The Da’esh debacle in
Syria/Iraq continues, and although they have been (mostly) contained and in some
places pushed back, a decisive victory over them, even if one could define what
that was, remains out of the question.
I proposed a viable
strategy for the situation some months ago, specifically to bolster the Kurds
and with them the terrorized religious minorities (Christians, Yazidis
specifically) in the area. While “our
side” may not have anything I can recognize as an active strategy, the other
players in the neighbourhood certainly know their interests and act, as much as
they can, in those interests.
To situate things,
here are the major power/interest blocs according to me:
·
Iran/Damascus/Hezbollah/Baghdad:
Iran is the underpinning and sole hope of victory for the Shia factions in the
region. Assad gets some support from
Russia, but without Tehran he would have been out of business a long time
ago. Iranian Quds Force have trained and
supported Assad’s troops, as they have done the same for Iraq’s Shia militias. Without Iran. Da’esh would have run roughshod
over the rest of Iraq and taken Bagdad and who knows what else.
·
House of
Saud/Jordan/non-Da’esh Iraqi Sunnis/Lebanon (minus Hezbollah)/Israel: if
nothing else points out how tangled this gets, this grouping does. I say the Saudi royal family instead of Saudi
Arabia proper, as I’m certain that Da’esh has some significant support in the hoi-polloi;
not a majority to be sure, but support is there. I don’t know what proportion of Sunni tribes
in the “Sunni Triangle” have held out against Da’esh, but any that have likely
had support from Saudi. Jordan was on the fence until Da’esh burned their
pilot alive, but now they’re bombing the shit out of them (“the shit” is
assumed; I have no BDA). The Lebanese Army
has skirmished with Da’esh (and likely al-Nusra as well) but they are not known
as a formidable fighting force. However,
due to the severity of the threat to the country as a whole, Saudi is paying
for $3Bn worth of armaments (from France) to boost up the Army’s capacity. As for Israel, they’re low on Da’esh’s
priority list (Hezbollah is higher) but they left to their own devices would be
a problem for Israel eventually.
·
“Kurdistan”/anyone
who isn’t a Da’esh compatible Sunni (includes religious minorities): This is
the group without any major patronage, but also the only group(s) I think we
should be directly helping. The Kurds
are pretty secular, socialist in some cases, and despite their internal
divisions they are the best bet for a functional country out of that entire
mess.
·
Sidelines/Wildcards:
Turkey is the biggest question mark here.
They have tense relations with the Kurds (improving, but still fraught)
and have been accused to helping or at least turning a blind eye to Da’esh
recruiting and logistics. I think they
are letting Da’esh bleed the Kurds to weaken them, but with Erdrogan’s Islamic
proclivities (e.g. support for Hamas) I’m not certain that’s all that’s going
on. Russia is keeping an oar in too,
basically to put that oar in “our” spokes by keeping the region unstable.
If one is being as objective as possible, few
countries outside of the region have any real interest in what happens, but the
nature of this is that the affected area will spread, and in fact hat is
happening. I could add to the above groups
Egypt, as our brilliant intervention in Libya a few years back has allowed Da’esh
to take root there. Libya makes Da’esh a
direct threat to Europe as well as much of Africa, and if Al Queda in Yemen
decides to switch over and gains traction, that’s the Arabian peninsula and
East Africa.
Most of these regions
have indigenous Salafist groups (Boko Haram, AQIM, Al-Shabab) so in some ways
this just puts a different name on an existing problem, but it’s a whole lot of
moles to whack. I’d say it’s time to sort out some spheres of influence with
players like Iran, but TELL them what they will be and enforce it.
Specifically, Iraq as
a country is history, much the same can be said for Syria. The Saudis are concerned about a “Shia
Crescent” from Iran to Lebanon, but exactly what they can do about it is
questionable. I could suggest that Saudi
and Jordan act together to redraw their borders to take in the Sunni areas of
western Iraq, but I’m sure there are many practical reasons not to do that, and
a lot of them likely tribal.
All we can (and
should) do is to help establish a viable Kurdistan, one that can stand against
all comers. This will piss off the
Turks, but they aren’t our allies anymore in anything more than name so I’m not
inclined to care. I would go so far as
to say that it’s in Turkey’s interest to shed some Kurdish territory to this
end, but of course that will never happen.
Iran will likely have some issues with this too, but I’m even less
inclined to worry about that.
How much blood and
treasure Western countries should put into keeping Da’esh down is difficult to
answer. Obviously the people directly
affected should be doing the heavy lifting, but how much and what kind of help
should we provide? I would say more than
we are now, and more importantly WE MUST HAVE A COHERENT PLAN for whatever we
commit. A sound strategy, the right force mix, and the Saudis paying the bills are the keys to our optimal (realistic) end state.
On the current trajectory the big winners are Assad, Iran and Hezbollah. That group alone should cause sensible people on the West to want to engineer a better (for us) outcome. Not going to happen of course, so I guess we'll just watch and see what does.
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