On
Wednesday, August 21st, the Syrian regime attacked civilians in the
Damascus countryside of al-Ghouta, killing around 1729 people as
reported by the Syrian opposition. Immediately the day after, French
Foreign minister Laurent Fabius, said that "reaction with force" might
be needed if the claim of using such weapons is confirmed. Last
Friday, US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said that the Pentagon has
ordered some naval assets to move closer to Syria in preparation for a
possible military strike using cruise missile. In addition, Britain
has set a firm position too, where Prime Minister David Cameron spoke to
US president Barack Obama in which they both agreed that there must be a
"serious response" to using such weapons. On Sunday, several US
lawmakers in Washington expressed their belief that they "expected
limited military" strike by the US and its allies. Hence the important question: will the US strike the Assad regime?
The
key point to note, is that it is very unlikely that the Assad regime
has used chemical weapons on such a large scale without knowing that it
would probably lead to a US intervention. Firstly, the Assad regime is
already struggling for its life from the sustained offensives of the
rebels. Secondly, it could achieve mass killings using conventional
weapons without creating media hype over chemical weapons. The Assad regime has been politically covered by the the United States
and the international community for the last two years and a half: it
has used chemical weapons against Syrian rebels and civilians several
times before on a smaller scale, but the US did not move. Due
to this political cover by the US, the Assad regime would only make
such a horrific step of such a scale with a prior green light from
Washington and with having an interest in a US intervention.
So
why would Washington give Assad such a green light which would enrage
world public opinion and would hurt the US’ image on a global scale if
not responded to? The Assad regime has secured US interests for the last 43 years. The
US still needs the Assad regime; since it has been very difficult to
find an ally within the Syrian rebels that can secure its interests as a
replacement for the Assad regime. This fact was clearly pronounced by Gen. Dempsey, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, when he stated: “It
is my belief that the [rebel] side we choose must be ready to promote
their interests and ours when the balance shifts in their favor. Today,
they are not.” Therefore,
the US would give such a green light for Assad to use chemical weapons
on such a scale only if it actually wanted an excuse to intervene to
protect its interests directly.
The
US turned a blind eye to Iranian support to the Assad regime and even
to Hezbollah's military intervention inside Syrian soil. The goal was to
prop up the Syrian regime until the US achieved building a secular
rebel coalition that could replace the Assad regime and secure US
interests. All that has failed.
Hezbollah gave a small push to Assad in Homs and captured the city of
Qusair and also supported Assad in Damascus. All that was limited and
Hezbollah started to weaken due to Lebanese internal concerns and to
heavy losses on the battlefield. So the US would militarily intervene if the Assad regime came close to implosion due to rebel pressure.
In
the last several weeks the rebels have made a comeback. Even though
this was not the first comeback in the last two years of fighting, what
was special about this comeback was the weapons gained from rebel raids
and control of army bases and checkpoints. In their control over the
Menneg airport in Aleppo, the rebels gained an enormous amount of
weapons including T-72 tanks, anti-tank guns, heavy machine guns, 57mm
anti-aircraft guns and payloads of artillery and grenades. The
most important gain came from the Damascus suburb arms depot where the
rebels gained hundreds of advanced anti-tank guided missiles (ATGMs)
which can eliminate any type of tank in the Assad repository.
These missiles included the French Milan type and the Russian Kornet,
Konkurs and Fagot types. The Kornet is the most advanced and can take
down the most advanced Assad tanks.
Assad's
only two advantages over the rebels from a weapons ability are the
heavy armor and air-power. Using the ATGMs, the rebels can neutralize
the ground based armor and therefore, have the ability to attack
airports and other ground infrastructure for his air-power. Thus,
the military strategic balance of the battle could shift within the
coming months, which is a possible explanation regarding US military
intervention. The goal of the US from such an intervention would be the following:
- Dismantle any heavy and lethal equipment that the rebels can get their hands on.
- Possible future utilization of drones to eliminate the threat of militants like Al-Qaeda in Iraq and Levant (ISIS) and Jabhat al-Nusra.
- Prepare for a future escalation in case the regime totally implodes and the rebels set up an independent state outside the influence of the current world order, especially an Islamic state.
No comments:
Post a Comment