{"id":23021,"date":"2015-10-26T14:30:22","date_gmt":"2015-10-26T03:30:22","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=23021"},"modified":"2015-10-23T09:51:50","modified_gmt":"2015-10-22T22:51:50","slug":"letter-from-washington-russia-syria-and-americas-feeble-response","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/letter-from-washington-russia-syria-and-americas-feeble-response\/","title":{"rendered":"Letter from Washington: Russia, Syria and America\u2019s feeble response"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n For a president who wanted to leave the Middle East behind so that he could focus on other pressing issues\u2014such as the much-publicised \u2018rebalancing\u2019 to the Asia\u2013Pacific\u2014Barack Obama wasn\u2019t dealt the best of hands.<\/p>\n However, in the case of Syria, a country which has suffered horrendously for the last four years\u2014over 250,000 people have died, some 4 million have fled the country and over 7 million are internally displaced\u2014Washington has displayed an incredible lack of leadership and resolve, compounded with the execution of poor policy.<\/p>\n The turning point in Washington\u2019s approach to the Syrian problem was President Obama\u2019s failure to stand by its \u2018red line\u2019<\/a> when Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons against his own population last year. Empty threats simply encourage bullies. And Russia\u2019s Putin rose to the occasion.<\/p>\n Notwithstanding the fact that President Obama declared in his address to the UN<\/a> last month that the use of force to resolve international disputes was pass\u00e9, <\/em>President Putin, smelling weakness and an opportunity to reassert himself on the international scene, has used naked military force to protect Russia\u2019s interests in Syria.<\/p>\n This has been a profound game-changer which will significantly delay a political resolution of the Syrian crisis. But more importantly, Washington\u2019s lack of appropriate response to this brute Russian action will further undermine the US\u2019 credibility as a superpower in the Middle East and beyond.<\/p>\n While Putin\u2019s military move into Syria could become Russia\u2019s quagmire<\/a>, as the Obama administration has already predicted, in the short-term, this is a big win for Russia.<\/p>\n First, by militarily dealing himself into the Syrian theatre, Putin has broken his international isolation, following his on-going Ukraine adventure and annexation of Crimea. The international community will have no choice but have to take into account his demands at the negotiating table whenever that time comes.<\/p>\n Second, Russia\u2019s sudden military entry into Syria confirms, along with its participation in the P5 + 1 nuclear negotiations with Iran, that Moscow has returned to the Middle East after a long absence. In addition to being allied with Iran, Russia is flirting with Egypt, warming up to Iraq and sending feelers to Saudi Arabia.<\/p>\n Third, Putin\u2019s deployment of assets<\/a> confirms that Russia won\u2019t hesitate to commit military resources to protect its interests, notably the survival of the Assad regime.<\/p>\n From Moscow\u2019s point of view this is critical because the Baath government in Damascus, with which it has had a strategic relationship for well over 40 years, ensures that the naval facility at Tartus, Moscow\u2019s only toe hold in the Mediterranean, remains in friendly hands. Moreover, an Assad regime hardens somewhat Caucasia, Russia\u2019s soft underbelly and the gateway to its restive Muslim-majority region in the south. Reportedly, hundreds of Chechens have already joined the Islamic State (IS) as have almost two thousand Russians<\/a>.<\/p>\n The direct consequence of this Russian insertion of military assets has been to rescue the Assad regime from near collapse. And although Russia asserted that its direct involvement in the conflict was to fight IS, no one has bought this lie, especially after it became obvious that the overwhelming bombing targets by the Russian air force<\/a> have been the anti-Assad militias and US-armed rebel strongholds in the west of the country and not IS in the east. Accordingly, IS has made gains<\/a> where the anti-Assad forces have been degraded.<\/p>\n President Obama\u2019s response to Russia\u2019s insertion into Syria was to state on 60 Minutes<\/a> that the US wouldn\u2019t change its current policy. Secretary of State Kerry even suggested<\/a> that \u2018meaningful\u2019 Russian help could contribute to a political solution. Unfortunately, this Russian intervention comes in the wake of the $500 million fiasco of trying to build up a new rebel force of some 5,000 \u2018moderate\u2019 fighters who would fight IS. After almost one year, only a handful had been trained. Accordingly, the program has quietly been shelved<\/a> in favour of arming existing Kurdish and Arab forces.<\/p>\n Of course, the Obama administration\u2019s approach to Syria has been grist for his political opponents\u2019 mill\u2014Republicans and Democrats. The Republicans have been particularly scathing of Obama\u2019s approach to the issue, with Senator McCain calling the administration\u2019s strategy an \u2018abject failure\u2019.<\/a><\/p>\n Even Hillary Clinton, the Democrats\u2019 most likely nominee for the 2016 presidential race, has been critical of her former boss, advocating the establishment of safe havens and no fly zones<\/a>. This position is supported by a number of influential opinion-makers<\/a>, including Condoleezza Rice, former President Bush\u2019s Secretary of State, and Robert Gates, who served both presidents Bush and Obama as Secretary of Defense.<\/p>\n President Obama rejects these proposals completely. This is a mistake for four reasons.<\/p>\n First, those safe havens would provide protection to hundreds of thousands of people now suffering and in danger in Syria. Second, it would help stem the flow of refugees escaping Syria and overwhelming Europe\u2019s capacity to deal with this human tragedy. Third, it would send a message to Putin that he won\u2019t set the agenda in Syria.<\/p>\n Finally, it would send a message to Washington\u2019s allies and friends around the world, especially in the Asia\u2013Pacific region, that they can count on the US, if and when the going gets tough. Rest assured that other bullies lurking in that neighbourhood are no doubt also watching Washington\u2019s moves very closely indeed.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" For a president who wanted to leave the Middle East behind so that he could focus on other pressing issues\u2014such as the much-publicised \u2018rebalancing\u2019 to the Asia\u2013Pacific\u2014Barack Obama wasn\u2019t dealt the best of hands. However, …<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":89,"featured_media":23022,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mi_skip_tracking":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[1490,218,163,274,744],"class_list":["post-23021","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-general","tag-airstrikes","tag-middle-east","tag-russia","tag-syria","tag-vladimir-putin"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\n