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Frightening parallels between Syria and Serbia


CHRIS TROTTER

Last updated 05:00, February 16 2016 

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ABDALRHMAN ISMAIL 

Civil defence members search for survivors after airstrikes by pro-Syrian
government forces in the rebel held al-Qaterji neighbourhood of Aleppo,
Syria, on February 14.

OPINION: Syria has become the Serbia of the early twenty-first century.

In the early years of the twentieth century, Serbia was Europe's tinder-box.
All the major powers understood the risk Serbia posed, but each of them had
too much at stake in the Balkans to hazard bringing the criminal Belgrade
regime to heel. The same can be said of Syria. The major powers all have a
great deal to lose by ending the Syrian civil war and restoring peace to the
Middle East.

What this means, however, is that the seething rivalries fuelling the Syrian
civil war could, at any moment, draw the major powers into a military
confrontation - with profound consequences for the whole world. Just as
Britain, France and Russia knew that Serbia could very easily be made the
pretext for a war against Germany and Austria-Hungary, the United States and
its key Middle Eastern allies know that Syria could very easily be turned
into a shooting war against the Russian Federation and Iran.

The fatal flaw in the great powers' relationship with Serbia in the early
twentieth century was that Serbia had geopolitical aspirations that could
only be satisfied by a general European war. The Serbian dream was to become
the leader of a new South Slav (Yugoslav) kingdom carved out of the Balkan
provinces of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. That was never going to happen
while Austria-Hungary endured. Serbia wanted - Serbia needed - a general
European war.

In Syria, the raging fratricidal battles are being driven by two, mutually
exclusive, geopolitical and religious visions of the region's future.

For Bashar al-Assad, Syria's beleaguered President, the best outcome of the
civil war would be the creation of a Shia Islam alliance extending all the
way from Syria's Mediterranean coast, through Iraq, to Iran's borders with
Afghanistan and Pakistan.

For Syria's Sunni majority, the ultimate goal is the creation of a Sunni
Islam alliance embracing Turkey, Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and the Gulf
States.

The success of either of these arrangements would fundamentally derange the
geopolitics of the Middle East. It is, therefore, unsurprising that the two
leading nuclear powers, the USA and the Russian Federation, both have planes
in the air and (some) boots on the ground in Syria.

President Vladimir Putin would dearly love to have a friendly Shia
confederation stretching protectively along the Russian Federation's
southern flank. That the increasingly erratic regime of Turkey's President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan would find itself squeezed between the two (and, quite
possibly, a newly created independent Kurdish state) only adds to the
attractiveness of this outcome.

For President Barack Obama, the situation is a great deal murkier.
Washington's unshakeable alliance with the State of Israel leaves it in
something of a quandary. Jerusalem already lives in existential fear of an
assertive (ie. nuclear-capable) Iran. It's reaction to an Iran-dominated
Shia confederation stretching from the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean can
only be imagined! But a vertical alliance of Takfiri-driven Sunni states,
stretching from the Persian Gulf to the Black Sea, would, if anything, be
worse! How long could it be before nuclear-armed Pakistan applied to join
this incipient Caliphate?

Russia's much clearer set of objectives is reflected in its much clearer
foreign and military policies in the Middle East. It's straightforward goal
is to keep Bashar al-Assad in power and destroy the Turks' and the Saudis'
Takfiri proxies - which include the Al Qaeda aligned al-Nusra Front as well
as the murderous Islamic State. [The Takfiris are Muslims who claim the
right to brand as apostate, and make war upon, every Muslim who, according
to the Takfiris' radically literal interpretation of the Quran, is guilty of
deviating from the "true" path of the Prophet.]

So far, the Russians and their Syrian Government allies are doing pretty
well. Thanks largely to Russia's fighter-bombers, the strategic rebel
stronghold of Aleppo is on the point of falling to Assad's army.

To the Turks and the Saudis, the fall of Aleppo would be a disaster. Not
only would the rebels' crucial supply lines to Turkey be severed, but the
road to the Islamic State's Syrian "capital", Raqqa, would lie open. But, as
Ankara and Riyadh both know, the moment the "moderate" rebels and the
Islamic State are defeated, the Syrian civil war is over. And if that
happens, there will be nothing to prevent the extension of Iranian power all
the way to the Syrian coast.

Hence the Saudi-Arabian Crown Prince's excited talk about sending tens of
thousands of ground troops to Syria via Turkey, ostensibly to destroy
Islamic State, but actually to establish a "buffer zone" along Turkey's
southern border with Syria. Russia has warned that any such breach of
international law will be answered with military force.

On Sunday, Turkish artillery began shelling Kurdish positions across the
Syrian border.

The parallels with Serbia in 1914 are frightening.

 - Stuff 

 

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