Showing posts with label Assad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Assad. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Assad in Russia - UPDATE



In his first foreign trip since Syria's civil war started in 2011, Syrian President Assad made an unannounced trip to Moscow to discuss Syria with Russian President Putin. Assad arrived in Moscow on Monday.

Since Russia began its direct military involvement in Syria on 30 September, it has effectively assumed the leadership of the pro-government coalition fighting the opposition and Islamist extremist groups in the country. Putin told Assad that Russia was ready to contribute to the fight and to a political settlement of the conflict that has raged for more than four years, the Kremlin said in a statement today. The statement did not say if the future of Assad was also discussed in the meeting, but interestingly Assad was not accompanied by his military or political teams during the visit.

Meanwhile, Turkey said on Monday that it would accept the Syrian leader’s staying in office for the first six months of a political transition, at the end of which he must go. (The New York Times, 21 October) 

UPDATE: Russia said on Tuesday that president Putin had telephone conversations over the course of the day with King Salman of Saudi Arabia, President Erdogan of Turkey, President Sisi of Egypt, and King Abdullah of Jordan to discuss his talks in Moscow with Syrian President Assad. (President of Russia/Twitter)   

Photo credit: Syrian President Bashar al-Assad meeting Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin; Tuesday 21 October 2015 (AFP)

Sunday, August 23, 2015

Another way to assess Iran's support of Assad

by Paul Iddon

Many detractors of former U.S. President Jimmy Carter lambaste him for leaving a former ally of the United States, the last Shah of Iran Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, fly around the world in exile without a country in which to take refuge. As Ronald Reagan put it during the 1980 presidential campaign, the Shah was a “stalwart ally” of the United States in that region and did its “bidding” there. Not assisting him or giving him refuge when he went into exile Reagan believed was “a blot” on America's record.

When the Shah died in 1981 former U.S. President Richard Nixon, a friend of the Shah, attended his funeral in Cairo wherein he called the Shah's treatment by the U.S. in exile as “shameful”, since it had “turned its back on one of its friends.” He too believed it had been a mistake not to assist that former American ally. After all, the Shah was an autocrat who he had helped elevate to be become a major regional power during his presidency as part of his administration's Nixon Doctrine.

Both these now deceased former American presidents voiced their view that even after the Shah had fallen the U.S. should not of snubbed him after he having had, in Reagan's words, “carried our load” for so long in the region they believed it was only right that they stand by their friend and ally until the end.

I'm often reminded of that episode of history when I see the lengths to which the current regime in Iran is going to prop-up the regime in Syria of President Bashar al-Assad. Yes, Assad is a strategically important ally and his fall would undermine Iran's strategic interests in the region vis-a-vis Hezbollah in Lebanon. But at the same time there is a much more personal component to the support Damascus has been receiving from Tehran given the fact that it was the Assad regime in Syria which had given decisive assistance to Iran during its brutal eight-year war with Saddam Hussein's Iraq.

The fostering of the Tehran-Damascus alliance came at a time when the help Iran got from the outside world during that war was extremely limited. Even after Iraq began to use chemical weapons on the battlefield. Many in the Iranian regimes Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) paramilitary still remember the help Syria gave them at a crucial and critical time for them shortly after their inception and see their support of the Assad regime today as one way to repay that support. Which is one reason why IRGC forces are also being sent to Syria to ensure Damascus and the remaining parts of the country Assad still retains remain under his control -- and possibly even to help him undertake an offensive aimed at retaking Idlib Province.

As the Shah had held the fort for Washington for so long in the Persian Gulf region so too did Assad for Iran in the Levant. And many in the establishment in Iran feel that another reason Assad should be supported when his rule is being directly threatened.

The comparison is obviously highly imperfect in many respects. After all, there have been weeks in Syria in the last four years whereby the Assad regime killed and tortured to death more people than the last Shah did during the entirety of his lengthy 38-year reign. Additionally, the last Shah did not authorize the bombing of his own country's cities like Assad did. And while the primary reason Tehran has sacrificed blood and treasure in keeping Assad in power is indeed strategic there is also that more personal component to this support which shouldn't be readily forgotten. Assad may well be a mass-murdering bastard, but it's worth remembering that from Tehran's point-of-view he is – as was Somoza to Washington once-upon-a-time – their bastard. 

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Zarif in Damascus

Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif arrived in Damascus today to discuss Iran’s four-point peace plan for seemingly an unending war now in its fifth year. As a sign of how troubling the situation has become, the Syrian air force carried airstrikes against the opposition in and around Damascus early Wednesday, just hours before Zarif’s plane landed at the airport. More than two dozen people were killed in today’s airstrikes. Zarif is scheduled to hold meetings with President Bashar al-Assad and other senior Syrian leaders.

Iran intervened militarily in the Syrian war from its beginning, deploying hundreds of Quds Force and IRGC officers and thousands of foreign Shia militias, including the Lebanese Hezbollah, to save the Assad’s regime. The Quds Force-led forces bear the brunt of fighting in Syria; especially in recent months after the anti-Assad forces scored significant victories against the Syrian Army. Zarif was in Beirut on Tuesday and met with Hezbollah’s secretary general Hassan Nasrallah.
Photo credit: Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif (second from left) arriving in Damascus; 12 Auguast 2015 (Twitter)

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Syrian FM in Tehran

Trilateral Meeting of Iran, Syria and Russia
Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem arrived in Tehran on Tuesday to attend a trilateral meeting with the Iranian officials and Russia’s visiting special envoy. Moualem’s visit comes at a critical time for the Assad regime. After more than four years of intense fighting, Syria is practically disintegrated, portioned into areas of influence of the regime, the Islamic State, and various opposition groups. Assad is mainly in control of Damascus-Latakia corridor, less than 20 percent of what used to be Syria, with the opposition closing in on Latakia.

Iran’s support of Assad’s regime has been a key factor for its survival. A coalition of Lebanese Hezbollah and Afghan, Pakistani and Iraqi Shia militias under the command of Iran’s Quds Force have taken up the fight against the opposition at a time when the morale in the Syrian army and the government’s national guard (the NDF) must be at its lowest after suffering a string of losses to the opposition this year. The Quds Force role in the fight, coupled with tens of billions of Iranian and Russian economic and military aid to Assad, has prevented the collapse of the regime.

Discussions in Tehran on the future of the war in Syria could be very intense. Assad does not have many options left and last week all but conceded to a de facto partition of the country when he said publicly that his army could not fight everywhere and needed to focus on areas of crucial importance to the regime. Iran and Russia, at least for now, seem to have doubled down on Assad's chances of defeating the opposition and will probably push Moualem to turn around the situation on the ground, the worst for Assad since the start of the civil war in 2011. 

File photo: Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem (IRNA)


Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Rebels Take Key Southern Base in Syria, Dealing Blow to Assad

A coalition of moderate rebel factions known as the Southern Front captured the Brigade 52 military base on Tuesday afternoon. Brigade 52 is the largest military installation in Daraa province, which borders Jordan, and is key to the defense of northern routes leading to Damascus. (The Washington Post, 9 June)

The loss of the base adds to a string of recent battlefield defeats for Assad’s regime. An Islamist coalition led by al-Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra has seized northwestern Idlib province. The Islamic State insurgents the ancient city of Palmyra and territory from government forces in the east in addition to territories held by other opposition forces. The regime has so far weathered the widening civil war because of military and financial support from Iran and Russia, but appears to be at its weakest point in the four-year-old conflict.

Today’s capture of Brigade 52 was a major victory for the moderate Southern Front. In April, it also captured the last border crossing between Syria and Jordan that was held by the Assad government. The umbrella group operates a military operations center in Amman and receives financial and military support from the Arab countries and backing from the West, the Post said.

Image credit: Southern Front logo: the Syrian independence flag flanked by an AK-47 on each side and the Arabic inscription, Al-Jabhat al-Jonubiya (Southern Front). Wikipedia.

Iran Spends Billions to Prop UP Assad – Report

Iran is spending billions of dollars a year to prop up the Assad regime in Syria. A spokesman for Staffan de Mistra, the UN special envoy to Syria, told Bloomberg on Monday that the envoy estimates Iran spends $6 billion annually on Assad’s government. Nadim Shehadi, the director of the Fares Center for Eastern Mediterranean Studies at Tufts University, said his research shows that Iran spend between $14 and $15 billion in military and economic aid to the Damascus government in 2012 and 2013, averaging more than $7 billion a year. (Bloomberg, 9 June)

The estimated $6-$7 billion figure in annual military and economic aid to Syria, which includes delivery of all crude oil needs of the country, does not take into account the annual expenditure for hundreds of Quds Force military advisers and other IRGC specialists deployed to Syria or the money spent on the Hezbollah and other foreign Shia militias operating under the Iranian command in the country. Those figures remain classified.

Steven Heydemann, who was the vice president for applied research on conflict at the U.S. Institute of Peace until last month, told Bloomberg earlier this year that the value of Iranian oil transfers, lines of credit, subsidies for weapons for the Syrian military, military personnel costs and supporting Hezbollah and Shia militias fighting in Syria, Iran’s total support for Assad, would be between $15 and $20 billion annually.

File photo: Syrian President Bashar Assad during a meeting in Tehran with Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (AFP/Getty Images/Bloomberg)


Friday, February 13, 2015

Syrian Army, Hezbollah Forces Rapidly Advance into Southern Syria

Major Military Operation Believed to Be Directed by Quds Force
The Syrian Army, bolstered by the Lebanese Hezbollah, continued its rapid advance into southern Syria today, recapturing strategic hilltops and key swaths of territory lost last year to rebel groups including al-Nusra. Iran’s Quds Force is believed to have directed the major military operation.

“Regime troops and their Hezbollah-led allied are advancing in the area linking Daraa, Quneitra and Damascus provinces,” the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported today.

A field commander told Syrian state TV: “The military operation launched by the Syrian army in the south continues under the leadership of President Bashar Assad and in cooperation with the axis of resistance – Iran and Hezbollah.” (Asharq Alawsat/ABC, 12 February)

The area captured today by Syrian government forces and its allies are close to the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

Above: map depiction of front lines, 11 February 2015  [source: #SchwarzeSun]


Photo credit: Pro-Assad fighters ride on military vehicles and tanks after regaining control of Deir al-Adas, a town south of Damascus; 10 February 2015 (Reuters/ABC)

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Obama on Iran

President Obama today spoke to Bob Schieffer on CBS ‘Face the Nation.’ Below are excerpts of Obama’s comments related to Iran and the region.
  • Our number one priority with respect to Iran is making sure they don’t get nuclear weapon... The question now is: Are we going to be able to close this final gap so that they can reenter the international community, sanctions can be slowly reduced and we have verifiable, lock-tight assurances that they can’t develop a nuclear weapon... There's still a big gap... We may not be able to get there.
  • Second thing that we have an interest is that Iran has influence over the Shia – both in Syria and in Iraq and we do have a shared enemy in ISIL.
  • We are focused on our common enemy but there’s no coordination or common battle plan (with Iran) and there will not be…There’s some de-conflicting in the sense that… we let them know, don’t mess with us; we’re not here to mess with you.
  • I’ve been very clear publicly and privately we are not connecting in any way the nuclear negotiations and the issue of ISIL.
  • It’s an almost absolute certainty that [Assad] has lost legitimacy with such a large portion of the country by dropping barrel bombs and killing children… that he can’s regain the kind of legitimacy that would stitch Syria together again. 

Photo credit: President Barack Obama talking to Bob Schieffer during an interview on Face the Nation; the Oval Office, 9 November 2014 (CBS)

Sunday, September 14, 2014

Is Iran really reconsidering its support of Assad?

 Are Iran and its regional ally Hezbollah really seriously reconsidering their support for their long-term ally in Damascus?

by Paul Iddon
Pro-Assad billboard, Damascus 2006 / Bertil Videt
Iran has poured billions into Damascus in order to keep the Assad regime in power so it can effectively suppress and crush all opponents to its authoritarian rule. Its ally the Hezbollah has since 2013 even been sending many of its own fighters into Syria in order to engage fighters in the ragtag opposition alongside the Syrian Army. 

In the process of consolidating his control to his country's west Mr. Assad gave ISIS a freehand in targeting other opposition groups. It was as if an unspoken mutual agreement was adhered to by both sides. ISIS was allowed consolidate control over large swaths of territory in the east while Assad continued to direct state forces to crush opponents closer to home. It seems that the regime did not to calculate that ISIS would garner as much power and territory as it has.

At present the United States-led coalition is preparing to strike ISIS in strikes that may even well extend into Syrian territory. The United States refuses to recognize the Assad regime as the legitimate government of Syria due to the atrocities it has levelled against Syria's population. There is also a possibility that the Syrian regime may come under fire from a coalition intervening in Syria too.

In light of these circumstances a peculiar report has come to light. According to The Telegraph the regime in Iran is seriously reconsidering its stance towards its long-term ally in Damascus. The papers source claims that Iran is prepared to "burn" Assad if it means that country can reach an agreement with the western powers on its nuclear program which would see to an ease and eventual lifting of the sanctions imposed on Iran's economy. One diplomat referred to in the report said that the shift may have come due to the fact that Tehran has come to a realization that it "cannot win the Syrian conflict whilst Assad is in power." 

If true this would indeed be a fascinating development. But the report is one which clearly needs to be taken with a grain of salt. Unless Assad is unable to secure his rule, even if through continued coercion and brute violence, Tehran would hardly compromise such a close ally just like that. Surely such an agreement tied with negotiations on other matters would at least see to clemency given to Mr. Assad and other important members of his regime – possibly in order to get him to agree to step-down in favour of a provisional government which would mark the beginning of the post-Assad phase in Syria's arduous modern history.

And even when such an agreement is indeed brokered Iran would of course want to ensure that it could continue to logistically support the Hezbollah in Lebanon (a Syrian official quoted in the report claims that, "Much of the Syrian army is Sunni and they see Hezbollah as too sectarian. Some from the Syrian army won't work with Hezbollah. They don't want a militia involved") so it can maintain at least one very important component of its self-described "axis-of-resistance".

While one wouldn't dismiss out of hand the authenticity of this report one does remains highly skeptical. After all the prospect of a post-Assad Syria and what that will mean for the present Iranian regime is surely something which has been on its mind for some time now. And one would indeed be quite surprised if they aren't continuously contemplating how they can seek to make the eventual ushering in of a post-Assad age less painful for them.

Saturday, September 13, 2014

"Degrading and defeating" ISIS will require "boots on the ground"


 by Paul Iddon
A recently proposed strategy published by the 'Institute for the Study of War' offers what is bound to be a controversial solution to the threat posed by Islamic State (IS, referred to herein as 'ISIS') which insists that any feasible military solution will indeed require the deployment of American ground forces in Iraq and Syria.

Written by Kim and Fred Kagan and Jessica Lewis 'A Strategy to Defeat The Islamic State' proposes many potential steps the United States can take to address ISIS. Fred Kagan is of course one of the chief intellectuals involved in devising the troop surge implemented in Iraq which did help bring some semblance of stability to that country before the U.S. withdrawal in late 2011. That fact in and of itself makes this strategy well worth understanding, evaluating and of course critiquing.
From the get-go the authors make it clear that their proposed strategy for defeating ISIS will require an insertion of ground forces. As many as 25,000 in fact which they envision being made up of “special forces and special mission units.”

In essence they inform their readers that,
'The activities recommended in this paper will likely require the deployment of not more than 25,000 ground forces supported by numerous air and naval assets. The bulk of those forces will likely be comprised of various kinds of units supporting a much more limited number of special forces and other assets deployed in small groups with tribes, opposition forces, and Iraqi security forces. This plan does not envisage U.S. combat units conducting unilateral operations (apart from targeted attacks against individual enemy leaders and small groups) or leading clearing operations. It requires some combat units in the support and quick reaction force (QRF) roles.'
As for Syria broadly speaking their solution is quite straightforward. The United States should seek to take on the al-Qaeda affiliated Jabhat al-Nusra (JN), ISIS and the Assad regime. They summarize this view when they write,
'The problem in Syria is relatively easy to state, but extremely difficult to solve. The Assad regime has lost control of the majority of the territory of the Syrian state. It has violated international law on many occasions and lost its legitimacy as a member of the international community. Assad himself is the icon of atrocities, regime brutality, and sectarianism to Sunni populations in Syria and throughout the region. His actions have fueled the rise of violent Islamists, particularly ISIS and JN. U.S. strategy must ensure that none of these three actors control all or part of Syria while supporting the development of an alternative, inclusive Syrian state over time.'
A consistent theme throughout their paper is the fundamental necessity of a political solution in both Iraq and Syria coupled with a military one. Again on Syria they insist,
'The U.S. must also engage much more vigorously in efforts to develop an inclusive government-in-waiting in Syria. We must do more than trying to unify what is left of the moderate opposition. We must also reach out to the ‘Alawite community and to Syria’s other minority groups in search of potential leaders who could join forces with moderate Sunni leaders to oppose extremists on all sides.'
From the get go we're informed by the authors that their strategy may prove impossible to implement given circumstances which range from whether or not potentially friendly elements in both Iraq or Syria will cooperate with them to whether or not the Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) can be effectively reformed when they inform us that,
'Even then, this strategy suffers from the high risk of failure and the near-certainty that the U.S. will suffer casualties, including at the hands of supposedly friendly forces. American troops dispersed among the Sunni population are at risk of being kidnapped. The significant anti-aircraft capabilities of ISIS put American helicopters at risk. It may turn out that the Sunni Arabs cannot or will not fight with us, finally, and that the overall strategy proposed here is infeasible. In that case, it will be necessary to abandon this strategy and reconsider our options.'
Nevertheless,
'The U.S. should adopt this strategy despite these risks. The consequences of inaction or inadequate action are evident: ISIS will retain control of much of the territory it holds, sectarian war will escalate, more foreign fighters including Americans and Europeans will cycle through the battlefield and get both trained and further radicalized, and al-Qaeda will benefit from the largest and richest safe-haven it has ever known. It is worth accepting the risks of this strategy to avoid this outcome.'
To date the authors tell us that Obama's record hasn't at all been a good one due to the fact that,
'He celebrated the regional and international partnerships that will join in the U.S.-led plan. This plan is largely a continuation of the failed counterterrorism strategy that the administration has pursued for years, and in which the threat of the Islamic State arose. The plan to lead other regional and indigenous forces in conducting an air-ground campaign to degrade and destroy ISIS in Iraq assumes conditions in the region that are no longer present. These conditions will likely cause the U.S. strategy to fail.'
Furthermore, to degrade and ultimately destroy ISIS the authors argue that the United States cannot adopt an Iraq-first, Syria-second strategy. It must engage ISIS in both countries simultaneously,
'Only military formations that cross sectarian lines will be able to challenge ISIS. This is an exceptional battlefield condition that cannot be assumed in either Iraq or Syria. Furthermore, the involvement of regional actors such as Iran, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia in the Syrian war has only increased the sectarian nature of the conflict over the last two years; their involvement in Iraq at this point may have the same effect.'
The authors continuously stress that United States policy in confronting ISIS must see to an atmosphere permeate whereby Sunnis feel empowered and are able to take a decisive stand and reject the Islamic State which has been forcibly established around them. The authors also argue that,
'Air strikes alone – which may be perceived as U.S. support to Iranian-backed Shi'a governments trying to oppress the Sunni Arabs – will not allow the U.S. to evaluate this variable and may well reduce the willingness of Sunni Arabs to join with us and, more importantly, to rejoin Iraqi and Syria. Developing a strategy that has a chance of success requires identifying the center of gravity of the overarching regional problem — the struggle within the Sunni Arab community itself amidst the collapse of state structures in the Middle East.'
Futhermore they reiterate their advocacy of U.S. approach which aims to remove Assad, JN and ISIS from the picture in Syria. The following paragraph aptly sums up why this is the position they take,
'ISIS must be defeated in Syria, and Assad must be removed from power. But a strategy that delivers Syria into the hands of Jabhat al-Nusra would be disastrous for the U.S. and its regional allies. JN is a loyal al-Qaeda affiliate and would establish an al-Qaeda state in Syria that would support the global jihadi movement. Any successful strategy for dealing with ISIS in Syria must also separate JN from the bulk of the opposition, marginalize it, and ultimately defeat it as well, while setting conditions for an inclusive post-Assad government that can prevent any al-Qaeda affiliate from re-establishing itself in Syria. This recovery of the opposition requires the removal of Assad as a necessary pre-condition for ending the Syrian war.'
Working closely with the Sunni communities they insist is essential for defeating such forces due to the fact that,
'Al-Qaeda and like-minded groups such as ISIS can only flourish in distressed Sunni communities. They attack every other religion and sect, but their bases must be in Sunni lands because their ideology is an extreme, exclusionary interpretation of Sunni Islam. Doing anything to al-Qaeda — defeating, disrupting, degrading, destroying, anything else — requires working with the overwhelming majority of the Sunni communities within which it lives and operates. Those communities have shown their distaste for the ideology and the groups that espouse it, rising up against them in Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, Egypt, and almost everywhere else they have appeared, except Pakistan.'
While the Iranian dimension in all of this is not on the top of their proposed agenda it is nevertheless featured throughout. The authors repeatedly denounce the prospect of Iranian "hegemony" in the region and denounce its role of stoking "sectarian polarization."

They scathingly critique Iran's role in the region throughout the text. The following paragraph very aptly sums up their many contentions with Tehran's policies,
'Iran is the principal regional symbol of sectarianism, preferentially supports extremist Shi’a groups, and is integrating national security forces into an international structure that includes its own forces and terrorist groups. Working with Iran will have the same effect on Sunni perception as working with Assad. It may also drive our Gulf Arab allies away in the belief that the U.S. has made a permanent shift of alliances in the Middle East. Iran’s leaders and military commanders, finally, have consistently and loudly repudiated any notion of cooperating with the U.S. in Iraq.'
They also denounce the idea of coordinating with Iran in any way insisting that,
'Doing so legitimizes the presence of Iranian troops in Iraq, a principle to which the U.S. cannot accede. It would also effectively require a level of intelligence-sharing and mutual confidence that would place U.S. troops too much at the mercy of the IRGC. Lack of coordination with Iranian assets, however, can lead to accidental exchanges of fire between U.S. and Iranian troops. Such exchanges could in turn lead to escalating conflict with Iran.'
Regarding Iran's proxies and allies in Iraq the authors contend that,
'The U.S. must use the expanding leverage increased military support will give it in Baghdad to continue to shape the emerging Iraqi government to be as inclusive and non-sectarian as possible. Well-known sectarian actors and Iranian agents such as Hadi al-Amiri (Badr corps commander), Qais al-Khazali (Asa’ib Ahl al-haq leader), and Qassim al-Araji (Badr corps deputy) cannot have leading positions in the security ministries or security services if there is to be any hope of persuading Iraq’s Sunni Arabs that they are safe in the hands of the new government. Reported U.S. pressure to keep Hadi al-Amiri from getting a ministry was an important step. Continued pressure must be exerted to keep him and others like him from getting ministerial posts or otherwise obtaining de jure control over Iraq’s security services. If such individuals are given inappropriate portfolios, the U.S. should continue to exert leverage — including refusing to work with forces over which they have been given command or influence — to secure their removal.'
They also recommend the following regarding regional powers who have funded, directly and indirectly, terror groups operating in Syria,
'The U.S. should exert all possible pressure on states that are currently supporting extremists in Syria either to reorient that support to moderate forces or simply to cut it off. If prominent supporters of extremists such as Qatar refuse to change their behaviour, the U.S. should act in concert with international partners to interdict that support and consider sanctioning the offenders.'
The authors also make clear that the United States has and will likely continue to have little sway over the Hezbollah,
'Hezbollah’s deployment of thousands of troops to Syria — the first major external military expedition in its four-decade history — initially strained its support in Lebanon. The expansion of sectarian conflict and the increase in Sunni extremist operations and attacks in Lebanon, however, have rallied support around Hezbollah once again. Strengthening the Lebanese government and armed forces independent of Hezbollah — to the limited extent to which that is possible — could threaten the organization’s control sufficiently to distract it from Syria somewhat. It might even weaken Hezbollah’s position in Lebanon more fundamentally, although that prospect remains dim.'
More risk are acknowledged when they discuss the prospect of JN and ISIS working together when collectively targeted by the U.S. Again inaction is deemed worse since it,
'… would allow ISIS and JN to build up their forces independently and offers no assurance that they will not ultimately recombine in any event. The ongoing jihadi competition caused in part by the ISIS-al Qaeda rivalry, moreover, has already increased the likelihood of attempts by other al-Qaeda affiliates to attack the U.S. homeland and U.S. interests abroad. The additional spur such efforts might receive from an American intervention in Syria and Iraq would be more than balanced by depriving two of the most lethal affiliates — JN and ISIS — of large territorial sanctuaries.'
As for Iran's potential reaction to such operations,
'Iran may perceive intervention as a re-invasion to position U.S. forces to attack Iran in the event of the failure of nuclear negotiations and may respond with regional attacks. The geographic focus of U.S. efforts may provide Tehran some reassurance, since they will be focused in northern and western Iraq away from the Iranian border. But the U.S. should also consider supplying its Gulf allies with additional defensive capabilities to deter any such Iranian response or render it ineffective if deterrence fails.'
Arguing for "additional defensive capabilities" for the Gulf states may be considered heavy-handed when one takes into account the fact that these Gulf Cooperation Council members have already been sold billions-of-dollars in arms and sophisticated military hardware in the last five years alone – the 2010 arms deal to supply Saudi Arabia with fighter jets was the biggest in both America and Britain's history. 
 
All-in-all in both Iraq and Syria the authors determine that there is no wholly military solution nor a wholly political one. Any solution will have to be a delicate combination of the two, in their conclusion they state,
'A strategy that does not describe how Iraq will win Mosul back and how a legitimate government will regain control of Syria’s northern cities is not a strategy to defeat or destroy ISIS. ISIS can control those areas now in part because the populations violently oppose the Assad regime and the government in Baghdad. The formation of a new government in Iraq does not solve this problem by itself. It may superficially bandage sectarian wounds, but it may also exacerbate them, particularly if the leaders of sectarian militias receive security portfolios. There is no meaningful political discourse in Syria at the moment. And even if political accords were reached in Damascus and Baghdad, ISIS retains the ability to control subject populations through brutal terror. There is no purely political solution to these problems.'
Obviously there is no clear-cut simple solution when it comes to addressing such a complex set of problems. For the good of a detailed, open and informed debate the ideas proposed in this paper should be rigorously evaluated when it comes to determining what should be done about ISIS and what broader role, if any, the United States should play in the Middle East region in relation to this present ongoing crisis. 

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Islamic State Captures Major Air Base in Syria

But Defeated in Push to Take Baiji Refinery in Iraq
Islamic State today captured Tabqa Airbase in Syria. The airfield was the last major military outpost controlled by the Syrian government in northeastern Syria. It appears that the government has ceded the control of northeastern region to the Islamic State, and concentrating its war efforts on Western parts of Syria. (CBS, 24 August)

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights first broke the news, which was later confirmed by state-run news agency SANA.

Meanwhile, the Iraqi security forces stopped Islamic State’ push to take the country’s largest refinery in Baiji, which has been shut down since June when battles between the government forces and IS fighters began.

In related news, car bombs killed more than 30 people in Kirkuk, and at least seven in Baghdad. The car bombs in Baghdad coincided with the visit to the Iraqi capital by Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif.

Photo credit: Islamic State fighters celebrating in Raqqa, Syria, after capturing the Tabqa air Base. (Aljazeera)