Alphen, Netherlands. 5 February.
Two events took place yesterday that revealed the tragedy, the hopelessness,
and the sheer cynicism that is the war in Syria. In London donors pledged some
$10 million of further humanitarian support for the 4m Syrians displaced beyond
Syria’s borders. Whether or not wretched Syrians will ever see that money is a
moot point. Indeed, previous experience suggests there is every likelihood that having pledged funds many of the states represented in London yesterday will
simply not cough up. Indeed, the whole event had the feeling of the League of
Nations revisited, a council of despair, a grand side-show to the reality that
Western powers simply have no real idea how to bring about a political end to a
war that threatens to propel over 2m more asylum seekers and migrants towards Europe.
The second event revealed the
sheer cynicism of President Putin’s Moscow and his clear order of strategic
priorities. As the London conference met the putative ‘peace’ talks taking
place very tentatively at the UN in Geneva had to be ‘suspended’. The suspension
took place because even as the delegate were sitting down in the old League of
Nations building the Russians and their Syrian allies were launching a
punishing attack on Syria’s largest and once most beautiful city, Aleppo. It is
now clear that both Putin and Assad had used the preparations for the peace talks
as cover to build-up the Syrian Army, and to get the Russian Air Force in
position to unleash the latest and continuing barrage on Aleppo.
When the report came out in
London last month into the role the Russian state had played in the 2006 murder of
Alexander Litvinenko one of the arguments the British Government put forward to
justify its pusillanimous response was that Russia was a vital partner in
resolving the war in Syria. Surely, finally, hopefully, after yesterday’s
events, London and other European capitals must finally have woken up to the
stark reality; Russia is not is Syria to partner the West, but to confound it. Sadly, don’t bet on
it.
Russia is in Syria to bolster the
Assad regime at any cost and to ensure Moscow’s influence and prestige in the region
is bolstered as part of a new illiberal axis. Russia is in Syria to preserve both its air
and naval base to ensure Moscow can extend its diplomatic and military influence
across the Middle East and far across the Mediterranean. Russia is in Syria to humiliate
the West and by so doing demonstrate that it is better for states in the region
to be a friend of Russia and its satellites than the weak, vacillating,
incompetent West. Russia is in Syria to heap more pressure on a Europe that is unable to take even the most basic
action to defend its own borders.
Taken together yesterday’s two
events reveal the contemporary strategic character of European and
Russian leaders. Strangled by their own strategic political correctness, incapable of decisive leadership, with a United States otherwise
engaged in its presidential elections, 'Europe' wrings its hands by holding big
conferences that do little to move Syria towards peace. Yesterday’s London
conference whilst worthy smacked of impotent leaders talking impotently about
matters that whilst important simply avoid the real question; what must
be done not just to defeat IS but to stop the war in Syria which now threatens
to engulf the region?
Meanwhile, utterly cynical and determined to use every
event however tragic, and every device however deadly, President Putin’s Russia appears
to know no depths to which it will sink in its efforts to divide, distract, destabilise,
and damage the West, Europe in particular. Moreover, Russia's actions also suggest a further cynical Moscow gambit; for a time at least Russia is prepared to be in implicit league with Islamic State.
The Oxford English Dictionary
defines being ‘in league’, as “an agreement made for mutual protection or
assistance or prosecution of common interests, parties (whether states or
individuals) to such compact”. Russia is clearly in 'compact' with President
Assad against non-Islamist Syrian rebels. However, at least until Moscow has
successfully confounded Western plans to remove Assad from power it looks to
all intents and purposes that Russia may well also be in a tacit compact with IS. By its actions alone Moscow clearly believes confounding the West,
and the forced driving of more desperate people towards Europe, as being of
more importance to the Russian national interest than defeating IS.
There was one other event that
took place yesterday which should concentrate Western minds. The CIA announced
that it now estimates there are some 6500 IS fighters in Libya. Indeed, the
growing power of IS in North Africa could well prevent the stabilisation of Libya and thus help
propel yet more migrants towards Europe. Clearly, Russia sees such instability
on Europe’s southern flank as also being favourable to Moscow’s zero sum view of international politics. Why? Because
so long as European leaders are mired in the chaos of mass irregular migration from Europe's southern flank they will be sufficiently distracted to miss and/or ignore Moscow’s real strategy;
to re-establish a Russian sphere of influence over Europe’s eastern flank.
It is a tragic irony that the
putative Syrian peace talks are taking place in Geneva’s old League of Nations
building. It was in that very building that Western powers back in the 1920s
and 1930s tried and failed to assuage Tojo’s Japan, Mussolini’s Italy, and of
course, Hitler’s Nazis. And we all know what happened next…
Julian Lindley-French
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