SUN 24 - 11 - 2024
Declarations
Date:
Feb 16, 2018
Source:
The Daily Star
United States stuck in Syria but appears to have no mission
Peter Apps| Reuters
In its five months in Syria last year, a single U.S. Marine Corps artillery battalion fired more shells than any equivalent American military unit since Vietnam.
The statistic – revealed this month by the Marine Corps Times – was another reminder of just how violent, out-of-control and complex the largely hidden war in Syria remains. With the support of Russia, Syrian President Bashar Assad has secured his position and is no longer fighting for his life. But the government in Damascus still lacks control of vast portions of the country, and a complex range of outside actors have found themselves increasingly dragged in.
Major Israeli airstrikes this weekend against Syrian forces, and Turkey’s ongoing offensive against Kurdish militants, were the latest indications of just how dangerously tensions have escalated. Both Israel and Turkey had largely avoided direct involvement over the nearly seven years the Syrian war has been raging. Now both have concluded that their interests require them to get their hands more seriously dirty.
For the United States, this is an awkward dynamic. Washington did everything it could to stay out of the war, now the bloodiest of the century. The speed and scope of Islamic State’s rise forced it to change course but, beyond defeating the militants, U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration does not seem to know what it wants to achieve.
The United States has helped the predominantly Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces to carve out large swaths of territory. But that is ground the SDF probably cannot hold against its Turkish and Syrian government enemies without significant U.S. backing. Now the United States is finding itself forced to engage, though it no longer has any clearly articulated mission of its own. Last Wednesday, the U.S.-led coalition struck pro-government forces that were moving on its allies in the SDF.
Reports suggested that as many as 100 may have been killed in the airstrikes, prompted by what the United States says was an unprovoked attack on nearby SDF forces and the handful of American troops accompanying them. If those figures are correct, that would make it the bloodiest engagement yet between Washington and the Syrian government.
Speaking the following day, U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis described the strike as a matter of self-defense. Democratic Virginia Senator Tim Kaine expressed concern, however, accusing the Trump administration of “deliberately stumbling” into a broader war in Syria, without consulting Congress.
That may be overstating it – not least because there does not seem much that is deliberate about U.S. actions. The issue for Washington, as for most of the other major players, is that having become embroiled in the war, it finds itself forced ever deeper simply to have any hope of maintaining influence.
Still, there’s no doubt the Pentagon has been keen to hold as much of a veil as possible over events in Syria. In December, it revealed it now had roughly 2,000 troops in the country – four times the figure previously released. The newer numbers, it said, were already a reduction from those early in the year, when the fight against Daesh (ISIS) still raged in earnest. Further withdrawals are planned, but whether they will be possible is a very different matter.
It’s a dynamic that is just as true for Russia and Iran, Assad’s primary backers, as well as a now increasingly involved Turkey.
Having come so close to losing power entirely, the Assad government clearly intends to retrieve every inch of territory it can. Having apparently concluded that a renewed coordination of external pressure for regime change is no longer likely, the Syrian military is once again quietly intensifying the ferocity of its onslaught on surviving rebel areas, including reported use of limited strikes with chemical weapons.
Such ongoing brutality might be enough to eventually crush some of the last rebel enclaves, primarily around Damascus. But it is unlikely to restore security to the country entirely. In December, Russian President Vladimir Putin effectively declared victory for Moscow’s military campaign in the region, pledging that some of its forces would return home.
Whether that will truly happen divides analysts. The prospect of a Russian withdrawal, however, has been accompanied by growing activity by forces linked to Tehran. Iran had been frustrated that Russia initially seized the agenda and is keen to retain territory and influence for itself and its primary regional proxy Hezbollah.
This, of course, has inevitably antagonized Israel. This weekend’s strikes were prompted after a suspected Iranian drone launched from Syrian territory penetrated Israeli airspace, and intensified after an Israeli F-16 jet crashed after apparently being hit by Syrian anti-aircraft fire.
Such largely accidental escalations are becoming ever easier, and could push U.S. forces in further confrontations, not just with Syria, but with Russia and NATO ally Turkey as well. It emerged this week that at least two Russian contractors may have been killed in the U.S. airstrikes the previous week, a sign of just how confused and risky things may get.
For the government of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the success of U.S.-backed Kurdish militias against Daesh risks becoming a very different kind of disaster. The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces and their U.S. allies now control an area roughly the size of Indiana.
The United States says its focus in Syria remains counterterrorism, but it has also pledged not to withdraw from key strongholds in the area the SDF currently controls, such as the strategic town of Manbij. Such promises – along with the creation of a border force in collaboration with the Syrian Kurdish authorities – have simply infuriated Turkey further.
In the weeks and months to come, Washington will have to work out what it realistically can achieve. Holding the terrain it currently occupies with the SDF is achievable, but could require further reinforcements in the face of Syrian and Turkish pressure. Working with Moscow, Tehran and Ankara on a peace deal might also have merit – but in the short term, all sides appear too focused on testing their strength militarily to seriously consider such negotiations.
Don’t expect things to get better anytime soon. Syria’s long nightmare isn’t over yet, and if anything, it will continue to become more complicated.
Peter Apps is Reuters global affairs columnist, and the executive director of the Project for the Study of the 21st Century. The opinions expressed here are his own.
A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on February 16, 2018, on page 7.
The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the Arab Network for the Study of Democracy
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