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Syria - The Rationale Behind The Delay Of Idleb's Liberation Elijah J. Magnier confirms our take [MofA] that the Syrian-Russian operation to liberate Idleb is on hold but not canceled: What is clear so far is the certainty that President Assad is not ready to give up Idlib to President Erdogan. Assad is said to be ready to start the attack in a few weeks even alone, at the cost of dragging everybody behind him onto the battlefield. The operation has to wait until the Congressional elections in the U.S. are over and the danger of a U.S. escalation for domestic policy reasons recedes. Russia also fears that an attack on Idleb right now could re-unite the U.S. and Turkey and lead to a new coordinated onslaught on Syria. Thomas Seibert at The Arab Weekly points to an upcoming change in the balance that will lower this risk: Moscow would wait until October or November before ordering an all-out attack because the Kremlin expects the crisis in Turkish-US relations to deepen even further by then. ... "Comprehensive action will start at a time when Turkey desperately needs Russian support" and Ankara is unlikely to add a crisis with Russia to its difficulties with the United States, [Kerim Has, a Moscow-based analyst of Russian-Turkish relations,] said. US sanctions against the Iranian oil industry starting in November are one reason why tensions between Turkey and the United States could worsen soon. Turkey buys about half its crude oil imports from Iran and has said it will not abide by the new sanctions. But Turkey still does not want to remove al-Qaeda from Syria. It wants to move the group around while keeping it under its own control. They are excellent shock troops which, if transferred to Jarabulus in Turkey's Euphrates Shield area, could potentially be used against the U.S. supported Kurds in the northeast of Syria.
Elijah J. Magnier confirms our take [MofA] that the Syrian-Russian operation to liberate Idleb is on hold but not canceled:
The operation has to wait until the Congressional elections in the U.S. are over and the danger of a U.S. escalation for domestic policy reasons recedes. Russia also fears that an attack on Idleb right now could re-unite the U.S. and Turkey and lead to a new coordinated onslaught on Syria.
Thomas Seibert at The Arab Weekly points to an upcoming change in the balance that will lower this risk:
But Turkey still does not want to remove al-Qaeda from Syria. It wants to move the group around while keeping it under its own control. They are excellent shock troops which, if transferred to Jarabulus in Turkey's Euphrates Shield area, could potentially be used against the U.S. supported Kurds in the northeast of Syria.
○ U.S. Policy Toward the Levant, Kurds and Turkey - By Joshua Landis 'Sapere aude'
Russia, Turkey agree to create demilitarized zone around Syria's Idlib
The agreement marks a major diplomatic victory for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who was eager to prevent a major Syrian government assault, backed by Russian air power [...] As part of the Russia-Turkey agreement: Radical rebel groups, such as al-Qaeda linked Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) will be ordered to leave the zone The Syrian government will gain access to a key highway passing through Idlib that connects the north of the country with other major cities Both Turkish and Russian troops will patrol the demilitarized zone
What threw me off was, even though MoA pulled out Southpoint bullet points, this front page message:
The [SYRIA-allied] operation has to wait until the Congressional elections in the U.S. are over and the danger of a U.S. escalation for domestic policy reasons recedes. Russia also fears that an attack on Idleb right now could re-unite the U.S. and Turkey and lead to a new coordinated onslaught on Syria.
Until spring perhaps. ugh.
(MoQ link: Turkish Strategy In Northern Syria: Military Operations, Turkish-backed Groups And Idlib Issue) Diversity is the key to economic and political evolution.
My take on the delay until after the midterm election ...
If the Russian and Syrian forces would be bombing Idlib, there will be a chance for a release of a chemical substance by whatever party on the ground putting blame on Assad. What's not needed in these weeks a retaliatory reaction by Western allies to bomb Syrian facilities creating a nationalist feeling in the US thereby backing the sitting president and the Republican party. A reverse of wagging the dog in past war scenarios. 'Sapere aude'
#BreakingNews:#Syria #Idlib postponed until 15 of #Decembre to start with, with a 15km buffer zone and an engagement of #Turkey to disarm Nusra ( or merge it) and neutralise all other jihadists.— Elijah J. Magnier (@ejmalrai) September 17, 2018
#BreakingNews:#Syria #Idlib postponed until 15 of #Decembre to start with, with a 15km buffer zone and an engagement of #Turkey to disarm Nusra ( or merge it) and neutralise all other jihadists.
I scanned Southfront for insight into the tri-partite zone agreement. TU-RU ministers attending demurely confirmed "political, military and economic issues". Erdogan of course "opposes any kind of military operation" in Idlib, but then it occurred to me.
HTS is rather defenseless once they leave Idlib. Diversity is the key to economic and political evolution.
Here what happened in the last 24 hours above Latakia ...
My new diary ...
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