[These
two men, driven by their own imperial ambitions, have no intention of seeking
peace in Syria , except on their own terms. It is already an
international conflict sucking in fighters from Iran , Saudi Arabia , Qatar , Chechnya and Pakistan , plus Shia from Iraq and Lebanon , and now it threatens to drag in Nato. It is
no exaggeration to say the conflict has the potential to become a Third World
War.]
By
Michael Burleigh
Recep
Erdogan (R) and Vladimir Putin (L)
|
There
is no end in sight to the disaster unfolding in the vast refugee camps of Jordan and Turkey , among the 60,000 terrified civilians
massing on the Syrian border and on Europe ’s
corpse-strewn Aegean shoreline.
Far
from it. Last week, Syria ’s Bashar al-Assad promised to wage war until
he had regained every inch of the country. Few believe that plans for an
American-backed peace deal can hold. Early indications suggest that the migrant
crisis in Europe will be many times worse this year than last.
Entire
towns have been laid waste during Syria ’s five-year civil war. Up to half a million
people on all sides have been killed. Millions are either internally displaced,
or worse, languishing in desperate foreign holding centres.
But
all this cannot be blamed only on the murderous advance of Islamic State, Assad’s
brutality, or the rebels who wish to depose him. Syria is now the battleground for a proxy war
between two regional powers, Russia and Turkey , or more particularly between their ego-fuelled
presidents: Recep Erdogan and Vladimir Putin. Or, if you like, between the
Sultan and the Tsar.
These
two men, driven by their own imperial ambitions, have no intention of seeking
peace in Syria , except on their own terms. It is already an
international conflict sucking in fighters from Iran , Saudi Arabia , Qatar , Chechnya and Pakistan , plus Shia from Iraq and Lebanon , and now it threatens to drag in Nato. It is
no exaggeration to say the conflict has the potential to become a Third World
War.
So
it is that the refugees have become a weapon in their own right – a crisis the
combatants are relentlessly fuelling in the hope of coercing Western
governments into supporting one side or the other.
For
its part, Turkey feels it is fighting a battle of survival. It
wants to prevent the Kurdish forces in Syria and Iraq from joining with its own Kurdish population
to create their own state – which would mean the dismemberment of Turkey .
But
Erdogan is also keen to see the removal of Assad, with whom Turkey has major complaints about water resources. So
Turkey has allowed foreign jihadis (including from Britain ) to cross into Syria to fight with the Al Qaeda-linked Nusra
Front and IS.
Erdogan
has 10,000 troops trying to suppress a Kurdish insurgency led by the Marxist
PKK (supported by Assad) in eastern Turkey , which is next to the autonomous Kurdish
region in northern Iraq . The Turks also want to protect 100,000
ethnic Turkmen in Syria who are also opposed to Assad.
It
is no mere coincidence that Erdogan is a pious Sunni Muslim, while Assad
belongs to the Shia Alawite sect.
The
conflict is already dangerously international. The wily Major General Qassem
Suleimani, leading Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Quds Force, has thousands of Hizbollah
fighters from Lebanon under his control; as many as 20,000 Afghan Hazara
refugees, paid $750 a month, with the promise of naturalization in Iran; Pakistani
Shia volunteers; and last but not least Iraqi Shia militias.
As
for the Russians, they’ve recruited 400 Cubans to man their latest tanks, including
the T-90, which has explosive plates on the hull that detonate incoming anti-tank
missiles.
The
Syrian war has become like the Spanish civil war of 1936-39 by pulling in
committed fighters from abroad. Foreign jihadis are a kind of international
brigade for IS and Nusra, while the large numbers of indigenous Islamist rebels
are funded from the Gulf.
And
the weaponry is frightening. On Putin’s 63rd birthday, 26 Russian cruise
missiles flew nearly a thousand miles from corvettes in the Caspian Sea over Iran to hit Syrian targets. Russia has deployed its latest anti-aircraft
missile systems (the S-400) and trialed its latest Su 35 ‘Flanker’ combat
fighters as well as older Bear and Blackjack strategic bombers.
All
of these planes use ‘dumb’ bombs, including cluster munitions, causing many
civilian casualties. The conflict works as a sort of live arms fair for Russia while also dividing the West’s allies.
Most
leaders in the region are rushing to pay court in Moscow : Iran ’s Rouhani; the Saudis; Israel ’s Netanyahu; Egypt ’s el-Sisi and King Abdullah II of Jordan included.
They
need arms or nuclear energy deals with Russia , or just to ensure the Russian or Syrian
airforce does not encroach on their airspace, or allow terrorists to do so. Nato’s
one member in the region, Turkey , is being diplomatically isolated, largely
through Erdogan’s fault.
Which
brings us back to the refugees. Turkey ’s president is cynically extorting
‘Turkgeld’ (like the Danegeld the Anglo-Saxons had to pay Vikings) from the EU,
in return for stemming the tide of migrants.
After
the EU offered three billion euros, the Turks said this was just an opening
instalment, and by the way, they wanted visa-free travel for all 78 million
Turks as well. Prolonging the disruption in Syria , and the refugee crisis, also suits Putin as
he calculates that Europe , desperate for peace, could be made to
soften its sanctions.
Not
that continuing stalemate is the main threat here – the proxy war in Syria is bringing the real risk of escalating into
a disastrous, and open, conflagration. Russia ’s prime minister Dmitry Medvedev warned of
this in an interview on Friday, insouciantly forgetting that Russian forces
have also been involved since September.
We
have already had Turkey shooting down a Russian fighter. The
potential for a disastrous increase in hostilities between Sultan Erdogan and
Tsar Putin are obvious.
Whether
we like it or not Europe lies next to a war that is escalating by the
day.
And
the growing number of overladen boats crossing the Mediterranean and the Aegean – or sinking with terrible results – will
make that all too clear.