The
military campaign against Islamic State is being reduced to a vicious sideshow
as the Syrian civil war enters a new make-or-break phase.Russian military
involvement has been a game-changer – saving Bashar
al-Assad’s forces from near collapse, blatantly attacking western-backed
opposition forces, and supplying T-90 tanks to
Assad’s army closing in on Aleppo.
For the western allies, time is running out.
The agenda is being shaped by Russia, Assad and Iran, which have formed a
de facto alliance to maintain the old Syria and – despite the supposed ceasefire agreed by
the big powers in Munich last Friday – are not dissuaded by the
death and destruction involved.
The
Syrian Centre for Policy Research estimates that Syrian war deaths are now more
than 400,000. Over half Syria’s 22 million citizens are internal or
international refugees. The civil war, not the Isis phenomenon, is responsible
for about 90% of these deaths and displacements, and the attacks of Assad
forces are believed to be responsible for over three-quarters of them. Today
came news of air
strikes on a Médecins Sans Frontières hospital
that the organisation blamed on Syrian government or Russian forces.
The accord in Munich was to impose a “cessation of hostilities” on the
warring parties within a week. The Russians warned darkly that a third world
war would be inevitable if nothing was done. The Saudis warned, less
credibly, that they were ready to intervene on the ground in
Syria.
But in reality the Russians think they need just a few more weeks to
wipe out the anti-Assad opposition, and the ceasefire they urge cannot take
effect soon enough to prevent that. The Saudis, more concerned with their
failing war in Yemen, know they cannot tip the balance against the
Russia-Assad-Iran axis.
The US, the Europeans and the UN can only hope that
they can this week firm up ceasefire arrangements – at least to create a
process that might help them navigate out of the mess. The trick will be to
convince the Russians that they have more to gain from an immediate ceasefire
than plunging forward.
The alternative would be to accept that Assad and his backers in Moscow
and Tehran will emerge as winners from this civil war – and then deal with Isis
in Syria, while western forces crush the movement in Iraq and elsewhere. But
this would be paying a high political price. Western policy across the Middle
East, and elsewhere, would be severely undermined, and an Assad victory would
be unlikely to bring even a sullen peace to Syria.
Britain’s involvement in the region to counter the Isis
phenomenon in 2014 was understandable and not necessarily
wrong. David Cameron is right to say the campaign against Isis is making
progress.
For all its barbaric videos and apocalyptic boasting the group is under
pressure. There have been no easy victories since it moved into undefended
Palmyra in May last year. It is losing ground to
Kurdish forces in Iraq and Syria. The battle of Mosul,
the centre of Isis in Iraq, is not far away. It is being dislodged from its
siege of Deir ez-Zor in
Syria, and Kurdish forces are moving closer to the Isis “capital” in Raqqa. The
economic infrastructure that Isis has created is being dismantled: last month
the group halved the salaries of
its mujahideen, and it is becoming paranoid about
spies and traitors.
But
none of this means that Isis will be decisively beaten any time soon. Until
someone other than badly supplied Kurdish forces is prepared to go toe-to-toe
against Isis fighters, the group will retain control over some territory,
people, hostages and slaves, alongside grudging, residual loyalty from Sunnis
in the region.
Even if Isis is being contained by western military action and
undermined by its own weaknesses, we are now faced by some stark realities.
First, Isis is not the crisis. It is a symptom of a civil war within
Islam in the Middle East, between Shias and Sunnis, and between mainstream and
extremist Sunni sympathies.
Second, the conflict of which Isis is only a symptom is the struggle
between Iran and Saudi Arabia for
dominance. It may be defined by religion, but this struggle is essentially
about the unstoppable political ambitions of the two most significant regional
powers.
Third,
Barack Obama’s uncertain international leadership and the reappearance of Russia as
a big player in the region has made it, once again, an arena for proxy wars.
The Russians genuinely fear the contagion of Middle Eastern terrorism within
their own Muslim communities and would rather have nasty governments than nasty
non-state groups to deal with. The US genuinely fears that its ability to
stabilise the region and maintain its credibility with regional allies the
world over will be fatally weakened if it walks away.
As a junior partner to the US, Britain can live with the containment of
Isis and deal with the terrorist challenges as they arise. But an uncontrolled
flow of refugees into Europe is
a different problem, as is the humanitarian crisis. Britain could make common
political cause with Germany to push for a more coherent EU approach on
refugees, while pressing its partners in the Gulf to do far, far more.
Militarily,
the Saudi threat issued at Munich has to be made credible. If a ceasefire does
not materialise soon, the Russians, Iranians and Assad himself have no
incentives to quit while they are ahead. Only the possibility of Arab ground
forces, from Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the UAE, heavily backed by western
logistics and intelligence, air power and technical specialists, could force
Assad and his backers to make a strategic choice in favour of cessation. Only
the US could make that work for the Saudis and others – and only Britain could
bring along other significant European allies.
This would undoubtedly be a dangerous escalation of the conflict. But in
the absence of a genuine ceasefire, the conflict is destined to escalate in any
case as Russian forces and Iranian militias put a vengeful Assad back in
control of a broken country. If that has the eventual effect of letting him
deal with Isis in Raqqa and Deir ez-Zor it will leave the west with much bigger
strategic problems across the region as a whole. Fifteen years ago these would
not have seemed such difficult choices. But after Iraq and Afghanistan they
look like dismal options.
The west can choose a dangerous push for a settlement now, or a tepid
continuation of a policy that promises a longer war and strategic failure in
the region – while hundreds of thousands of desperate people wait at
Europe’s doorstep.
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