign Minister Lavrov had this to say on
Monday about the resumption of the talks in Geneva:
“The work is not easy; it is yet to be understood
how all these groups [taking part in the
intra-Syrian talks] could gather at the same table
together … but the process has gotten under way, and
it is in our common interests to make it sustainable
and irreversible.”
And
according to the Russian news agency TASS, President
Assad has told President Putin by telephone that he
is ready to start a political process in Syria as
soon as possible and that he hoped that eventual
full-scale UN-mediated talks between Syrian
government and opposition representatives in Geneva
would produce concrete results.
A
Calculated Decision
Putin is
gambling that the interested parties – first and
foremost, the U.S. – will put the heat on those over
whom they have influence to make the cessation of
hostilities stick and cooperate in thwarting the
aims and actions of ISIS and Al Qaeda.
Russia’s
decision on a troop pullout having been unilateral,
Putin retains the option to reinsert Russian forces
should the gamble fail. It seems clear that he would
prefer not to have to do that. And he is unlikely to
do that, short of a rapidly growing threat from
terrorists, trained and equipped for violence in
Syria, returning to stir up trouble in Russia.
Putin is
acutely aware of quagmires. The Soviet Union got
bogged down in one in Afghanistan and, of course, he
has watched what he calls “partners” get stuck there
as well – not to mention Iraq, or Syria, or Libya –
much less Vietnam. Last October, when President
Obama and Secretary Kerry chose to warn Putin about
quagmires, I can imagine the look on the Russian
President’s face.
The Russian
withdrawal bespeaks an understanding that risky
gambles are less to be feared than quagmires – the
more so since Moscow lacks one of its “partner’s”
seemingly inexhaustible source of funding for its
military escapades that result in quagmires. Indeed,
Moscow has already announced a five percent cutback
in military spending for this year.
Typically,
when responding to provocations (like the February
2014 coup in Ukraine) from “partners,” as well as to
other dangers to Russia’s security interests, Putin
has displayed a notable penchant for heeding dicta
more contemporary than those of Yogi Berra. One of
them seems to be President Obama’s favorite motto:
“Don’t do stupid stuff.”
Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, a publishing
arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in
inner-city Washington. During his 27-year career at
CIA he was chief of the Soviet Foreign Policy Branch
and prepared the
President’s Daily Brief
for Presidents Nixon, Ford, and Reagan. He is
co-founder of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for
Sanity (VIPS). |