Alphen, Netherlands. 3 August.
August always fills me with geopolitical foreboding. With the democracies on
vacation it is this month that is traditionally the moment for dirty
geopolitics. This August is doubly concerning because it coincides with the
Brazil Olympics. True to form our old friend Vladimir Putin is using both to
ruthlessly pursue his strategic ends in Syria. Remember the Beijing Olympics
back in 2008 when he invaded Georgia? This August he is applying the same
tactics against Aleppo that he used against Grozny during the two Chechen Wars.
The shooting down of a Russian Air Force helicopter some 8 km from where a
barrel bomb had just been dropped is eerily reminiscent of the destruction of
Grozny. As is the offer to ‘assist’ with humanitarian efforts, but only so long
as such efforts are under the complete control of both Damascus and Moscow.
What is the West doing about it? Next
to nothing. Limited coalition raids are being mounted against ISIS targets, but
nothing to resolve the situation in Syria. There was an interesting piece in
the British digital newspaper The
Independent last week by Dutch Foreign Minister Bert Koenders. Sad to say
it was all too typical of the ‘something must be done, but not too much, and
not by me’ nonsense beloved of Europe’s handwringing, strategically-inept
political elite.
Entitled Aleppo must not become synonymous with global inaction the title
was carefully worded, particularly the use of the phrase, ‘global inaction’. Of
course, Koenders should really have said ‘Western inaction’ or to be more
precise ‘European inaction’. Why? Because as a foreign minister he knows all
too well that without UN Security Council agreement ‘global’ action is a
non-starter. Yes, the piece likens Aleppo to Srebrenica and the dark chapter in
UN and Dutch peacekeeping when Dutchbat
permitted the Bosnian Serbs to murder thousands of Bosnian Muslims. Yes, Koenders
makes the valid point that most Syrians want to live neither under the
murderous Caliphate nor under the equally murderous Assad regime, and their
cynical Russian and Iranian backers who see the Syrian people as no more than
very small pawns in a great geopolitical game.
What he suggests as a solution is
both clever and disingenuous. Koenders calls for a stepped up campaign against
ISIS and a much greater humanitarian effort. However, what he wilfully fails to
point out in the piece is that in Syria humanitarian action cannot be effective
without strategic action. In other words, any alleviation of suffering and/or
defeat of ISIS is not possible without either confronting Russia and removing
Assad, or accommodating Russia and talking to Assad. It is a stark choice that
has been obvious for some time but which Koenders and his fellow leaders have
pretended they need not make.
Confronting Russia and Assad at
this stage would require the West to threaten a major military land, sea intervention,
involving both Western and Arab forces. That is not going to happen. Turkey is
now close to being a failed state and no longer a sound base from which to
launch such an assault. President Obama is a lame duck president who can at
best order a few air strikes against ISIS in Libya. Europe has become strategic
prey and abandoned all pretence of engaging danger at distance and simply waits
these days for danger to come to Europe, mitigate the effects, and/or pretend
no danger exists.
Thus, there is only the
alternative? If the West/Europe is not prepared to act against Assad and Putin
it must talk to Assad and Putin if there is to be any chance of an alleviation
of the suffering of the Syrian people. There are many factors that have led
Syria to this point but Western, in particular European, weakness is a major
factor. Sadly, it is weakness typified by a European political elite of which
Koenders is a part.
So, as America blusters the
summer away in what is perhaps the worst US general election in American history,
and Europe slumbers on what is now a permanent strategic vacation Assad and
Putin will continue to act with impunity. No amount of hand-wringing articles
by impotent foreign ministers from small European states who have decimated
their own ability to influence big, dangerous events will matter a jot.
Let me be clear; Syria is the new
Chechnya and Aleppo is the new Grozny. In the two Chechen wars Putin believed
that the only way to break the secessionist movement was to destroy Grozny.
Assad, with Russian backing, is now determined to wipe Aleppo out. And, like
Chechnya, both Assad and Putin will give the West just enough excuse to turn
away and do nothing.
The consequences? Many thousands
more will die and in October at the latest President Erdogan of Turkey will
abrogate the March 2016 deal with the EU and open the floodgates to hundreds of
thousands of refugees seeking to escape to Europe. Then, Europe will again see
the folly of being too weak to stop what is happening in Syria.
Still, there is always the
Olympics to watch.
Julian Lindley-French
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