Calgary Herald

New refugee exodus feared

Assad’s march on Aleppo raises potential for even larger wave

- DONNA ABU- NASR

With Russian warplanes in the air and Iranian special forces on the ground, an emboldened Syrian President Bashar Assad is turning back to the biggest trophy in his country’s civil war, and this time Europe is also on the front line.

As his troops head toward Aleppo, Syria’s former commercial hub and largest city, helicopter­s are dropping warnings to residents to vacate areas. Should Aleppo and other Sunni towns fall to Assad’s forces, the potential for another, larger, wave of refugees would be nightmaris­h, according to one official in a European government.

The province is roughly divided between Assad and the militants. If they see government forces advancing, Syrians “who have been on the fence will be convinced that it’s time to go,” said Ghanem Nuseibeh, founder of London- based consulting firm Cornerston­e Global Associates. “You would expect another wave of refugees to try to head toward Turkey and eventually to Europe before the regime closes the border,” he said.

More than four years of fighting has displaced 7.5 million people within Syria and turned it into a country that exists only in name. For the U. S., the question is how much political and military capital it wants to pour into another Middle Eastern country, while rivals Russia and Iran take advantage of its reticence to prop up their ally in the region. Meanwhile, Europe is faced with one of the biggest geopolitic­al challenges in decades as hundreds of thousands of Syrians seek haven.

“Syria may be beyond any solution,” said Anthony Cordesman, a Middle East analyst at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington. “Half the remaining population has escaped the war zones and they lack jobs or homes. Many of the towns have suffered a great deal of damage.”

Assad is looking to consolidat­e his hold over the swath of Syria he controls. The prize for the Syrian government and its allies is Aleppo because of its proximity to the Turkish border.

Taking it would give Russia, Iran and Assad more bargaining power at any future settlement talks and more say in how the region will be redefined. A European official said that one of Putin’s goals is to present Europe with a Syria dominated only by two main groups — Assad and Islamic State — and ask the West to choose which one to support.

 ?? DIMITAR DILKOFF/ GETTY IMAGES ?? A woman and child arrive on the Greek island of Lesbos after voyage from Turkey. The potential for another wave of refugees worries European officials.
DIMITAR DILKOFF/ GETTY IMAGES A woman and child arrive on the Greek island of Lesbos after voyage from Turkey. The potential for another wave of refugees worries European officials.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada