Wednesday, February 10, 2016

"Russia Lives The Lie" in Syria


StrategyPage reports:

The current UN sponsored peace talks have been delayed until February 25 th largely because Russia has been lying about why it is really in Syria and that lie is both obvious and a major factor in preventing the peace talks from starting. The problem is that Russia is concentrating most of its considerable firepower on rebel groups that are hurting the Syrian Assad government forces the most. By American count only about ten percent of Russian air strikes have been against ISIL (Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant) and those targets were usually hit to protect Assad forces ... Not surprisingly these rebels refuse to participate in peace talks as long as the UN allows Russia to get away with their lies. In the last week this Russian support has enabled Assad forces to cut rebels in Aleppo off from Turkey (a primary source if reinforcements and supplies). This is a major defeat for the rebels.

UN officials believe they can work out the disputes between the rebels and the Russians in time to get the peace talks going by the end of the month but that remains to be seen because the Syrian rebels blame Russia for most of the current government success. As a result the rebels contribute to the failure of the UN peace talks by demanding a lot of pre-conditions aimed at the Russians. At the very least the rebels wanted the Russians to halt their Assad support while peace talks go on. The rebels are asking for other concessions, like release of captured leaders lifting of sieges of some pro-rebel civilian areas. Russia refuses to comply with these demands.

Another issue the rebels are angry about was the UN agreeing to keep the Syrian Kurds out of the peace talks. This was something Turkey insisted on. There were other problems, like the tensions between Russia, Saudi Arabia and Iran which have also helped cripple UN efforts to get Syria peace talks going. The growing tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran has made cooperation over brokering a Syria peace deal less likely. Russian efforts to mediate are also compromised because of tensions with Iran and the Saudis. Russia has backed away from earlier suggestions that they would support forcing the Assads out of the government (while allowing Assad allies to carry on instead) and offering the Assads refuge in Russia.

So far Russian bombers and attack helicopters have killed over 3,000 people. Russia claims that about a third of these dead have been ISIL with the rest being other rebels and civilians. These Russian air attacks are now frequently hitting over a hundred targets a day. Western critics accuse Russia of ignoring civilian losses. That is true but because of that the Russian air attacks have been more effective and have been of great assistance to the Western war against ISIL. Russia calls Western criticism hypocrisy especially since Western and Arab leaders backing the fight against ISIL are not pressuring Russia to change its ROE (Rules of Engagement) over this because everyone admits that this would just encourage ISIL to use civilians as human shields even more.

There's much more at the link.

It's a long report with a lot of detail, but well worth reading in full.  In particular, I recommend its analysis of the actions and reactions of other players in Syria - Iran, Israel, Turkey and the Kurdish groups in Iraq, Syria and Turkey.  The Syrian conflict is a tangled web of alliances, interests and chain reactions, and its complexity means there won't be any quick solution.

As a matter of fact, looking at the complexity of the situation there, one wonders whether Russia isn't being drawn into a similar situation to what the USA faced in South Vietnam.  Over the past decade of the latter conflict, it was obvious that the South Vietnamese government only retained power and control because the USA backed it.  When that backing was withdrawn, collapse soon followed - and the USA was humiliated in the eyes of the world for a generation or more.  Will the same fate befall Russia in Syria?  It's a good question.  Students of history will doubtless already have noted the parallels.

Peter

6 comments:

  1. The magical American foreign policy is what makes it so complex.
    ISIS and the rebels are functionally the same. You fund the rebels, you fund ISIS.
    We've got a lot of 'facts' don't exist apart from the narrative, like Russians violating Turkish airspace, or Assad using chemical weapons.
    There is a weird inertia in D.C., where they have to stick to the narrative. The Russians got into this to support Assad, which makes perfect sense. They also got into it because they saw a lot of the terrorists they had to fight in Chechnya had gone to Syria. American foreign policy had conveniently put most of these idiots in one place. So, the Russians realized it would be better to fight them in Syria rather than have them come back home, and then having to fight them.

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  2. Difference: Russia don't give a rodent's posterior if they get embarrassed.

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  3. Russia did the same thing in Afghanistan, on a larger basis, intervening to prop up a faltering ally, and took a bigger hit that we did in Vietnam (just not as widely known in the West).
    10+ years later they went into Chechnya and got hurt badly again - this could be the third time for them, depending on how they play their cards.
    I don't see Syria becoming anything more than a semi-failed state; the Assad regime has so alienated everybody except their core supporters that I don't see how he can get full control back even with Russian help. For him the 'best case' scenario may be to officially run the country but have areas he doesn't control, like Saddam in Iraq in the 1990's or the tribal areas of Pakistan have been for decades.

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  4. Russia lost 14k in Afghanistan. Us 30k in Vietnam.

    S. Vietnam fell after the us congress stopped supporting the gov.

    Same thing happened in Afghanistan.

    Russian cost in Syria I has been minor. Ukraine has been much bigger.

    Cost to Europe of refugees is a huge destabilize. Russia is getting a huge payoff for minimal cost.

    1. Shows they stand by their allies.
    2. Destabilizes Europe
    3. Forces us and Europe to negotiate with them.
    4. Embarasses the us.
    5. Kills Sunnis / radical Islamist.
    6. Gives Russia influences in Middle East they have not had since 73.
    7. Shows Russia is a world power.
    8. Hurts Saudis / gulf states
    9. Showcases Russian military technology
    10. Distracts from Ukraine

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  5. I thought I heard also that there are competing interests trying to build oil/gas pipelines through Syria with Russians interests on one side. Can't remember where I heard that.

    MechAg94

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  6. while the comparison to Vietnam is possible the remark that the south only survived with help of the USA forgets the point that the North only could aggress with the help of Russia and China.

    in my view it is a dishonest analogy.

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