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IN SYRIA, TRUMP IS LETTING IRAN AND ASSAD WIN

Arminkh

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Probably doesn't have anything to do with our missile attack, or does it? :lol:
Poor guy sounds so desperate!

http://www.newsweek.com/syria-trump-letting-iran-and-assad-win-629380

BY FREDERIC C. HOF ON 6/27/17 AT 10:46 AM

Last week the US Central Command (CENTCOM) spokesman for the anti-ISIS coalition announced what seemed to be a major clarification of American policy in Syria.

Referring to a Syrian town on the Iraqi border, Colonel Ryan Dillon said the following:


If they [Assad regime forces] want to fight ISIS in Abu Kamal and they have the capacity to do so, then that would be welcomed. We as a coalition are not in the land-grab business.

We are in the killing-ISIS business. That is what we want to do, and if the Syrian regime wants to do that and they’re going to put forth a concerted effort and show that they are doing just that in Abu Kamal or Deir el-Zour or elsewhere, that means that we don’t have to do that in those places.

It is difficult to understate the importance of Colonel Dillon’s words. Iran and its client regime have been conditionally invited to take over whatever parts of eastern Syria they can grab.

CENTCOM knows that the “Syrian regime” presence in eastern Syria is largely in the form of Iranian-led militiamen from Lebanon, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

CENTCOM is likewise cognizant of the role the Assad regime has played in midwifing and sustaining ISIS as a symbolic enemy while trying, with Russian and Iranian help, to crush a Syrian uprising against its corrupt, incompetent, and brutal rule.

And CENTCOM will not dispute the May 19, 2017 words of State Department Special Envoy Brett McGurk, characterizing what he had heard from Syrians emerging from the ISIS nightmare: “Unanimously nobody wants the Syrian regime to come back, regime symbols, regime military forces.”

gettyimages-800712256.jpg
Syrian children ride a horse in the northern city of Idlib on June 25, 2017, on the first day of Eid al-Fitr holidays which mark the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan.OMAR HAJ KADOUR/AFP/GETTY

The view of the Tampa-based CENTCOM, however, is that a regime whose misrule has brought Syria to the brink of state failure—a carcass on which extremists have feasted—is welcome to reestablish itself in eastern Syria provided it makes a “concerted effort” against ISIS.

Tampa’s view of Western equities in Syria comes down very specifically to the neutralization of a criminal band consisting in large measure of Iraqi Baathists and violent, lost souls from around the Sunni Muslim world. And the neutralization itself seems to boil down to Raqqa: the ISIS-proclaimed “capital” of the “caliphate.”

In Tampa’s view, it is all about killing ISIS in Raqqa. Creating conditions that would keep it dead? That, presumably, would be someone else’s job

Narrowing the nature of the mission is an understandable instinct for a military command. Still, CENTCOM professionals are far from ignorant of the results that flowed from the absence of post-combat stabilization planning in Iraq in 2003 and Libya in 2011.

They seem to think, however, that eastern Syria in 2017 is different: that American military advisors are merely assisting “partners”—the Kurdish-led “Syrian Democratic Forces” (SDF) in a ground war against ISIS, and that responsibility for post-combat governance rests with the SDF.

Or, perhaps because an overwhelmingly Arab Sunni Muslim eastern Syria is not governable by Kurds and their Arab auxiliaries, the Assad regime and Iran can have it all.

Work with the Syrian opposition and help to establish sustainable, non-Assad governance in eastern Syria to keep terrorists out and facilitate peace talks? “Not our job,” per CENTCOM.

Indeed, sealing the victory over ISIS in Syria appears to be no one’s job. The Trump administration, like its predecessor, recognizes the Assad regime for what it is: an incubator for terrorism, extremism, and regional instability with a long, toxic reach into Europe.

But, like its predecessor, it chose to follow the lead of Tampa in pursuing ISIS with a Kurdish-led militia instead of a professional, American-led, ground force coalition of the willing. Unless it enjoys a large measure of good luck, the SDF militia will take Raqqa with great difficulty and then will find it hard to take the real prize of eastern Syria: Deir Ezzor.

CENTCOM apparently would just as soon leave the area’s major city and its nearby oil fields to Assad and his Iranian supporters.

A ground campaign against ISIS spearheaded by professionals could have long ago cleared eastern Syria and facilitated the rise in liberated territories of a Syrian alternative to Assad.

The decision to rely instead on a Kurdish-dominated militia—one willing to collaborate if necessary with the regime to defy a NATO ally (Turkey) and establish an autonomous zone for itself—has extended the life of an armed gang for two years or more. That extension has enabled ISIS to plan and execute mass terror operations in Turkey and Western Europe.

And now it is facilitating the ability of Iran and Assad to fill the vacuum once ISIS is gone. Is the United States “in the killing-ISIS business” for the benefit of Iran and its client?

The Trump administration correctly views Iranian domination of Syria—undertaken to secure and reinforce Hezbollah in Lebanon—as contrary to American interests. Yet Tampa articulates a policy that seems to be fully at peace with Iran and Assad dominating eastern Syria, provided they refrain from attacking American-supported, anti-ISIS forces, and provided they make a “concerted effort” against ISIS in Syria.

Is it possible that Iranian and regime threats to those forces over the past few weeks have achieved their desired effects?

If the CENTCOM approach is good enough for Washington, it will be good news indeed in Tehran and Damascus, to say nothing of Moscow. An Obama administration Syria policy rooted in reassuring Iran about the untouchability of its Syrian client will have been embraced, executed, and completed by its successor.

In its agonizing, slow-motion campaign against ISIS in Syria, the United States will, in the end, have made the whole country safe for Assad, for Iran, and for whatever forms of resistance arise in response to the triumph of misrule, collective punishment, and humanitarian abomination.

For an administration rhetorically committed to pushing back against Iran’s regional expansion, it would be a remarkable reversal and a precipitous climb-down.

Frederic C. Hof is director of the Atlantic Council's Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East.
 
Probably doesn't have anything to do with our missile attack, or does it? :lol:
Poor guy sounds so desperate!

http://www.newsweek.com/syria-trump-letting-iran-and-assad-win-629380

BY FREDERIC C. HOF ON 6/27/17 AT 10:46 AM

Last week the US Central Command (CENTCOM) spokesman for the anti-ISIS coalition announced what seemed to be a major clarification of American policy in Syria.

Referring to a Syrian town on the Iraqi border, Colonel Ryan Dillon said the following:


If they [Assad regime forces] want to fight ISIS in Abu Kamal and they have the capacity to do so, then that would be welcomed. We as a coalition are not in the land-grab business.

We are in the killing-ISIS business. That is what we want to do, and if the Syrian regime wants to do that and they’re going to put forth a concerted effort and show that they are doing just that in Abu Kamal or Deir el-Zour or elsewhere, that means that we don’t have to do that in those places.

It is difficult to understate the importance of Colonel Dillon’s words. Iran and its client regime have been conditionally invited to take over whatever parts of eastern Syria they can grab.

CENTCOM knows that the “Syrian regime” presence in eastern Syria is largely in the form of Iranian-led militiamen from Lebanon, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

CENTCOM is likewise cognizant of the role the Assad regime has played in midwifing and sustaining ISIS as a symbolic enemy while trying, with Russian and Iranian help, to crush a Syrian uprising against its corrupt, incompetent, and brutal rule.

And CENTCOM will not dispute the May 19, 2017 words of State Department Special Envoy Brett McGurk, characterizing what he had heard from Syrians emerging from the ISIS nightmare: “Unanimously nobody wants the Syrian regime to come back, regime symbols, regime military forces.”

gettyimages-800712256.jpg
Syrian children ride a horse in the northern city of Idlib on June 25, 2017, on the first day of Eid al-Fitr holidays which mark the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan.OMAR HAJ KADOUR/AFP/GETTY

The view of the Tampa-based CENTCOM, however, is that a regime whose misrule has brought Syria to the brink of state failure—a carcass on which extremists have feasted—is welcome to reestablish itself in eastern Syria provided it makes a “concerted effort” against ISIS.

Tampa’s view of Western equities in Syria comes down very specifically to the neutralization of a criminal band consisting in large measure of Iraqi Baathists and violent, lost souls from around the Sunni Muslim world. And the neutralization itself seems to boil down to Raqqa: the ISIS-proclaimed “capital” of the “caliphate.”

In Tampa’s view, it is all about killing ISIS in Raqqa. Creating conditions that would keep it dead? That, presumably, would be someone else’s job

Narrowing the nature of the mission is an understandable instinct for a military command. Still, CENTCOM professionals are far from ignorant of the results that flowed from the absence of post-combat stabilization planning in Iraq in 2003 and Libya in 2011.

They seem to think, however, that eastern Syria in 2017 is different: that American military advisors are merely assisting “partners”—the Kurdish-led “Syrian Democratic Forces” (SDF) in a ground war against ISIS, and that responsibility for post-combat governance rests with the SDF.

Or, perhaps because an overwhelmingly Arab Sunni Muslim eastern Syria is not governable by Kurds and their Arab auxiliaries, the Assad regime and Iran can have it all.

Work with the Syrian opposition and help to establish sustainable, non-Assad governance in eastern Syria to keep terrorists out and facilitate peace talks? “Not our job,” per CENTCOM.

Indeed, sealing the victory over ISIS in Syria appears to be no one’s job. The Trump administration, like its predecessor, recognizes the Assad regime for what it is: an incubator for terrorism, extremism, and regional instability with a long, toxic reach into Europe.

But, like its predecessor, it chose to follow the lead of Tampa in pursuing ISIS with a Kurdish-led militia instead of a professional, American-led, ground force coalition of the willing. Unless it enjoys a large measure of good luck, the SDF militia will take Raqqa with great difficulty and then will find it hard to take the real prize of eastern Syria: Deir Ezzor.

CENTCOM apparently would just as soon leave the area’s major city and its nearby oil fields to Assad and his Iranian supporters.

A ground campaign against ISIS spearheaded by professionals could have long ago cleared eastern Syria and facilitated the rise in liberated territories of a Syrian alternative to Assad.

The decision to rely instead on a Kurdish-dominated militia—one willing to collaborate if necessary with the regime to defy a NATO ally (Turkey) and establish an autonomous zone for itself—has extended the life of an armed gang for two years or more. That extension has enabled ISIS to plan and execute mass terror operations in Turkey and Western Europe.

And now it is facilitating the ability of Iran and Assad to fill the vacuum once ISIS is gone. Is the United States “in the killing-ISIS business” for the benefit of Iran and its client?

The Trump administration correctly views Iranian domination of Syria—undertaken to secure and reinforce Hezbollah in Lebanon—as contrary to American interests. Yet Tampa articulates a policy that seems to be fully at peace with Iran and Assad dominating eastern Syria, provided they refrain from attacking American-supported, anti-ISIS forces, and provided they make a “concerted effort” against ISIS in Syria.

Is it possible that Iranian and regime threats to those forces over the past few weeks have achieved their desired effects?

If the CENTCOM approach is good enough for Washington, it will be good news indeed in Tehran and Damascus, to say nothing of Moscow. An Obama administration Syria policy rooted in reassuring Iran about the untouchability of its Syrian client will have been embraced, executed, and completed by its successor.

In its agonizing, slow-motion campaign against ISIS in Syria, the United States will, in the end, have made the whole country safe for Assad, for Iran, and for whatever forms of resistance arise in response to the triumph of misrule, collective punishment, and humanitarian abomination.

For an administration rhetorically committed to pushing back against Iran’s regional expansion, it would be a remarkable reversal and a precipitous climb-down.

Frederic C. Hof is director of the Atlantic Council's Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East.

I hate to say this but the Pentagon has been waiting for an good excuse to go to war with Iran for decades now. And make no mistake if the US is willing to bomb Syria than it will find a way to bomb Iran in the process. To them its a two birds with one stone sort of deal.

Here's the skinny, The US/Israeli/Saudi axis is pushing the Allied Iran/Syria/Russia (sort of) powers to see what sort of reaction they will get out of them so in turn the axis will gauge what it is they can or can't get away with. So far all the axis can do is some small bombings here and there as well as support for known Jihadis in the pursuit of making sure the Allied push to regain as much land as possible is slowed down or side tracked as much as possible. The recent Israeli bombings in the South-Western region of Syria are proof to this concept. The militants will lob a couple missiles/mortars into Golan heights and Israel will call upon the right of self-defense and hit Syrian positions the same positions that the militants want to advance on. This form of attack has been used by the US multiple times already during the course of this war. The most blatant so far was the US air force strike that killed some 90 SAA soldiers who were in battle with ISIS, the official line is always "it was a mistake, we wanted to hit ISIS targets" blah blah blah, at the same time the attack happened ISIS and other militants from other groups advanced on SAA positions. Same as is happening in Southern Syria regarding the Israeli Air strikes.

But this recent news of the US having "intel" on the SAA planning on another chemical weapons attack (when the Russians have already proved Syria has none left) is just a way for them to hit SAA positions all over Syria where the SAA is advancing. Most likely US wants to hit bases and positions in Eastern Syria that are near US backed forces, this will allow the US back forces to advanced easier and without much confrontation. Make no mistake this upcoming false flag will be the big one (they want to stem the Allied powers operational initiative as soon as possible because if SAA/Hezbollah/IRGC/Russians reach Deir Ezzor the war is effectively over with ISIS shattered and cut apart). Syrian and Iraqi border will have more supplies and possible troops pour in.

If Iran shoots at the US with their stock pile of advanced field tactical ballistic missiles than Iran has to commit to a war the Pentagon has always been willing to fight. This will throw the entire region into a shooting war frenzy as old rivalries and scores will have to settled for good this time. Israel will attack Iran, Saudi will attack Iran, Iran will unleash its thousands (I'm not exaggerating here, they literally have thousands of ballistic missiles in storage and hundreds ready to be built at a moments notice) on Israel and Saudi assets, then bigger world powers will either have to calm the situation or ride the storm out by choosing which sides they want to ally with.

Its for this reason that I just don't have much faith in Russia as an A class friend and ally. Their record is ok but just not what is expected of an ally. Iran on the other hand would have put everyone in their place if they had the operational capacity to do so. Reason why the US put military arms embargo sanctions on Iran was because Iranian pilots have a good kill ratio (They have very skilled pilots) and if they were allowed to have a modern Air force they would be unmatched expect for the Israelis.

Long story short. We all want to see the Russians step up the rhetoric and put their foot down, but the majority of their Air force has left Syria and only some jets and a good amount of Helicopters remain. This is barely enough to fend off from the Hundreds of US military scattered around the Middle East. Iran would last and throw heavy punches in the beginning stages of the war but will wane as the US will push HARD for air control of both Syria-Iraq and Iranian Air space.

Whose to say what will happen but this past month has been astounding regarding US/Israeli/Saudi aggression against the allies.
 
I hate to say this but the Pentagon has been waiting for an good excuse to go to war with Iran for decades now. And make no mistake if the US is willing to bomb Syria than it will find a way to bomb Iran in the process. To them its a two birds with one stone sort of deal.

Here's the skinny, The US/Israeli/Saudi axis is pushing the Allied Iran/Syria/Russia (sort of) powers to see what sort of reaction they will get out of them so in turn the axis will gauge what it is they can or can't get away with. So far all the axis can do is some small bombings here and there as well as support for known Jihadis in the pursuit of making sure the Allied push to regain as much land as possible is slowed down or side tracked as much as possible. The recent Israeli bombings in the South-Western region of Syria are proof to this concept. The militants will lob a couple missiles/mortars into Golan heights and Israel will call upon the right of self-defense and hit Syrian positions the same positions that the militants want to advance on. This form of attack has been used by the US multiple times already during the course of this war. The most blatant so far was the US air force strike that killed some 90 SAA soldiers who were in battle with ISIS, the official line is always "it was a mistake, we wanted to hit ISIS targets" blah blah blah, at the same time the attack happened ISIS and other militants from other groups advanced on SAA positions. Same as is happening in Southern Syria regarding the Israeli Air strikes.

But this recent news of the US having "intel" on the SAA planning on another chemical weapons attack (when the Russians have already proved Syria has none left) is just a way for them to hit SAA positions all over Syria where the SAA is advancing. Most likely US wants to hit bases and positions in Eastern Syria that are near US backed forces, this will allow the US back forces to advanced easier and without much confrontation. Make no mistake this upcoming false flag will be the big one (they want to stem the Allied powers operational initiative as soon as possible because if SAA/Hezbollah/IRGC/Russians reach Deir Ezzor the war is effectively over with ISIS shattered and cut apart). Syrian and Iraqi border will have more supplies and possible troops pour in.

If Iran shoots at the US with their stock pile of advanced field tactical ballistic missiles than Iran has to commit to a war the Pentagon has always been willing to fight. This will throw the entire region into a shooting war frenzy as old rivalries and scores will have to settled for good this time. Israel will attack Iran, Saudi will attack Iran, Iran will unleash its thousands (I'm not exaggerating here, they literally have thousands of ballistic missiles in storage and hundreds ready to be built at a moments notice) on Israel and Saudi assets, then bigger world powers will either have to calm the situation or ride the storm out by choosing which sides they want to ally with.

Its for this reason that I just don't have much faith in Russia as an A class friend and ally. Their record is ok but just not what is expected of an ally. Iran on the other hand would have put everyone in their place if they had the operational capacity to do so. Reason why the US put military arms embargo sanctions on Iran was because Iranian pilots have a good kill ratio (They have very skilled pilots) and if they were allowed to have a modern Air force they would be unmatched expect for the Israelis.

Long story short. We all want to see the Russians step up the rhetoric and put their foot down, but the majority of their Air force has left Syria and only some jets and a good amount of Helicopters remain. This is barely enough to fend off from the Hundreds of US military scattered around the Middle East. Iran would last and throw heavy punches in the beginning stages of the war but will wane as the US will push HARD for air control of both Syria-Iraq and Iranian Air space.

Whose to say what will happen but this past month has been astounding regarding US/Israeli/Saudi aggression against the allies.
Well actually Ms Haley has this time put Russia and Iran on notice too:

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/laure...warning-over-chemical-weapons-attack-n2347378

I think for Russia, it is clear what it needs to do. In case of an all out war in Syria, where US tries to undermine Russia and Iran's influence, Russia has only two choices:

1- Respond with all might and save its one and only naval base in Mediterranean.

2- Stay back and watch US defeat the last two countries in the middle east that are independent and not under US influence.

Please note that without Russia's naval base in Syria, Russia's black sea fleet access to open sea is dependent on Turkey. Also without Iran and Syria, Middle east is lost to US and its allies.

I personally think Russia can't stay neutral in this case and it either need react and stay its ground or it should forget ever having any influence in middle east again. I think Russia's recent reaction to downing of Syria's fighter jet by US is a good sign that Russia is not going to back down here.

@vostok What is your opinion.
 
Well actually Ms Haley has this time put Russia and Iran on notice too:

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/laure...warning-over-chemical-weapons-attack-n2347378

I think for Russia, it is clear what it needs to do. In case of an all out war in Syria, where US tries to undermine Russia and Iran's influence, Russia has only two choices:

1- Respond with all might and save its one and only naval base in Mediterranean.

2- Stay back and watch US defeat the last two countries in the middle east that are independent and not under US influence.

Please note that without Russia's naval base in Syria, Russia's black sea fleet access to open sea is dependent on Turkey. Also without Iran and Syria, Middle east is lost to US and its allies.

I personally think Russia can't stay neutral in this case and it either need react and stay its ground or it should forget ever having any influence in middle east again. I think Russia's recent reaction to downing of Syria's fighter jet by US is a good sign that Russia is not going to back down here.

@vostok What is your opinion.

Armin, literally the fate of Iran and Syria rest in the hands of Russia and whether or not they can have the balls to put their foot down. If they don't want to engage US directly then Russia NEEDS to sell advanced jets to Iran and/or Syria ASAP so they can do the heavy lifting from here on out.

The recent strikes from both US and Israel are very alarming as they both seek to stem/hinder the SAA/IRGC/Russian progress all across Syria.
 
1- Respond with all might and save its one and only naval base in Mediterranean.

2- Stay back and watch US defeat the last two countries in the middle east that are independent and not under US influence.
There is always that glorious third option: proxy war! :cheesy:
 
Well actually Ms Haley has this time put Russia and Iran on notice too:

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/laure...warning-over-chemical-weapons-attack-n2347378

I think for Russia, it is clear what it needs to do. In case of an all out war in Syria, where US tries to undermine Russia and Iran's influence, Russia has only two choices:

1- Respond with all might and save its one and only naval base in Mediterranean.

2- Stay back and watch US defeat the last two countries in the middle east that are independent and not under US influence.

Please note that without Russia's naval base in Syria, Russia's black sea fleet access to open sea is dependent on Turkey. Also without Iran and Syria, Middle east is lost to US and its allies.

I personally think Russia can't stay neutral in this case and it either need react and stay its ground or it should forget ever having any influence in middle east again. I think Russia's recent reaction to downing of Syria's fighter jet by US is a good sign that Russia is not going to back down here.

@vostok What is your opinion.
I do not understand why Americans should get involved in the war in Syria at all? I do not think they have interests there. Syria is a longtime ally of the USSR / Russia.
Russia in Syria has several objectives:
To support an ally who is in trouble by stopping desintegration of the state.
It is easier to destroy jihadists in Syria than in the Caucasus or Central Asia.
To prevent expansion of the terrorist organization of IGIL and its transformation into a real state with a radical jihadist ideology.
 
Last edited:
I do not understand why Americans should get involved in the war in Syria at all?

The American government is inherently imperialistic, they want to get their way everywhere, by whatever means. So they use the Arab "spring" as an opportunity to try to remove Syria as:

- An ally of Russia
- An ally of Iran
- An enemy of Israel

Killing 3 birds with 1 stone.
 
Probably doesn't have anything to do with our missile attack, or does it? :lol:
Poor guy sounds so desperate!

http://www.newsweek.com/syria-trump-letting-iran-and-assad-win-629380

BY FREDERIC C. HOF ON 6/27/17 AT 10:46 AM

Last week the US Central Command (CENTCOM) spokesman for the anti-ISIS coalition announced what seemed to be a major clarification of American policy in Syria.

Referring to a Syrian town on the Iraqi border, Colonel Ryan Dillon said the following:


If they [Assad regime forces] want to fight ISIS in Abu Kamal and they have the capacity to do so, then that would be welcomed. We as a coalition are not in the land-grab business.

We are in the killing-ISIS business. That is what we want to do, and if the Syrian regime wants to do that and they’re going to put forth a concerted effort and show that they are doing just that in Abu Kamal or Deir el-Zour or elsewhere, that means that we don’t have to do that in those places.

It is difficult to understate the importance of Colonel Dillon’s words. Iran and its client regime have been conditionally invited to take over whatever parts of eastern Syria they can grab.

CENTCOM knows that the “Syrian regime” presence in eastern Syria is largely in the form of Iranian-led militiamen from Lebanon, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

CENTCOM is likewise cognizant of the role the Assad regime has played in midwifing and sustaining ISIS as a symbolic enemy while trying, with Russian and Iranian help, to crush a Syrian uprising against its corrupt, incompetent, and brutal rule.

And CENTCOM will not dispute the May 19, 2017 words of State Department Special Envoy Brett McGurk, characterizing what he had heard from Syrians emerging from the ISIS nightmare: “Unanimously nobody wants the Syrian regime to come back, regime symbols, regime military forces.”

gettyimages-800712256.jpg
Syrian children ride a horse in the northern city of Idlib on June 25, 2017, on the first day of Eid al-Fitr holidays which mark the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan.OMAR HAJ KADOUR/AFP/GETTY

The view of the Tampa-based CENTCOM, however, is that a regime whose misrule has brought Syria to the brink of state failure—a carcass on which extremists have feasted—is welcome to reestablish itself in eastern Syria provided it makes a “concerted effort” against ISIS.

Tampa’s view of Western equities in Syria comes down very specifically to the neutralization of a criminal band consisting in large measure of Iraqi Baathists and violent, lost souls from around the Sunni Muslim world. And the neutralization itself seems to boil down to Raqqa: the ISIS-proclaimed “capital” of the “caliphate.”

In Tampa’s view, it is all about killing ISIS in Raqqa. Creating conditions that would keep it dead? That, presumably, would be someone else’s job

Narrowing the nature of the mission is an understandable instinct for a military command. Still, CENTCOM professionals are far from ignorant of the results that flowed from the absence of post-combat stabilization planning in Iraq in 2003 and Libya in 2011.

They seem to think, however, that eastern Syria in 2017 is different: that American military advisors are merely assisting “partners”—the Kurdish-led “Syrian Democratic Forces” (SDF) in a ground war against ISIS, and that responsibility for post-combat governance rests with the SDF.

Or, perhaps because an overwhelmingly Arab Sunni Muslim eastern Syria is not governable by Kurds and their Arab auxiliaries, the Assad regime and Iran can have it all.

Work with the Syrian opposition and help to establish sustainable, non-Assad governance in eastern Syria to keep terrorists out and facilitate peace talks? “Not our job,” per CENTCOM.

Indeed, sealing the victory over ISIS in Syria appears to be no one’s job. The Trump administration, like its predecessor, recognizes the Assad regime for what it is: an incubator for terrorism, extremism, and regional instability with a long, toxic reach into Europe.

But, like its predecessor, it chose to follow the lead of Tampa in pursuing ISIS with a Kurdish-led militia instead of a professional, American-led, ground force coalition of the willing. Unless it enjoys a large measure of good luck, the SDF militia will take Raqqa with great difficulty and then will find it hard to take the real prize of eastern Syria: Deir Ezzor.

CENTCOM apparently would just as soon leave the area’s major city and its nearby oil fields to Assad and his Iranian supporters.

A ground campaign against ISIS spearheaded by professionals could have long ago cleared eastern Syria and facilitated the rise in liberated territories of a Syrian alternative to Assad.

The decision to rely instead on a Kurdish-dominated militia—one willing to collaborate if necessary with the regime to defy a NATO ally (Turkey) and establish an autonomous zone for itself—has extended the life of an armed gang for two years or more. That extension has enabled ISIS to plan and execute mass terror operations in Turkey and Western Europe.

And now it is facilitating the ability of Iran and Assad to fill the vacuum once ISIS is gone. Is the United States “in the killing-ISIS business” for the benefit of Iran and its client?

The Trump administration correctly views Iranian domination of Syria—undertaken to secure and reinforce Hezbollah in Lebanon—as contrary to American interests. Yet Tampa articulates a policy that seems to be fully at peace with Iran and Assad dominating eastern Syria, provided they refrain from attacking American-supported, anti-ISIS forces, and provided they make a “concerted effort” against ISIS in Syria.

Is it possible that Iranian and regime threats to those forces over the past few weeks have achieved their desired effects?

If the CENTCOM approach is good enough for Washington, it will be good news indeed in Tehran and Damascus, to say nothing of Moscow. An Obama administration Syria policy rooted in reassuring Iran about the untouchability of its Syrian client will have been embraced, executed, and completed by its successor.

In its agonizing, slow-motion campaign against ISIS in Syria, the United States will, in the end, have made the whole country safe for Assad, for Iran, and for whatever forms of resistance arise in response to the triumph of misrule, collective punishment, and humanitarian abomination.

For an administration rhetorically committed to pushing back against Iran’s regional expansion, it would be a remarkable reversal and a precipitous climb-down.

Frederic C. Hof is director of the Atlantic Council's Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East.
I`m detecting maximum butthurt in this article,not so surprising considering its source ie another us think tank
 
Perhaps open a new front. A front where USA is vulnerable.
 
I do not understand why Americans should get involved in the war in Syria at all? I do think they have interests there. Syria is a longtime ally of the USSR / Russia.
Russia in Syria has several objectives:
To support an ally who is in trouble by stopping desintegration of the state.
It is easier to destroy jihadists in Syria than in the Caucasus or Central Asia.
To prevent expansion of the terrorist organization of IGIL and its transformation into a real state with a radical jihadist ideology.
Simple! they want everything to themselves. They have put it squarely: Stop Iran's increasing influence in the region (I bet they have the same intention about Russia but don't say it that loud).
 
I think they were just testing the waters:

Moscow warns Washington against ‘incendiary, provocative action’ in Syria
Published time: 28 Jun, 2017 15:02








FILE PHOTO. A Russian Su-30 fighter aircraft takes off from the Hmeimim airbase in Syria. © Maksim Blinov / Sputnik
To avoid endless war in Syria, US deconflicts with Russia – Pentagon
On Monday evening, the White House claimed that Syrian President Bashar Assad was preparing a chemical attack and warned that the Syrian government would “pay a heavy price” if the attack was carried out, as cited by AP.

Hours later, the Pentagon said it had detected activity by the Syrian authorities in preparation for the attack. Pentagon spokesman Navy Captain Jeff Davis said that the US had seen “activity” at Shayrat airfield that showed “active preparations for chemical weapons use.”

The US government failed to provide any further details or proof of such claims, while the State Department’s spokesperson, Heather Nauert, said it was “an intelligence matter.”

When confronted by a journalist that Washington uses the phrase to justify anything that suits it, Nauert answered: “I’m not going to get into that one with you, but this is a very serious and great matter.”

On Wednesday, though, the US suggested that the Syrian leadership had swiftly changed its mind about planning an alleged attack. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, as cited by Reuters, said: “it appears that they [Syria’s authorities] took the warning seriously. They didn’t do it.”

The Syrian government, as well as Russian authorities, have denied any allegations against them, with Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov saying that "such threats to Syria's legitimate leaders are unacceptable."

In the latest statement, Deputy Foreign Minister Gatilov said that Russia doesn’t rule out that “there may be provocations”following the announcement from Washington.

Read more
Russia hoping Tillerson can stop 'Pentagon provocations' in Syria
The statements by the US administration complicate the [peace] negotiations in Astana and Geneva, and Moscow believes such attempts to boost the tensions around Syria are unacceptable.

"The statements on Syrian armed forces getting ready to use chemical weapons is complete nonsense… These assumptions aren’t based on anything, no one provides any facts," the Russian diplomat said.

"If the aim is to ramp up the spiral of tension, we think it’s unacceptable. It complicates the process of negotiations undertaken in Astana and Geneva," Gatilov underlined.

“We’ve seen this in the past. Of course there are many ill-wishers, who want to undermine the process [of negotiations]. So any provocations are possible,” the deputy foreign minister added.

Earlier, Russia’s Foreign Ministry issued another official statement, saying: “We consider all these insinuations about chemical weapons which are being carried out in the worst traditions of the 2003 NATO intervention in Iraq as an ‘invitation’ for terrorists, extremists, and the armed opposition in Syria to carry out another large-scale provocation, which will result in the ‘unavoidable punishment’ of President Assad, according to Washington’s plans.”

In April, US President Donald Trump launched an attack on Syria with 59 Tomahawk missiles, which targeted Shayrat Airbase near the city of Homs. The strike was in response to what the US claimed was a chemical weapons attack in Khan Shaykhun, orchestrated by Syria’s government – something Damascus repeatedly denied.

And now this:

https://www.rt.com/usa/394350-mattis-decofliction-line-russia/
 

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