The Syrian army said it entered Manbij on Friday for the
first time in years, after the Syrian Kurds urged Damascus to protect the town
from the threat of impending Turkish military offensive, though Turkish President
Erdogan has termed the handover a “psyops” by the Kurds.
If Turkey mounts an offensive in Manbij, it would be the
third invasion by the Turkish armed forces and their Syrian militant proxies in
the Kurdish-held areas in northern Syria. The first Operation Euphrates Shield
in Jarabulus and Azaz in northern Syria lasted from August 2016 to March 2017,
immediately after the foiled coup plot against the Erdogan administration in
July 2016. And then, Turkey mounted Operation Olive Branch in the Kurdish enclave
of Afrin in northwestern Syria that lasted from January to March 2018.
In order to simplify the Syrian theater of proxy wars for
the readers, it can be divided into three separate and distinct zones of influence:
the Syrian government-controlled areas, the regions administered by the Syrian
Kurds and the areas occupied by the Syrian opposition.
Excluding Idlib in northwestern Syria, which has been
occupied by the Syrian opposition, all the major population centers are
controlled by the Syrian government: which include, Damascus, Homs, Hamah,
Latakia and Aleppo, while the oil-rich Deir al-Zor has been contested between
the Syrian government and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, and it also
contains a few pockets of the remnants of the Islamic State militants alongside
both eastern and western banks of the Euphrates River.
The regions administered by the Syrian Kurds include the
Kurdish-majority Qamishli and al-Hasakah in northeastern Syria, and the
Arab-majority towns of Manbij to the west of the Euphrates River in northern
Syria and Kobani to the east of the Euphrates River along the Turkish border.
The Turkish “east of Euphrates” military doctrine basically
means that the Turkish armed forces would not tolerate the presence of the
Syrian PYD/YPG Kurds – which the Turks regard as “terrorists” allied to the PKK
Kurdish separatist group in Turkey – in Manbij and Kobani, in line with the
longstanding Turkish policy of denying the Kurds any Syrian territory to the
west of the Euphrates River in northern Syria along Turkey’s southern border.
Excluding the western Mediterranean coast and the adjoining
major urban centers controlled by the Syrian government and the Kurdish-administered
areas in the northeastern Syria, the Syrian opposition-dominated areas can be
further subdivided into three separate zones of influence.
Firstly, the northern and northwestern zone along the
Syria-Turkey border, in and around Aleppo and Idlib, which has been under the
influence of Turkey and Qatar. Both these countries share the ideology of
Muslim Brotherhood and have provided money, training and arms to Sunni Arab
militant organizations, such as al-Tawhid Brigade, Zenki Brigade and Ahrar al-Sham,
in the training camps located in the border regions between Turkey and northern
Syria.
Secondly, the southern zone of influence along the
Syria-Jordan border, in Daraa and Quneitra and as far away as Homs and
Damascus. It was controlled by the Salafist Saudi-Jordanian camp which provided
money, weapons and training to the Salafist militant groups, such as al-Nusra
Front and Jaysh al-Islam in the suburbs of Damascus, until those militant
outfits were evicted from southern Syria by the offensives of Syrian armed
forces and allied militias with the backing of Iran and Russia.
Here, let me clarify that this distinction is quite
overlapping and heuristic at best, because al-Nusra’s jihadists have taken part
in battles as far away as Idlib and Aleppo, and after its eviction from
southern Syria, al-Nusra Front, which rebranded itself to Hayat Tahrir-al-Sham
in January 2017, has found its new redoubt in Idlib in northwestern Syria
alongside the Muslim Brotherhood-sponsored militant groups, though it belongs to
the Wahhabi-Salafi denomination espoused by Saudi Arabia.
And thirdly, the eastern zone of influence along the
Syria-Iraq border, in Raqqa and Deir al-Zor, which was held by a relatively
maverick Iraq-based Salafist militant outfit, the Islamic State, until Deir
al-Zor was recaptured by the Syrian government forces, and Raqqa and parts of
Deir al-Zor governorate to the east of Euphrates River were cleared by the
US-backed and Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces.
It’s worth noting that before the Russian intervention in
September 2015, leaving the western Mediterranean coast and Syria’s border with
Lebanon, the Baathist and Shi’a-led Syrian government was surrounded from all
three sides by hostile Sunni forces: Turkey and Muslim Brotherhood in the north,
Jordan and the Salafists of the Gulf Arab States in the south, and the Sunni
Arab-majority regions of Mosul and Anbar in Iraq, which were then occupied by
the Islamic State, in the east.
The ethnic and sectarian conflict in Syria and Iraq is
actually a three-way conflict between the Sunni Arab militants, the Shi’a-led
governments and the Kurds. Although after the declaration of a war against a
faction of Sunni Arab militants, the Islamic State, Washington also lent its
support to the Shi’a-led government in Iraq, the Shi’a Arabs of Iraq are not
the trustworthy allies of the United States because they are under the
influence of Iran.
Therefore, Washington was left with no other choice but to
make the Kurds the centerpiece of its policy in Syria after a group of Sunni
Arab jihadists overstepped their mandate in Syria and overran Mosul and Anbar
in Iraq in early 2014, from where the United States had withdrawn its troops
only a couple of years ago in December 2011.
The so-called “Syrian Democratic Forces” are nothing more than
Kurdish militias with a symbolic presence of mercenary Arab tribesmen in order
to make them appear more representative and inclusive in outlook.
Regarding the Kurdish factor in the Syrian civil war, it
would be pertinent to mention here that unlike the pro-America Iraqi Kurds led
by the Barzani clan, the Syrian PYD/YPG Kurds as well as the Syrian government
have been ideologically aligned, because both are socialists and have
traditionally been in the Russian sphere of influence.
Moreover, as I have already described that the Syrian civil
war is a three-way conflict between the Sunni Arab militants, the Shi’a-led
government and the Syrian Kurds, and the net beneficiaries of this conflict
have been the Syrian Kurds who have expanded their areas of control by aligning
themselves first with the Syrian government against the Sunni Arab militants
since the beginning of the Syrian civil war in August 2011 to August 2014, when
the US policy in Syria was “regime change” and the CIA was indiscriminately
training and arming the Sunni Arab militants against the Shi’a-led government
in the border regions of Turkey and Jordan with the help of Washington’s
regional allies: Turkey, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states, all of which
belong to the Sunni denomination.
In August 2014, however, the US declared a war against one
faction of the Sunni Arab militants, the Islamic State, when the latter overran
Mosul and Anbar in early 2014, and Washington made a volte-face on its previous
“regime change” policy and started conducting air strikes against the Islamic
State in Iraq and Syria, thus shifting the goalposts in Syria from the previous
unrealistic objective of “regime change” to the achievable goal of defeating
the Islamic State in order to save its credibility as a global power.
After this reversal of policy by Washington, the Syrian
Kurds took advantage of the opportunity and struck an alliance with the US
against the Islamic State at Masoud Barzani’s bidding, hence further
buttressing their position against the Sunni Arab militants as well as the
Syrian government.
More to the point, however, for the first three years of the
Syrian civil war from August 2011 to August 2014, an informal pact existed
between the Syrian government and the Syrian Kurds against the onslaught of the
Sunni Arab militants, until the Kurds broke off that arrangement to become the
centerpiece of Washington’s policy in the region.
In accordance with the aforementioned pact, the Syrian
government informally acknowledged Kurdish autonomy; and in return, the Kurdish
militias jointly defended the Kurdish-majority areas in northeastern Syria,
specifically al-Hasakah, alongside the Syrian government troops against the
advancing Sunni Arab militant groups, particularly the Islamic State.
Finally, everyone has their own axe to grind in Syria, as
there are no permanent allies or foes in international politics, only interests
are permanent. It’s all about maintaining the balance of power. But whenever
the US throws its weight behind a faction, it invariably disrupts the delicate
equilibrium.
The allies of Washington then tend to assume that they are
negotiating from a position of strength with the weight of a global power
behind them; and under the mistaken assumption, they overreach themselves and
encroach upon the rights of their regional adversaries.
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