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International News Title: Russia Just Blinked in Syria and It Isn’t an Accident Osama bin Laden, terrorist mastermind and, as it turned out, prophet. One of the many signature accomplishments of the Obama administration was inviting Russia to take a role in the war in Syria. If one were writing a John le Carre-style novel one could draw a straight line from our withdrawal from Iraq to the rise of ISIS to the Arab Spring to our attempt to overthrow Assad to the rise of ISIS to the increase of Iranian power to using the Russians as our intermediary with Iran to negotiate the now-defunct Iran nuclear deal to a Russian military presence in Syria. But as Irans power has grown in the region and it looks more and more intent upon creating a Shia empire stretching from Tehran to the Mediterranean, it has become an existential threat to Israel. Israel has struck at Iranian bases in Syria and the intermixing of Russian and Iranian assets has now become a liability. Two days ago, Israel told Russia that it would no longer confine its attacks to Iranian targets along the Syria-Israel frontier but would now target them throughout Syria. According to London-based Asharq al-Awsat, Israel has decided to expand its red lines in Syria and will no longer confine itself to the area near its southern border. Israel has been cited as the source of numerous air and missile strikes in the country on sites connected to Iran and its Lebanese terror proxy Hezbollah. Now Russia is trying to extract its Iranian client/master (because the Russo-Iranian relationship has Russia both leading and being the toady to the Iranians) from a no-win predicament. Iran cant stay in southern Syria because they cant project the force necessary to either deter Israeli attacks or to defend their own forces. They cant leave, because to be seen as being booted out by the Jews would destroy the aura of invincibility and inevitability that Iran has tried to develop around its march to the sea. The change in Russias position has become clearer since Israels May 10 military clash with Iran in Syria and amid Moscows concerns that further Israeli moves would threaten the stability of Syrian President Bashar Assads regime. Russia recently renewed efforts to try to get the United States involved in agreements that would stabilize Syria. The Russians might be willing to remove the Iranians from the Israeli border, though not necessarily remove the forces linked to them from the whole country. Russia, too, is dealing with a public relations problem. It is trying to link a withdrawal of Iranian forces from the Syrian border with a withdrawal of US forces around al-Tanfthis was the location where Russian mercenaries got the snot beat out of them by US forces back in February. Without some sort of face-saving deal, Russian prestige will suffer and the Iranians will start thinking the Russians are looking for an exit. And they are. What had started out as a venture to procure a Mediterranean port and supporting logistics facilities and airbases to project Russian naval power into the Eastern Med has become an oozing ulcer, costing Russia cash and lives. None of this just happened.Leon Hadar has an interesting article in The National Interest called Trumps Strategy for the Middle East Is Working. In it he juxtaposes the way Middle East crises used to work and the deft change of calculus made by Trump (Im using Trump as a metaphor for his administration because guys like Mattis and Bolton and Pompeo have watched the Middle East for a while). Doing nothing, U.S. officials were warned, could risk a full-blown regional war, outside intervention by global adversaries, oil embargoes, the collapse of pro-American Arab regimes, the survival of Israel, and perhaps even the end of the world as we know it. As the rest of the nations international and domestic problems would be placed on the policy backburner, the U.S. president would make urgent phone calls to Middle Eastern leaders, as he and the rest of Washington would consider sending the Marines, dispatching American envoys to the Middle East, launching another peace process and perhaps even convening another peace conference. This kind of American diplomatic hyperactivity in the Middle East would be followed by the deployment of U.S. peacekeeping troops and the provision of huge financial assistance packages, with the Americans being drawn into never-ending efforts to resolve unresolvable conflicts, continuing to raise the costs of U.S. intervention in the Middle East. And you could always count on Americas European allies, in another demonstration of their free-riding on American power, to press the United States to do something and then criticize Washingtons policies as a way of pandering to the Middle Easterners (See, we arent as pro-Israeli as the Americans). Now, it is the Russians in that position. Though I think Hadar goes to obscene lengths to not criticize the Obama administrationthey are the ones that turned a routine Syrian massacre of political opponents into a regional war complete with genocide and ethnic cleansingwhat has happened is completely right: It is interesting to note that many officials and pundits in Washington continue to operate under the belief that what happens or would happen in the Middle East, including the prospects for a military confrontation between Iran and Israel, depends on what the United States says and does. Hence, the notion that the U.S. decision to withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal accelerated the military tensions between the Iranians and Israelis (because the Iranians were supposedly humiliated and the Israelis were emboldened by Trumps abrogation of the 2015 accord.) In fact, both sides are being driven by other considerations (Irans interest in exerting its influence in the region; Israels concerns over Iranian military presence across its border with Syria), and nothing that Washington would do is going to change their respective strategic calculations, short of deploying U.S. troops to Syria. But this time around, the global actor that needs to be worried about the possibility of a military confrontation between Iran and Israel in Syria is Russia that recognizes that that could threaten its evolving Pax Russiana in the Levant. President Putin would, therefore, need to use Russias military and diplomatic power, including his close personal ties with the Israeli and Iranian leader, to prevent that from happening. As the Americans learned in the past, that kind of diplomacy ends up being the target of criticism by all the major players, as Putin discovers that he has no choice but to bribe the Iranians and the Israelis, without receiving any gratitude from either side. If Putin succeeds in his efforts, and convinces the Iranians and the Israelis to adhere to a set of rules of engagement in Syria. he would win a few diplomatic brownie points for averting an Iran-Israel war. If he fails, Russia and not the United States would be blamed the ensuing mess this time, allowing the Trump Administration to pick up the pieces, if it so desires. And there is more: That is not necessarily the way President Trump sees it. He is counting on the Saudis and the Israelis, joined by Egypt, Jordan and the other Arab Gulf states to stand-up to the Iranians, by using their enormous military power to mention the high financial resources at their disposal, with the United States providing indirect intelligence and military assistance, and ready to intervene only as the balancer of last resort. I think Hadar misses a larger point here. This forcing of the Arab states and Israel into an alliance, and this was a stated objective of Trump in his visit to Saudi Arabiaa visit that was overshadowed in some quarters by his participation in a sword dance and Toby Keith performing to an all-male audiencehas defanged the Palestinians. They are seeing that no one really cares about them and while the Arab states are willing to say pleasing things, the Palestinian issue is a secondary concern to states fighting for their very lives against Iran. This is a generational, if not permanent, re-ordering of the Middle East. And, amazingly, this is serving to reduce Germanys ability to call the shots for the EU on how it relates to Iran. In sixteen months the Trump administration has beaten ISIS to rags, forced Israel and Saudi Arabia into a virtual alliance, and has the Russians looking for the exit. This is not a bad start. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 4.
#1. To: Tooconservative (#0)
I see in this just a lot of patriotic flag-waving hot air. Instead of championing right over wrong, it champions the might of one country over another, completely ignoring what's best & just for the people in the region. Iran and Russia wanting to dominate the region is bad, while the USA and Israel wanting to dominate the region is good. And that in a country where Iran and Russia are welcome by the Syrian government, and where both the USA Israel are expressly NOT welcome. Screw the rule of law. Hooray for the USA. We're the champions because we can kick around other countries who (maybe) can't kick back. Aren't we the greatest country in the world? Don't you wish you were on our team? That's the sentiment I read here.
We were not uniformly unwelcome, not at first. Back then, our presence helped Assad. We made clear that any use of chem weapons would draw a reprisal. The article is correct. The U.S. and Israel will not stand down from confronting Iran and demanding that it exit before the situation in Syria is considered resolved. Trump doesn't want to stay at all. Israel knows that its somewhat fragile alliance with the Saudis could fall apart if they are too aggressive in Syria, even against Iran. If Iran and Hezbollah withdraw, Israel will stand down and Trump will pull our troops back to the Iraqi border. Then Russia can declare victory in preserving its ally, Assad, and hightail it for Moscow while the getting is good. Russia knows that America, Israel and the Sunni Gulf sheiks could flood the insurgents with weapons to make the Russians' lives unbearable. Trump doesn't want to let Syria turn into his Vietnam but Putin doesn't want Syria to turn into his Afghanistan. There will be no peace until Iran and Hezbollah get out of Syria. It's just that simple.
#7. To: Tooconservative (#4)
I disagree. Israel and Saudi Arabia want Assad gone. That was the whole point of the civil war in the first place. Saudi Arabia is Sunni and Iran Shiite and Saudi Arabia doesn't want Iran to have an ally in Assad. So they've wanted Assad gone from the get go. And end to the civil war with Assad remaining in power won't change that. And Isreal simply wants to isolate Iran as much as possible and, as usual, wants all countries bordering them, plus Iran, to be disarmed. I don't think "stand down" is in the Israeli vocabulary.
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