Monday, 5 October 2015

Putin's playbook in Syria draws on Ukraine and loathing for revolution

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Did his experience in Ukraine tempt Vladimir Putin to begin Russia's Syrian expedition? Are they both examples of the Kremlin taking advantage of Western hesitation or caution? Or are they two episodes (with more to come) of Russia taking revenge for previous humiliations (Kosovo, Iraq, Libya, etc.) and reasserting itself as a Great Power?
Do we yet have any idea what the Russian President's endgame is? Is he a master strategist or a cunning magician disguising Russia's relative decline? Russia's sudden and forceful intervention in the four-year Syrian conflict poses plenty of questions.

Comparisons of events in Ukraine and Syria should not be overdone. The circumstances and the geography are different. In Syria, the Russians were invited in by a government; in Ukraine most certainly not. In Syria, Russia is projecting power and trying to influence the shape of the Middle East; in Ukraine, it is acting in its backyard. Last year, Putin even asserted of Ukraine: "We are one people. Kiev is the mother of Russian cities."
In Syria, the intervention is overt and trumpeted as Russia deploys the best of its air force; in Ukraine, it is denied with a shrug as Moscow relies on surrogates with varying degrees of discipline.

Obscure intentions 

 

Even so, Russian intentions in Syria and Ukraine do seem part of a pattern. Russia is trying to help allies strengthen their bargaining position while being less than clear about its own role and ends. In Syria, for example, Putin has spoken about the war against ISIS, but Russia's target list clearly includes any of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's opponents that threaten the regime's heartland.
Obama and Putin face off at U.N.

Obama and Putin face off at U.N. 01:46
At the United Nations, Putin waxed lyrical about taking on the threat of ISIS. On Sunday, Russian officials spoke of hitting ISIS positions in the province of Idlib, where ISIS has no presence.
And it's not clear yet whether Russia's priority is to help the Syrian regime go on the counterattack or guarantee access to the Mediterranean for its military in a post-Assad chunk of Syria on the coast.
In Ukraine, Moscow is sustaining the rebels with equipment and supplies to enable them to hold big chunks of the Donbass, while denying that it is involved in their revolt. Some see the ultimate aim as annexation (de facto or formal) of eastern Ukraine and its heavy industry; others a sort of collar to be tugged anytime President Petro Poroshenko cozies up to the European Union or NATO.
For now, that second aim seems more likely. Putin seems reluctant to invite more U.S. and European sanctions by upping the ante, and he said last week there was hope the Ukrainian crisis "can be dealt with." Some rebel leaders in eastern Ukraine are suggesting eastern Ukraine might fall into some sort of limbo, like Russian enclaves in Georgia and Moldova. 

Sourced from cnn.com

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