US-Russia
cooperation in Syria!
-Dr. Abdul Ruff Colachal
_____
All UN veto members have a common
plan and they move accordingly. USA and Russia, the two very important super
powers, have always cooperated in regional problems even during the Cold War
era.
Cooperation and confrontation have
been the hallmark of Russo-US relations. Russia has once again accused the USA
of training terrorists in Syria, this time at a military base in the south of
the war-torn country. Moscow has regularly charged that Washington provides
cover, if not all-out support, for militant forces fighting against Syria’s
regime and civilian population.
In Syria the USA and Russia seem to
be working in tandem in Syria to destabilize those Arab nations by attacking
select zones without any clash between them in the choice of zones for attack.
Apparently, US-Russian relations in
Syria are warmer after Trump’s arrival at White House. Russia says it want sot
end its role in Syria but USA is opposed to ending terror wars in West Asia and
it has no plan to leave Syria either under Azad or anybody else. USA would not
even consider leaving Syria or West Asia for good because there is nothing that
could force it to leave the region alone.
More than 6 year-old conflict in
Syria that’s killed at least 400,000 people and generated millions of refugees
has entered a new phase; with diplomacy taking center stage as fighting
subsides. Islamic State has been driven out of its main strongholds, and the two
rival blocs that have been combating the jihadists -- the Assad-Russia-Iran
alliance, and a coalition headed by the USA-- are now arguing over the shape of
a postwar settlement.
Assad's departure from power is
supposed to be a stated US objective, even if the Trump government is more
flexible than its Obama government predecessors in how its provisions are
implemented. However, in fact, USA does not want either to kill or remove Assad
form power but only wants to destabilize that Arab nation as part of their Arab
Spring agenda.
Limiting or even reversing Russian
influence in the Middle East continues to be the operative principles guiding
the formation of US foreign policy.
Russia’s intervention in the Syrian
war in 2015 on the side of Bashar al-Assad has been marred by accusations its
Air Force deliberately targeted aid convoys and civilian infrastructure.
Donald Trump’s informal meetings with
Vladimir Putin on November 11 on the sidelines of the recent APEC summit in
Vietnam may have produced a warm attitude between the two leaders, but some
fundamental policy differences between them are hard to overlook. Though the
bilateral diplomatic effort has elicited optimism from officials, it does not
represent any promising step forward to save tremendous numbers of lives in
Syria which has been under siege from foreign forces.
In fact their statement does not
provide a workable roadmap for effective American-Russian collaboration and
coordination Putin’s spokesman characterized it that it "does not require
comments" and is not open to multiple interpretations. The latest
statement — another in a long list that have been hailed as groundbreaking
efforts to end the fighting in Syria — is really not going to make a difference
this time around.
On the one hand, one gets the
impression that both super powers are trying stabilizing Syria but on the
other, both are destabilizing the Arab nation as per their own plans without
any conflicts. However, just as with the agreements reached over Syria during
the last year of the Obama government, this latest statement is open to
multiple interpretations.
Both sides continue to use vague
language and terms deliberately left undefined to accommodate the still
considerable divergences between Washington and Moscow over Syria's future.
While both sides agree on the necessity of fighting ISIS, Moscow has a much
broader definition of who constitutes "associates" of ISIS — in order
to encompass some of the groups that the United States views as legitimate
opposition to the Assad regime. Both sides concur foreign fighters should
leave, but are the Iranian Al-Quds units of the Revolutionary Guard or
Hezbollah combatants permitted to remain at the invitation of the government in
Damascus?
The statement heralds an imminent
shift in the trajectory of US-Russia relations. The statement builds on
previous modest steps that Russia and the USA have achieved: the use of
de-escalation zones and limited cease-fires to tap down fighting; the
continuation of deconfliction efforts to ensure that USA-Russian-backed forces
don’t engage in direct clashes; the agreement to work with Jordan to stabilize
southern Syria and maintain tenuous truces between pro- and anti-regime forces;
and the ostensible support for the complete destruction of the Islamic State and
getting a post-conflict political reconciliation process underway.
It’s only the Geneva talks that can
lead to a sustainable settlement, the US officials said. A separate Russian-led
process is pointless unless it contributes to that goal, and looks instead like
a quick-fix arrangement to leave Assad in power and get someone else to foot
the bill for reconstruction, they argued.
The flaw in that approach, the White
House contends, is that Assad lacks the means to control the territory that’s
nominally back under his control, while his main allies can’t afford to pick up
a bill for reconstruction that may total several hundred billion dollars. Syria
under Assad remains cut off from the world economy and subject to sanctions by
the UN, USA and European Union. America and its EU allies are in agreement that
there shouldn’t be any international funding for rebuilding in the
Assad-controlled part of Syria, the officials said.
The question of Assad’s future has
overshadowed all other sticking points in the Syrian talks, and has already
caused a breakdown at the latest round in Geneva. The USA and its European and
Arab partners have spent years insisting on his departure. Yet as Russian
support swung the war in the Syrian president’s favor, the ‘Assad-must-go’ coalition
was left without any obvious means of making that happen.
Moreover, while Russia keeps open the
possibility that Assad could be re-elected as president of a post-war Syria,
the United States finds it inconceivable that, in any free and fair election,
Assad could win a majority of the ballots cast.
Also, the statement never mentions
the "Syria National Dialogue Conference" that Moscow has now
postponed until next month. The conference represents the Kremlin's efforts,
along with its partners in the Middle East, to define the
"acceptable" members of the Syrian political constellation who could
be brought into some sort of power-sharing agreement.
At the same time, some of those who
will not be invited to or would not take part in the planned conference in
Sochi are precisely the political forces that the United States hopes would
play a leading role in a post-war Syria.
Meanwhile, although Trump may be
prepared to accept a cooperative role for Russia in charting Syria's future, he
has almost no political support for this position in the USA — either within
his own national security establishment or from Congress.
The USA will not passively "sign
on" to decisions on Syria reached largely by the trilateral dialogue by
Russia-Iran-Turkey— yet Russia, in turn, is not going to yield the gains that
its air power has won for the Assad regime on the battlefield. The joint
statement is important because it recognizes the crucial task of preventing any
sort of clash between Moscow and Washington in Syria. It sends a clear message
to the military establishments of both countries to take the steps necessary to
avoid any accidents.
Last week, Israel carried out an air
strike on a military base near Damascus. USA asks Israel to intervene and kill
some Syrians on its behalf, ostensibly to help push back against Iranian
influence. The US officials said it’s a priority to stop Iran and its proxies
from entrenching in Syria and posing a threat to American allies, though they
wouldn’t go into detail about how that can be achieved. Topping that list is
Israel, which says it’s ready to take military action of its own to combat
Iran’s growing clout in the neighboring country., according to Arab media.
NATO-Russia relations deteriorated in
2014 when the alliance decided to suspend cooperation with Moscow over the
Ukrainian crisis that was triggered by the coup in Kiev.
Meanwhile, number of NATO troops near
Russian borders tripled Since 2012: Russia
Russian Defense Minister Sergei
Shoigu said on 22 December that NATO has doubled the number of its military
drills since 2012 in the vicinity of Russia's borders, adding that Moscow is
scrutinizing the exercises. Sergei said that the US missile defense
system in Europe has been brought to the level of "initial operational
readiness." The number of the bloc's servicemen deployed near Russian
borders has grown from 10 to 40 thousand in three years, he added. While the
bloc conducted 282 military exercises near Russia's borders in 2014, in 2017
the number of drills grew to 548. He also said that the NATO member-states have
intensified their surveillance operations near Russia. "We resolutely
suppress any attempts to violate the Russian air and sea borders," the
Minister of Defense added.
Shoigu has added that the Russian
military is determined to keep the pace of modernizing hardware and acquiring
new equipment next year. The armed forces will receive 10 S-400 missile systems
and put in service 11 Yars missile systems. "The share of modern weapons in
the Russian army should grow to 61 percent by the end of 2018, including 82
percent in the strategic nuclear forces, 46 percent in the land forces, 74
percent in the aerospace forces, 55 percent in the navy."
Its latest effort backfired last
month when Russia’s Defense Ministry attached video game footage as
“irrefutable evidence” of its claims. “According to space and other types of
surveillance data, there are militant units inside a US base in Tanf, Syria.
They are, in fact, training there,” General Valery Gerasimov, Chief of the
General Staff of Russia's Armed Forces, said in an interview with the
Komsomolskaya Pravda tabloid.
ISIS is a terrorist organization
banned in Russia. Gerasimov cited a BBC report about a secret US-led coalition
deal to let hundreds of Islamic State (ISIS) fighters escape their former
stronghold of Raqqa in October. He estimated around 350 of these fighters were
in the Tanf base in southern Syria and 750 more at another base in a
Kurdish-held region in the northeast. “They are de-facto IS. But, after they
are worked on, they change colors and rename themselves the ‘New Syrian Army,’
or otherwise,” Gerasimov said. The USA has not yet responded to Russia’s latest
accusations.
Meanwhile, President Vladimir Putin
signed an agreement with Syria which will give the Russian military access to
an airbase on the Mediterranean for another half a century. According to the
document published on the official government website, Russia will continue to
lease the Khmeimim Air Base, in the Latakia province, until at least 2066. The
Syrian government conceded to lend the base in Latakia province free of charge.
Hosting the leaders of Iran and
Turkey at the Black Sea resort of Sochi last month, Russian President Vladimir
Putin declared there’s a “real chance” to end the war, saying “the militants in
Syria have been dealt a decisive blow.” Russia’s intervention in the war two
years ago turned the tide of the conflict in Assad’s favor.
Putin plans to invite all Syrian
factions to a congress in Sochi early next year. Meanwhile, United
Nations-brokered talks in Geneva -- which have been underway since the civil
war’s early years, though they’ve produced few results -- resumed last week.
The Syrian conflict is likely to drag
on and could reignite into full-scale civil war as long as President Bashar
al-Assad remains in power, despite efforts by Russia to paint the conflict as
winding down, according to White House officials. The Syrian faction including
America’s Kurdish allies controls the largest amount of territory, besides
Assad’s government.
The Syrian army is barely able to
reimpose authority on territory it has recaptured, even with military support
from Russia and Iran, while Assad’s allies can’t afford to rebuild the country.
As the war against Islamic State winds down, some US troops are set to stay on
to help the Kurds consolidate their gains.
Declarations of victory by Assad’s
backers are premature, three White House officials said in a briefing for
reporters. They spoke on condition of anonymity to share internal government
assessments of the conflict.
UNSC that can reign in USA and other
powers forcing them to mind their own business is silent and only promotes the
military interests of veto member states.
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