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Agschmid

(28,749 posts)
Thu Jul 30, 2015, 11:44 AM Jul 2015

Bashar al-Assad’s Luck May Finally Be Running Out

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Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has played a weak hand so well for so long that it seems foolhardy to bet against him. Even as he’s lost control over a significant portion of his territory and presided over the worst humanitarian crisis of the 21st century, he’s kept his core supporters in line and remains in office years after most Mideast watchers thought he only had months left in power. He called Barack Obama’s bluff by using chemical weapons and managed to avoid intervention by giving them up. By either directly or tacitly fostering the rise of ISIS, he’s taken international attention off his own violence to the point that the U.S. seemed on the verge, just a few months ago, of admitting he would stay in power. All the while, he’s continued to terrorize the people of Syria with barrel bombs and chemical weapons.

But for the first time in a long time, recent developments seem not so great for Assad. This week, rebel groups are pushing into the Sahl al-Ghab plain in northwest Syria, an area that, as Reuters puts it, is “crucial to the defense of the coastal mountains that are the heartland of Assad's Alawite sect.” This follows fighting in May in which government forces lost most of northwestern Idlib province to fighters from the al-Qaida-linked Jabhat al-Nusra. Assad admitted on Sunday that his military is short on manpower and will have to pull back from some strategically important areas.

It’s also bad news for Assad that Turkey and the United States now seem to be on the same page when it comes to Syria. While the U.S. has been primarily focused on ISIS in Iraq, with the training of anti-Assad rebels in Syria relegated to the backburner, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government has remained committed to Assad’s ouster. The agreement between the two governments reached last week is primarily focused on ISIS, but it also includes a plan to create a 60-mile-long “safe zone” across the Turkey-Syria border for “relatively moderate” rebels—meaning those who are not affiliated with ISIS and at least not openly affiliated with al-Qaida— and displaced Syrian civilians. This comes very close to the “no-fly zone” Turkey has advocated for years, though the U.S. is reluctant to call it that. Whatever it’s called, it’s bad news for the Syrian military—the only fighting force in the country with an air force.

The Wall Street Journal also suggested yesterday that officials in Russia—the Syrian government’s primary international backer along with Iran—are losing patience with their client in Damascus and are “showing more openness to discussing alternatives to Mr. Assad as his regime loses territory.” There’s been speculation about this before and it may be wishful thinking by Syrian opposition leaders, who are the article’s primary sources. (A Russian announcement this week that it is considering resuming oil and gas projects with Syria isn’t a hopeful sign.) But there are some intriguing details in the article, including the fact that Russian officials have been meeting with Syrian opposition groups in Turkey for the first time. The Journal also mentions a recent meeting between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Syria’s foreign minister in which the Russian leader pointed out Assad’s military setbacks and suggested that the Syrian regime join forces with regional rivals Turkey and Saudi Arabia. Such an alliance would be hard to imagine with Assad still in power. The well-connected Russian foreign policy analyst Fyodor Lukyanov suggests that the Kremlin is “looking at the acceptability of other candidates at this point.”


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Bashar al-Assad’s Luck May Finally Be Running Out (Original Post) Agschmid Jul 2015 OP
Good analysis. MADem Jul 2015 #1
Yes and it's been a LONG time coming. Agschmid Jul 2015 #2
Patience and Fortitude Conquer All Things, I guess! MADem Jul 2015 #3
the question has never been whether Assad should go it's been can we live geek tragedy Jul 2015 #4
I'm not entirely sure how we've been living with him... Agschmid Jul 2015 #5
When he has lost the Russians, that means the end is nigh. DetlefK Jul 2015 #6
Okay. So what comes after Assad? Anybody? Comrade Grumpy Jul 2015 #7
It's a great question... Agschmid Jul 2015 #8

MADem

(135,425 posts)
1. Good analysis.
Thu Jul 30, 2015, 11:49 AM
Jul 2015

Lots of "unknowns" yet, but Turkey on the same page as USA is a big deal, especially since they've got territory to protect and a standing military of close to a half million conscripts ready to defend the homeland. They are a force to be reckoned with, if it comes to that.

 

geek tragedy

(68,868 posts)
4. the question has never been whether Assad should go it's been can we live
Thu Jul 30, 2015, 11:59 AM
Jul 2015

with whom/what would replace him.

Agschmid

(28,749 posts)
5. I'm not entirely sure how we've been living with him...
Thu Jul 30, 2015, 12:04 PM
Jul 2015
Hospital in Israel Treats Wounded Syrians

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In Galilee, an Israeli hospital 30 kilometers from the Syrian border treats wounded Syrians from the bloody civil war happening there. Some of them children.

On February 16, 2013, a quiet Saturday, the 331 bed Ziv Medical Center in Zefat began treating seven Syrians . "Saturday is the day when the hospital has a very skeleton staff because most people don't work on Saturdays," Linda Futterman, Director of International Relations told our group of visiting journalists. "So they called in all the trauma staff to treat these seven patients. We thought OK. We have never treated Syrians before. This is a one-time event. It's very unusual."

Israel considers Syria an enemy country. With no diplomatic relations between the two nations, treating these causalities was previously unheard of. "For us to suddenly have seven causalities was quite an amazing thing. They were very afraid of us at first. Expecting us to do bad things to them. Now, they try and come here because they know they are going to get top medical aide. Since then, they have been coming in sometimes more, sometimes less."

Now, two years and 500 patients later, the hospital continues to take these wounded in. Brought into the country by the IDF army, there are three other hospitals in northern Israel treating these patients. But Ziv's close proximity to the border with Syria makes them the sought out and preferred destination for treatment.


Warning: GRAPHIC IMAGES at the link.

DetlefK

(16,423 posts)
6. When he has lost the Russians, that means the end is nigh.
Thu Jul 30, 2015, 12:14 PM
Jul 2015

The Russians only like him because he allowed their military to use syrian ports. It looks like Russia is now negotiating with Assad's opponents for a similar deal and once that is secured, Assad has literally no friend left in the world.

Iran? Syria is predominantly sunni. And Assad is an Alawite. Right now a sunni syrian army, sunni syrian rebels, sunni Al-Nusra and sunni ISIS are fighting each other in Syria. Shia Iran has no interest in supporting either. Iran is focusing on Iraq.

China? China will try to prevent precedent that a ruler gets toppled for human-rights violations, but it similarly won't lift a finger to support Assad.

 

Comrade Grumpy

(13,184 posts)
7. Okay. So what comes after Assad? Anybody?
Thu Jul 30, 2015, 12:55 PM
Jul 2015

The US and others have been so monomaniacally focused on "Assad must go," but I never hear a word about who or what is supposed to replace that regime.

There is no real organized political opposition anymore.

There are a whole bunch of guys with guns, most of them pretty nasty fellows.

And then there are the "friends of Syria." With friends like that...

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