Syria :
U.S. Finally Agrees To Russian Ceasefire Plan
By Moon Of Alabama
May 20, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Moon
Of Alabama"
-
The recent
talk between the Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov and
Secretary of State Kerry brought some progress. The
U.S. was so far
not willing to agree to a real ceasefire in
Syria and persisted on a lower level "cessation of
hostility" agreement. This now changed. The U.S.,
for the first time,
agreed to proceed towards a full ceasefire
between its proxy forces in Syria and the Syrian
government and its allies. In the press availability
after the Tuesday talks Kerry said:
[T]oday,
we believe we moved the ball forward in some
ways, and I’ll say specifically.
First,
we pledged our support for transforming
the cessation of hostilities into a
comprehensive ceasefire. And we
committed to use our influence to use the
parties to the cessation in order to ensure
compliance.
Second,
we agreed that if a party to the cessation of
hostilities engages in a pattern of persistent
noncompliance, the task force can refer that
behavior to the ISSG ministers or those
designated by the ministers to determine
appropriate action, including the exclusion of
such parties from the arrangements of the
cessation. Interpreted directly, that means that
if they continue to do it and they’re pretending
to be part of the cessation and they’re not,
they could be subject to no longer being
part of the cessation immediately.
Those last
sentences are mainly directed at Ahrar al Sham which
never signed the cessation agreement but claimed to
be part of it while continuing its attack on Syrian
government forces and civilians. Kerry is conceding
to the Russian standpoint that Ahrar, by its action,
is a terrorist group that needs to be fought down.
Fourth, we
call on all parties to the cessation of
hostilities to disassociate themselves
physically and politically from Daesh
and al-Nusrah and to endorse the intensified
efforts by the United States and Russia to
develop shared understandings of the threat
posed and the delineation of the territory that
is controlled by Daesh and al-Nusrah and to
consider ways to deal decisively with terrorist
groups.
Kerry had
agreed to this position on al-Qaeda ad the Islamic
State in earlier talks but later retracted with weak
excuses that "intermingling" between al-Qaeda and
"moderate rebels" made fighting al-Qaeda nearly
impossible. That "intermingling" is
no longer an excuse. The U.S. now agreed that
Russia and the Syrian government will fight al-Qaeda
and that any other groups standing nearby and
getting hit have only themselves to blame.
By the way,
the New York Times
account of the talks and the press conference by
chief manipulator David Sanger are waaay off from
what was really said.
The
"cessation of violence" has held up quite well since
the end of February. The south is mostly quite and
there are only few hotspots elsewhere where fighting
still flares up. Over 100 settlements and their
local forces have, with Russian mediation, signed
ceasefire agreements with the government.
There is
also a new, deeper level of Russian and U.S.
cooperation of Syria and on fighting al-Qaeda and
the Islamic State. A common rough plan was agreed
upon to attack and eliminate both group. As part of
this plan Iraqi forces under U.S. control
attacked and occupied Rutba in west Iraq. Rutba,
part of Anbar province, controls much of the open
land and desert in the triangle of the Iraqi, Jordan
and Syrian border. This move cuts off the southern
route that connected the Islamic State in Iraq and
Syria. The Syrian/Russian part of this move will be
the liberation of Deir Ezzor in south-east Syria in
the upcoming months. An attack on the Islamic State
held Raqqa will only follow later on after a large
concentration of force is made possible.
There are a
few other active flashpoints in Syria. In East
Ghouta, east of Damascus city, the Saudi sponsored
Salafists of Jaish al-Islam are fighting groups once
supplied by the CIA and now associated with
al-Qaeda/Jabhat al Nusra for control of the area.
This fight is already part of the disassociation
from Nusra that the U.S. agreed upon. But the
fighting is bloody with at least 500 losses on both
sides during the last weeks. The Syrian army is the
laughing third party in this and today
took a significant part of the south of the
East-Ghouta pocket.
The rebel
part of Aleppo city, controlled by al-Qaeda, is now
cut off from its only supply line. Improvised
rockets from the rebel side are daily hitting
civilians in the densely populated government held
side. To eliminate the now besieged al-Qaeda in east
Aleppo city will be a very bloody and destructive
fight that might take months.
In the
north Turkish supported "moderate rebels" still try
to move towards east along the Turkish-Syrian border
to eliminate the Islamic State access there. But
each time they announce to have taken this or that
town away from IS, a counterattack follows and IS
regains its positions. This infighting between
hostile forces is again to the advantage of the
Syrian government.
Around
Palmyra the Islamic State has made some surprise
attacks on the Shear oil field and the T-4 military
airport on the western road to Palmyra. There was,
according to unofficial sources, some significant
damage to Syrian and Russia material on the air base
but no news about the incident was published. The
advances the Islamic State made in area have by now,
with significant Russian help, all been reversed.
Following a consolidation phase a renewed push from
Palmyra eastward to Deir Ezzor is expected.
Hizbullah
has pulled back all troops for the Aleppo area where
they were replaced by Iranian forces. It is
unwilling to commit additional forces just to
move some ceasefire lines a few miles back or forth.
It continues its engagement around Damascus and in
the border region to Lebanon with IS and al-Qaeda
being the main targets.
Russia,
Iran, Hizbullah and the Syrian government are all
aware that the U.S. is "flexible" with its
interpretation of agreements and tends to cheat
whenever it believes that it can do so to its own
advantage. They are fully prepared to respond and
escalate again should the U.S. proxy forces divert
from the new agreements or should some significant
other changes on the battlefield occur.
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