Total Pageviews

Wednesday 21 October 2015

Global and Regional Alliances Development on Syria

The world is full of contradictions today. We need to be frank in asking each other if we have a reliable safety net in place. Sadly, there is no guarantee and no certainty that the current system of global and regional security is able to protect us from upheavals.... The international and regional political, economic, and cultural cooperation organisations are also going through difficult times..”.... Vladmir Putin (Valdai Club speech, October 2014)

From a tale of twist and turns, the Syrian conflict has metamorphosed from that of an Arab Spring solidarity protest to a full blown civil war with religious undertones, serving a practical laboratory for proxy warfare pitting regional and World powers against each other.
Illustration of the current Syrian conflict trend
Source:http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/10/16/world/middleeast/untangling-the-overlapping-conflicts-in-the-syrian-war.html?smid=fb-nytimes&smtyp=cur&_r=0

Like an inselberg, the Assad regime has weathered the odds against it albeit the resultant carnage on the Syrian human and infrastructural milieu consequentially, of that Country’s 22million pre-war population, over 250,000 have been killed, about 7.6 million are internally displaced, 4million have fled the Country’s borders and have increasingly fuelled the European migrant/refugee crises. As such, on the current global scale, one out of every four refugees globally is Syrian.
Defying all peace mediation and palliative odds, especially with the active participation of Russia, the Syrian case is actively taking the course of leaving the last bleeding man be declared as victor; for in series of mis-calculated foreign intervention from regional and global powers, the resultant has been a creation of hydra-headed belligerents with no clear vision for the sustenance of the Syrian State.
With Western powers standing aloof at the onset of the Syrian conflict, regional powers of the Middle East championed by Saudi Arabia footed the belligerent cause against the Syrian government in terms of funding and arms. Seeing an opportunity for a balance of power, the Iranian government shored up support for its alleged Shiite spiritual ally in opposition against what it saw as an unbecoming resurging Sunni dominance from the Arab Spring. In the end, rebel groups funded by the Saudi Arabia led coalition of Middle East powers metamorphosed into hardliner Jihadist groups which in turn became a menacing threat to religious tolerance within the region.
Nevertheless, Western powers saw no glory in changing their stance against the Assad regime, choosing instead to derecognize the Assad government in favour of the opposition Free Syria Army. In spite of this, the Assad regime was learnt credence as it labelled the belligerent opposition as terrorists and in the real sense of fact, the Syrian political Opposition had no control over the fighters and a times, the opposition belligerents had had to turn the guns on each other as there were gaps in central command control and ideological/religious stance to the conflict.
A caricature cartoon of Russia's Putin propping up Syria's Assad
Source:http://eastwestpublic.com/2015/10/09/russias-syrian-bombing-gives-boost-to-iran/

Amidst the ensuing chaos, Russia stood arms akimbo, preferring to support the Syrian government with resolutions and its veto power at the United Nations. As such, when the United States threatened the Syrian government with airstrikes if it crossed the ‘red line’ in the use of Chemical weapons, Russia pushed for the decommissioning of Syria’s Chemical weapons arsenal which in turn was surprisingly successful.
For four long years since the start of the Syrian conflict, it seems unending as it has defied the cerebral diplomatic intrigues of the World’s top diplomats in Koffi Annan and Lakhdar Brahimi. Not even peace summits in the historic peace convention city of Geneva have brought any beacon of hope to resolving the Syrian conflict.
With all parties and proxies standing firm on their lines and not ready to yield ground, the Syrian conflict became embroiled in a stalemate, threatening to partition the country alongside the line of control of the belligerents. Not even the menacing advance the Islamic State (IS) identified as a common enemy to all parties in the conflict has united the belligerents. Instead, each belligerent has sought to deal with the Islamic State individually whilst pursing their individual causes against each other.
With the Syrian president openly admitting that he might have to concede territory to the enemy in order to consolidate its stronghold in the face of declining manpower, the Russians have seized the initiative to step up military support for the regime, whilst claiming to be doing its bit in fighting terrorism and Islamic extremism as manifested by the Islamic State.
Whilst the United States and its NATO allies have stepped up sortie attacks on Islamic State positions and refusing to collaborate with the Syrian government, rather choosing to identify ‘moderate Syrian rebels to train and arm as foot soldiers, the tactics has apparently failed, as the Islamic State keep capturing more territory and the US trained rebels keep melting away in battle against ISIS and gifting the enemy military hardware.
Russia on the other hand has chosen to identify with the Syrian government in the fight against the Islamic State and as such, entered into a de facto coalition with all parties supporting the Syrian government such as Iran, Iraq and Hezbollah.
Source: www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-34474362

Despite the identification of a common enemy in ISIS by all belligerents, they have failed to unite under a common cause. This calls to question the historicity of Western powers if they have lessons from World War two when a coalition of Allied powers in United States, United Kingdom and Russia had to fight concomitantly to ensure the defeat of NAZI Germany, and the happenstances thereafter which resulted in the cold war.
As regional and global powers pursue their interests in the Syrian conflict, it must be noted that an inflammable situation which could ignite into a wider conflict is in the offing, as these conflicting powers could accidentally turn their weapons on one another.
Seventy years after the end of the most devastating war in Human history, there are still several applicable lessons to be learnt from World War Two. Regional and Global powers party to the Syrian conflict will profit the cause of global peace by taking revision courses from that epoch.

The crisis has reached a point where, unless we end the war, the country will slowly empty itself — a haemorrhaging of its brightest and best, it’s young and old, escaping unspeakable horrors in the largest refugee migration since World War II, until all that will be left are the fighters..... KIM GHATTAS


No comments:

Post a Comment