The
Slow Death of the Syria Cease-Fire Brings a
Hybrid War With Russia Closer
By
Alastair Crooke
June
21, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "World
Post"
-
BEIRUT —
Gradually, the mist of ambiguity and confusion
hanging over Syria is lifting a little. The
landscape is sharpening into focus. With this
improved visibility, we can view a little more
clearly the course of action being prepared by
Iran, Russia and the Syrian government.
Russia is
emerging from an internal debate over whether
the U.S. is truly interested in an entente or
only in bloodying Russia’s nose. And what do we
see? Skepticism. Russia is skeptical that NATO’s
new missile shield in Poland and Romania,
plus military
exercises right up near its border, are
purely defensive actions.
Iran,
meanwhile, is studying the entrails of the
nuclear agreement. As one well-informed
commentator put it to me, Iran is “coldly
lethal” at the
gloating in the U.S. at having “put one
over” Iran. Because, while Iran has duly taken
actions that preclude it from weaponizing its
nuclear program, it will not now gain the
financial normalization that it had expected
under the agreement.
It’s
not a question of slow implementation — I’ve
heard directly from banks in Europe that they’ve
been visited by U.S. Treasury officials and
warned in clear terms that any substantive trade
cooperation with Iran is closed off. Iran is not
being integrated into the financial system. U.S.
sanctions
remain in place, the Europeans have been
told, and the U.S. will implement fines against
those who contravene these sanctions. Financial
institutions are fearful, particularly given the
size of the fines that have been imposed —
almost $9 billion for the French bank BNP a
year ago.
In
principle, sanctions have been lifted. But in
practice, even though its sales of crude are
reaching pre-sanctions levels, Iran has found
that, financially, it remains substantially
hobbled. America apparently achieved a double
success: It circumscribed Iran’s nuclear
program, and the U.S. Treasury has hollowed out
the nuclear agreement’s financial quid pro quo,
thus limiting Iran’s potential financial
empowerment, which America’s Gulf allies so
feared.
Some
Iranian leaders
feel cheated; some are livid. Others simply
opine that the U.S. should never have been
trusted in the first place.
And
Damascus? It never believed that the recent
cease-fire would be a genuine cessation of
hostilities, and many ordinary Syrians now
concur with their government, seeing it as just
another American ruse. They are urging their
government to get on with it — to liberate
Aleppo. “Just do it” is the message for the
Syrian government that I’ve heard on the
streets. A sense of the West being deceitful is
exacerbated by
reports of American, German, French and
possibly Belgian special forces establishing
themselves in northern Syria.
All this
infringement of Syrian sovereignty does not
really seem temporary but rather the opposite:
there are shades of Afghanistan, with all the
“temporary” NATO bases. In any case, it is no
exaggeration to say that skepticism about
Western motives is in the air — especially after
Ashton Carter, the U.S. defense secretary,
raised the possibility of NATO entering the
fray.
As Pat
Lang, a former U.S. defense intelligence
officer,
wrote last week:
The
Russians evidently thought they could make
an honest deal with [U.S. Secretary of State
John] Kerry [and President] Obama. Well,
they were wrong. The U.S. supported jihadis
associated with [Jabhat al-Nusra, al Qaeda’s
Syria wing] ... merely ‘pocketed’ the truce
as an opportunity to re-fit, re-supply and
re-position forces. The U.S. must have been
complicit in this ruse. Perhaps the Russians
have learned from this experience.
Lang goes
on to note that during the “truce,” “the Turks,
presumably with the agreement of the U.S.,
brought 6,000 men north out of [Syria via the]
Turkish border ... They trucked them around, and
brought them through Hatay Province in Turkey to
be sent back into Aleppo Province and to the
city of Aleppo itself.”
Reports in Russian media indicate that Nusra
jihadists, who have continued to
shell Syrian government forces during the
“truce,” are being commanded directly by Turkish
military advisers. And meanwhile, the U.S.
supplied the opposition with about 3,000
tons of weapons during the cease-fire,
according to I.H.S. Jane’s, a security
research firm.
In
brief, the cease-fire has failed. It was not
observed. The U.S.
made no real effort to separate the
moderates from Nusra around Aleppo (as Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has affirmed).
Instead, the U.S. reportedly
sought Nusra’s exemption from any Russian or
Syrian attack. It reminds one of that old joke:
“Oh Lord, preserve me from sin — but not just
yet!” Or in other words, “preserve us from these
dreadful jihadist terrorists, but not just yet,
for Nusra is too useful a tool to lose.”
The
cease-fire did not hasten any political
solution, and Russia’s allies — Iran and
Hezbollah — have already paid and will continue
to pay a heavy price in terms of casualties for
halting their momentum toward Aleppo. The
opposition now has renewed vigor — and weapons.
It is hard
to see the cease-fire holding value for Moscow
much longer. The original Russian intention
was to try to compel American cooperation,
firstly in the war against jihadism and, more
generally, to compel the U.S. and Europe to
acknowledge that their own security interests
intersect directly with those of Moscow and that
this intersection plainly calls for partnership
rather than confrontation.
The
present situation in Syria neither facilitates
this bigger objective nor the secondary one of
defeating radical jihadism. Rather, it has led
to
calls in Russia for a less conciliatory
approach to the U.S. and for the Kremlin to
acknowledge that far from preparing for
partnership, NATO is gearing up for a hybrid war
against Russia.
It is
also hard to see the cease-fire holding any
continuing value for Tehran either. While the
Iran nuclear agreement seemed to hold out the
promise of bringing Iran back into the global
financial system, such expectations seem now to
be withering on the vine. As a result, Iran is
likely to feel released from self-imposed
limitations of their engagement in Syria and in
other parts of the Middle East. Damascus,
meanwhile, only very reluctantly agreed to leave
its citizens in Aleppo in some semi-frozen
limbo. Iran and Hezbollah were equally dubious.
All this
suggests renewed military escalation this
summer. Russian President Vladimir Putin will
probably not wish to act before the European
summit at the end of June. And neither would he
wish Russia to figure largely as an issue in the
U.S. presidential election. Yet he cannot ignore
the pressures from those within Russia who
insist that America is planning a hybrid war for
which Russia is unprepared.
The Russia
commentator Eric Zuesse encapsulated some of
these concerns,
writing that “actions speak louder than
words.” Earlier this month, he notes, the U.S.
refused to discuss with Russia its missile
defense program:
Russia’s concern is that, if the ‘Ballistic
Missile Defense’ or ‘Anti Ballistic Missile’
system, that the U.S. is now just starting
to install on and near Russia’s borders,
works, then the U.S. will be able to launch
a surprise nuclear attack against Russia,
and this system, which has been in
development for decades and is technically
called the ‘Aegis Ashore Missile Defense
System,’ will annihilate the missiles that
Russia launches in retaliation, which will
then leave the Russian population with no
retaliation at all.
Zuesse
goes on to argue that the U.S. seems to be
pursuing a new nuclear strategy, one that was
put forward in 2006 in a Foreign Affairs
article headlined “The Rise of Nuclear
Primacy,” and scrapping the earlier policy of
“mutually assured destruction.” The new
strategy, Zuesse writes, argues “for a much
bolder U.S. strategic policy against Russia,
based upon what it argued was America’s
technological superiority against Russia’s
weaponry — and a possibly limited time-window in
which to take advantage of it — before Russia
catches up and the opportunity to do so is
gone.”
So, what
is going on here? Does the U.S. administration
not see that pulling Russia into a debilitating
Syrian quagmire by playing clever with a
cease-fire that allows the insurgency to get the
wind back in its sails is almost certain to lead
to Russia and Iran increasing their military
engagement? There is
talk both in Russia and Iran of the need for
a military surge to try to break the back of the
conflict. Does the U.S. see that ultimately such
a strategy might further entangle it — just as
much as Russia and Iran — in the conflict? Does
it understand Saudi Arabia’s
intent to double down in Syria and Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s political
interest in continuing the Syrian crisis? Does
it judge these very real dangers accurately?
No, I
think not: the political calculus is different.
More likely, the explanation relates to the
presidential election campaign in the U.S. The
Democratic Party, in brief, is striving to steal
the Republican Party’s clothes. The latter holds
the mantle of being credited as the safer pair
of hands of the two, as far as America’s
security is concerned. This has been a
longstanding potential weakness for the
Democrats, only too readily exploited by its
electoral opponents. Now, perhaps the
opportunity is there to steal this mantle from
the Republicans.
All
this hawkishness — the American shrug of the
shoulders at making Iran feel cheated over the
nuclear agreement; at Russia, Iran and Damascus
seething that the Syria cease-fire was no more
than a clever trap to halt their military
momentum; at the psychological impact of NATO
exercising on Russia’s borders; at the possible
consequences to Obama’s refusal to discuss the
ballistic defense system — all this is more
likely about showing Democrat toughness and
savvy in contrast to Donald Trump.
In
short, the Democrats see the opportunity to cast
themselves as tough and reliable and to
transform foreign policy into an asset rather
than their Achilles’ heel.
But if
all this bullheadedness is nothing more than the
Democratic Party espying an apparent weakness in
the Trump campaign, is this foreign policy
posturing meaningful? The answer is that it is
not meaningless; it carries grave risks.
Ostensibly this posture may appear clever in a
domestic campaigning context, where Russia is
widely viewed in a negative light. But
externally, if the Syrian cease-fire comes to be
viewed as nothing more than a cynical ploy by
the U.S. to drag Russia deeper into the Syrian
quagmire in order to cut Putin down to size,
then what will likely follow is escalation. Hot
months ahead in Syria. Russia will gradually
reenter the conflict, and Iran and Iraq will
likely increase their involvement as well.
There
are those in the U.S., Turkey and the Gulf who
would welcome such a heightened crisis, hoping
that it would become so compellingly serious
that no incoming U.S. president, of either hue,
could avoid the call to do something upon taking
office. In this way, the U.S. could find itself
dragged into the maw of another unwinnable
Middle Eastern war.
We
should try to understand the wider dangers
better, too. Baiting Russia, under the
problematic rubric of countering Russian
“aggression,” is very much in fashion now. But
in Russia, there is an influential and
substantial faction that has come to believe
that the West is planning a devastating hybrid
military and economic war against it. If this is
not so, why is the West so intent on pushing
Russia tight up into a corner? Simply to teach
it deference? Psychologists warn us against such
strategies, and Russia finally is reconfiguring
its army (and more hesitantly, its economy)
precisely to fight for its corner.
As
another noted Russia commentator, John Helmer,
noted on his blog on May 30, the new NATO
missile installations in Eastern Europe “are
hostile acts, just short of casus belli — a
cause of war.” According to Reuters, Putin
warned that Romania might soon “be in the
cross hairs” — the new NATO missile
installations there will force Russia “to carry
out certain measures to ensure our security.”
“It will
be the same case with Poland,” Putin added.
Did you
hear that sound? That was the ratchet of war,
which has just clicked up a slot — or two.
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