dyingtoknow
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if by west you mean the west's traditional allies like the Saudi royals, Qatar royals etc then yes, they're losing, losing in Syria, Iran is rising and will be the regional hegemon with greater influence in Iraq. The region's being reshaped, and the power balance is tilting away from the US-Saudi nexus.. and that's a good thing.
There's nothing to "win" in Syria, the place is a wreck and will be for a generation. I don't think America wants a presence in that country and it has done everything possible to avoid direct involvement in the conflict. Only ISIS forced them to intervene and it is only with air power.
The traditional American allies, Israel, the Saudis etc are the only countries besides Iran left intact and with any discernible power . Iran is really the only power left not under American influence, and even that is debatable.
Iran simply doesn't have the power to stand up to the West alone, it's only the diplomatic approach of Obama who is leaving office soon that has opened up the crippling sanctions Iran has faced. No doubt if Iran starts to threaten America interests or a more hawkish American administration is around these sanctions will be reapplied. It's hard to see how Iran will be a regional hegemon.
by reshape I meant that the balance of power is tilting away from the Saudis with the emergence of Iran.
In Syria, the SAA have made significant advances since the Russian intervention while Saudi and Turkish etc backed jihadists have taken a beating.
In Iraq the US has far less influence now than during the occupation, they're Shia majority so after the US introduced democracy, they voted on sectarian lines and they've grown closer to Iran and Russia. Low oil prices isn't some gulf states conspiring to drain Russia, it's hurting everyone:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...axing-people-for-the-first-time-a6768206.html
The west, as the OP says, hasn't lost anything, it's just the regional dynamics in the ME are changing.
What is the evidence that the balance of power is tilting away from the Saudi-US axis? If anything we're now seeing the power of this axis in action with the oil price war that has crippled Russia and will slow down an Iranian resurgence.
Sure Iran has a presence in Iraq and Syria but that is not something that is a positive - these countries are burning wrecks, perhaps irreparably so. Being in these countries is a burden as Russia will find out.
It's really a case of the last man standing, and that man is the US-Saudi coalition. America may have lost wars but it left the battlefield so charred that it ended up winning (or will win) by default as its enemies are left with nothing but burdensome ruins with no strategic or economic value (see Iraq/Syria).
In contrast America and its allies, their homelands are left intact. The only ones left.
The only way to change the dynamics will be the introduction of a peer to America's power, China perhaps. But China is still 20 years away from being ready. Then we will see.