Is There a US-Russia Grand Bargain in Syria?
By Pepe
Escobar
Global Research, March 18, 2016
Sputnik 17 March 2016
Region: Middle East & North Africa, Russia and FSU
Theme: US NATO War Agenda
In-depth Report: SYRIA: NATO'S NEXT WAR?
It’s spy thriller stuff; no one is talking. But
there are indications Russia would not announce a partial withdrawal from Syria
right before the Geneva negotiations ramp up unless a grand bargain with
Washington had been struck.
Some sort of bargain is in play,
of which we still don’t know the details; that’s what the CIA itself is
basically saying through their multiple US Think Tankland mouthpieces. And
that’s the real meaning hidden under a carefully timed Barack Obama interview that, although inviting
suspension of disbelief, reads like a major policy change document.
Obama invests in proverbial whitewashing,
now admitting US intel did not specifically identify the Bashar al-Assad government as responsible
for the Ghouta chemical attack. And then there are nuggets, such
as Ukraine seen as not a vital interest of the US – something
that clashes head on with the Brzezinski doctrine. Or Saudi Arabia as freeloaders
of US foreign policy – something that provoked a fierce response
from former Osama bin Laden pal and Saudi intel supremo
Prince Turki.
Tradeoffs seem to be imminent. And that
would imply a power shift has taken place above Obama — who is
essentially a messenger, a paperboy. Still that does not mean that the
bellicose agendas of both the Pentagon and the CIA are now contained.
Russian intel cannot possibly trust a US
administration infested with warmongering neocon cells. Moreover, the
Brzezinski doctrine has failed – but it’s not dead. Part of the Brzezinski plan was to flood oil
markets with shut-in capacity in OPEC to destroy Russia.
That caused damage, but the second part,
which was to lure Russia into an war in Ukraine for which
Ukrainians were to be the cannon fodder in the name of “democracy”,
failed miserably. Then there was the wishful thinking that Syria would suck
Russia into a quagmire of Dubya in Iraq proportions –
but that also failed miserably with the current Russian time out.
The Kurdish factor
Convincing explanations for the (partial)
Russian withdrawal from Syria are readily available. What matters is that the Khmeimim
air base and the naval base in Tartus remain untouched. Key Russian
military advisers/trainers remain in place. Air raids, ballistic missile
launches from the Caspian or the Mediterranean – everything remains
operational. Russian air power continues to protect the forces deployed
by Damascus and Tehran.
As much as Russia may be downsizing, Iran
(and Hezbollah) are not. Tehran has trained and weaponized key paramilitary
forces – thousands of soldiers from Iraq and Afghanistan fighting
side by side with Hezbollah and the Syrian Arab Army (SAA). The SAA will keep
advancing and establishing facts on the ground.
As the Geneva negotiations pick up, those facts
are now relatively frozen. Which brings us to the key sticking point in Geneva – which has got to be included
in the possible grand bargain.
The grand bargain is based on the current
ceasefire (or “cessation of hostilities”) holding, which is far from a
given. Assuming all these positions hold, a federal Syria could emerge, what
could be dubbed Break Up Light.
Essentially, we would have three major
provinces: a Sunnistan, a Kurdistan and a Cosmopolistan.
Sunnistan would include Deir ez-Zor and Raqqa, assuming the whole province may be
extensively purged of ISIS/ISIL/Daesh.
Kurdistan would be in place all
along the Turkish border – something that would freak out Sultan
Erdogan to Kingdom Come.
And Cosmopolistan would unite the Alawi/
Christian/ Druze/ secular Sunni heart of Syria, or the Syria that works,
from Damascus up to Latakia and Aleppo.
Syrian Kurds are already busy spinning that a
federal Syria would be based on community spirit, not geographical
confines.
Ankara’s response, predictably, has been harsh;
any Kurdish federal system in northern Syria represents not only a red
line but an “existential threat” to Turkey. Ankara may be falling
under the illusion that Moscow, with its partial demobilizing, would
look the other way if Erdogan orders a military invasion of northern
Syria, as long as it does not touch Latakia province.
And yet, in the shadows, lurks the
possibility that Russian intel may be ready to strike a deal with the
Turkish military – with the corollary that a possible removal
of Sultan Erdogan would pave the way for the reestablishment
of the Russia-Turkey friendship, essential for Eurasia integration.
What the Syrian Kurds are planning has nothing
to do with separatism. Syrian Kurds are 2.2 million out of a
remaining Syrian population of roughly 18 million. Their cantons
across the Syria-Turkey border —Jazeera, Kobani and Afrin – have been
established since 2013. The YPG has already linked Jazeera
to Kobani, and is on their way to link them to Afrin. This,
in a nutshell, is Rojava province.
The Kurds across Rojava – heavily
influenced by concepts developed by imprisoned PKK leader Abdullah
Ocalan — are deep into consultations with Arabs and Christians
on how to implement federalism, privileging a horizontal self-ruled
model, a sort of anarchist-style confederation. It’s a fascinating
political vision that would even include the Kurdish communities in Damascus
and Aleppo.
Moscow – and that is absolutely key – supports
the Kurds. So they must be part of the Geneva negotiations. The Russian
long game is complex; not be strictly aligned either with Damascus or
with the discredited “opposition” supported and weaponized by Turkey
and the GCC. Team Obama, as usual, is on the
fence. There’s the “NATO ally” angle — but even Washington is losing
patience with Erdogan.
The geopolitical winners and losers
Only the proverbially clueless Western
corporate media was caught off-guard by Russia’s latest diplomatic coup
in Syria. Consistency has been the norm.
Russia has been consistently upgrading the
Russia-China strategic partnership. This has run in parallel to the
hybrid warfare in Ukraine (asymmetric operations mixed with economic,
political, military and technological support to the Donetsk and Lugansk
republics); even NATO officials with a decent IQ had to admit that
without Russian diplomacy there’s no solution to the war
in Donbass.
In Syria, Moscow accomplished the outstanding
feat of making Team Obama see the light beyond the fog
of neo-con-instilled war, leading to a solution involving Syria’s
chemical arsenal after Obama ensnared himself in his own red line.
Obama owes it to Putin and Lavrov, who literally saved him not only
from tremendous embarrassment but from yet another massive Middle
East quagmire.
The Russian objectives in Syria already
laid out in September 2015 have been fulfilled. Jihadists of all
strands are on the run – including, crucially, the over 2,000 born
in southern Caucasus republics. Damascus has been spared from regime
change a la Saddam or Gaddafi. Russia’s presence in the
Mediterranean is secure.
Russia will be closely monitoring the current
“cessation of hostilities”; and if the War Party decides to ramp up
“support” for ISIS/ISIL/Daesh or the “moderate rebel” front via any
shadow war move, Russia will be back in a flash. As for Sultan Erdogan,
he can brag what he wants about his “no-fly zone” pipe dream; but the fact
is the northwestern Syria-Turkish border is now fully protected by the
S-400 air defense system.
Moreover, the close collaboration of the
“4+1” coalition – Russia, Syria, Iran, Iraq, plus Hezbollah – has broken more ground
than a mere Russia-Shi’te alignment. It prefigures a major geopolitical
shift, where NATO is not the only game in town anymore, dictating
humanitarian imperialism; this “other” coalition could be seen as a
prefiguration of a future, key, global role for the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization.
As we stand, it may seem futile to talk
about winners and losers in the five-year-long Syrian tragedy –
especially with Syria destroyed by a vicious, imposed proxy war. But
facts on the ground point, geopolitically, to a major victory
for Russia, Iran and Syrian Kurds, and a major loss for Turkey and
the GCC petrodollar gang, especially considering the huge geo-energy interests
in play.
It’s always crucial to stress that Syria
is an energy war – with the “prize” being who will be better positioned
to supply Europe with natural gas; the proposed Iran-Iraq-Syria
pipeline, or the rival Qatar pipeline to Turkey that would imply a pliable
Damascus.
Other serious geopolitical losers include the
self-proclaimed humanitarianism of the UN and the EU. And most of all
the Pentagon and the CIA and their gaggle of weaponized “moderate rebels”.
It ain’t over till the last jihadi sings his Paradise song. Meanwhile,
“time out” Russia is watching.
The original source of this article is Sputnik
Copyright © Pepe Escobar, Sputnik, 2016
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