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International News Title: HOW AMERICA SHOULD RESPOND TO RUSSIA’S SYRIA VENTURE: A GUIDE To respond to Russias military campaign in Syria, first, we have to be realistic about the facts on the ground. Iraq and Syria, for all practical purposes, are failed states. There is no chance that either Iraq or Syria will ever be reconstituted as mandated by the Sykes-Picot Agreement of 1916, which basically divided up control or influence over the Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire between France and England. Since the combined remaining military forces of Hezbollah, the Iranian Quds Force and Syrias President Bashar al-Assad have not been sufficient to assure Assads survival, Russias deployment of its air and marine ground forces to an airbase at Latakia, Syria should have come as no surprise. The preparations for this deployment clearly have gone on for some time. Our intelligence community certainly must have detected these preparations as well as the pre-deployment of surface-to-air missile batteries to the Latakia airbase about two months ago. Russian President Vladimir Putins objectives are very clear. Notwithstanding his statements that his main objective is to defeat the Islamic State, he intends to support the retention of Syrian President Assad in power at all costs. In that sense, he will confront all the Sunni militias, including Jabhat al-Nusra, Ahrar al-Sham, as well as ISIS, which threaten the Assad regime. The announcement by Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi that Iraq intends to share intelligence with Syria and Russia, plus his statement that he would welcome Russian air strikes against ISIS in Iraq, clearly adds a new dimension to Russias involvement. Should Putin expand Russian involvement into Iraq, it would certainly provide some balance to the theory of an emerging Damascus-Baghdad-Beirut-Tehran-Moscow axis. Another complicating factor is the deployment of the Russian cruiser, Moskva, armed with 64 advanced S-300 surface-to-air missiles. This is one of Russias most advanced air defense systems and may indicate that Russia is taking over air defense responsibilities for Syria. The survival of both the Syrian and Iraqi regimes are key elements in the unwritten plan for Iranian regional hegemony. However, President Obamas apparent complicity with the Russian deployment of military forces and suggestion that they could be even a stabilizing factor fits right in with his leading from behind strategy. Our enemies clearly view this strategy as weakness and will continue to exploit the power vacuum created by our lack of leadership. It will provide further substance to a Tehran-Baghdad- Beirut-Damascus-Moscow axis for Iranian regional dominance. Such a strategy certainly will not be welcomed by Saudi Arabia, the Gulf States, UAE, Jordan, or for that matter, our ally Israel. Clearly, Sunni opposition to Shiite domination will ensure that a chaotic situation will remain for the foreseeable future. Other complicating factors will be how long Israel decides to wait before launching a strike to destroy Irans key nuclear infrastructure, and how long it will be before Saudi Arabia and its Sunni allies obtain their own nuclear weapons capability. In the current complicated and dangerous situation, what is the most sensible course for the U.S. to follow to protect our interests and regional allies, given our lack of leadership, which is clearly evident? We have nothing to gain by further involving U.S. forces in what should be recognized as failed states Syria and Iraq. In this sense, our principal objectives remain the prevention of Iran from achieving a nuclear weapons capability and the removal of the corrupt jihadist Iranian theocracy. Lets not forget, the removal of Bashar al-Assad from Syria is a principal objective pushed by the Muslim Brotherhood and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey. Leaders in the Middle East will follow the strong horse. With President Obamas leading from behind strategy, Putin has become the strong horse! There have been recent calls for the establishment of a no-fly zone over so-called moderate rebel areas. The window for such action was closed once Russia completed its military force deployment and commenced air strikes. It makes no sense to create a situation that elevates this classic Sunni-Shiite conflict into a potential direct U.S.-Russian conflict. With our current weak and inept leadership, the current chaotic situation needs to be kept at the lowest possible conflict level. Therefore, steps that the United Stated could take that would require no further commitment of U.S forces, but would complicate Russias and Irans ability to achieve their objectives, would be the following: 1. To counter recent Russian and Chinese naval deployments off Syria, we should deploy a Carrier Strike Group to the Eastern Mediterranean. This would send a very positive signal to our NATO allies as well as to Egypt and Israel. The above actions are what we should be doing to protect our interests in the region, as well as those of our allies. Such action would complicate and make it more costly for Russia and Iran to achieve their objectives and possibly prevent a nuclear arms race in this most unstable region. Poster Comment: Interesting analysis but flawed prescriptions. Kurdistan being the most blatant, it is a landlocked nation like Afghanistan, and thus our lines of supply to support them would be subject to the whim of other nations, who do not have the option of withdrawing from the region. Kurds should remember the Hmong people, another group of landlocked hill tribesmen who threw in their lot with us. It did not turn up too well for them, nor us for some of either, such as the families of the 6 people murdered by Chai Soua Vang after he trespassed on their land. The Kurds should do like we should do, and watch our enemies kill each other. Who knows what opportunities might present themselves as a result. In particular if things get real ugly between Russia and Turkey. And us for Ukraine, as an admiral I wonder if he has any idea how Red China got their aircraft carrier. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: nativist nationalist (#0)
We should have stayed out of the middle east 20 years ago.
We have no NATO allies. Our NATO allies are busy waving the white flag surrender to the flood of degenerate invading jihadist immigration. This is the same plan we are busily enginerring for ourselves. Welcoming us to join them in group massive group suicide does not make them allies. The serious question we should be asking ourselves is, "How did we become so God damned stupid."
Israel will wait until the end of time. They cannot GET TO Iran without flying over other countries: Jordan, then Saudi Arabia, then Kuwait - Syria and Iraq are out. Are the Saudis going to let the Israelis do that? And, of course, if the Lebanon-Syria-Iraq-Iran-Russia axis playsout, and the Russians are heavily involved in Iranian nuclear energy exploitation, the Russians may put advanced SAM sites around the Iranian facilities, which will mean that the Israelis will take losses, perhaps heavy losses. It's a bridge too far. Of course, if Iran becomes a Russian client state, Iranian nukes will cease to really be a threat because the Russians will control them.
The US military/industrial complex.
My God, man, haven't you been pating attention to what has been happening in our education system over the past 60 years? A dummy electorate gets the elected officials it deserves. потому что Бог хочет это тот путь
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