Arab News

Dangerous clashes portend wider conflicts in Syria

- TALMIZ AHMAD

Lack of due process, forced confession­s and physical or psychologi­cal torture are prominent

In this fraught situation, there were two skirmishes in Syria involving US forces last month

Syria has too many military fronts and too many contending players. These, taken together, have created an uneasy calm before the major storm that is to come. At Idlib, Russian and Turkish forces have been patrolling the six-kilometerw­ide security corridor along the M4 highway, but the highway remains closed to traffic. There are reports that the Syrian government and its Russian advisers are planning a major assault to decimate the entrenched Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham (HTS) and recover this last bastion of rebel-held territory. Turkey seems to be ambivalent and is perhaps negotiatin­g with Russia the possible accommodat­ion of its interests in Libya in exchange for its acceptance of some initial moves against HTS at Idlib.

At the same time, there are indication­s that HTS leader Abu Mohammed Al-Julani is attempting to project a new image of himself, showcasing political leadership in a public milieu in place of his earlier persona as the reclusive head of an extremist organizati­on. He has made numerous media appearance­s that show him as a leader concerned about the wellbeing of ordinary people in the Idlib governorat­e. Turkey is supportive of this new look, probably wishing to persuade the Russians to accept that HTS is no longer an extremist group but a mainstream political entity.

Even as northweste­rn Syria is girding itself for the long-anticipate­d attack on Idlib, the northeast remains the theater where Turkish and Kurdish interests directly collide. An uneasy peace is maintained by Russian military police, who patrol the Syria-Turkey border from the Euphrates to the Iraq border and control two-thirds of the Kurdish-dominated region. The Kurds are represente­d by the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), while US troops are also present in the region, ostensibly to protect the oil fields.

In this hotbed of contention, a new source of disquiet has been introduced, with the

SDF entering into a 25-year agreement with an obscure American energy company, Delta Crescent Energy, to market the oil produced in the area and, in the near future, set up two refining facilities. Promoted by SDF leader Mazlum Kobane, the agreement is an effort by the Kurds to keep the US engaged on their side and — as oil revenues make the Kurds economical­ly self-sufficient — support Kurdish autonomy in Syria on the lines of what the US achieved for the Kurds in Iraq through the Kurdistan Regional Government. The agreement has been condemned by the Syrian government. It could also be wrecked on the rocks of opposition from both Turkey and Russia. The former sees the SDF as a “terrorist” organizati­on that

Talmiz Ahmad is an author and former Indian ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Oman and the UAE. He holds the Ram Sathe Chair for Internatio­nal Studies at the Symbiosis Internatio­nal University in Pune. is closely affiliated with its own Kurdish dissidents in the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK). Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has described the US approach as a “disgrace to democracy.” Russia supports a united and sovereign Syria, with the Kurds participat­ing in a federal arrangemen­t. Moscow is also unenthusia­stic about a continued US military presence in Syria, particular­ly when 90 percent of the country’s oil is in territorie­s now under American control.

In this fraught situation, there were two skirmishes in Syria involving US forces last month. The first occurred at Qamishli, on the Turkish border, on Aug. 17, when Syrian government troops faced US soldiers at a checkpoint. In this encounter, a Syrian soldier was killed and two were wounded. Government sources said US helicopter­s had attacked the checkpoint.

The second incident occurred on Aug.

25, when a Russian military vehicle hit an American vehicle, causing some US troops to suffer concussion. The US called this “unsafe and unprofessi­onal behavior” by the Russians, while the latter said their patrol was being deliberate­ly blocked by the US vehicle. These skirmishes are causing concerns that they could inadverten­tly escalate into larger conflicts.

Meanwhile, the threat from Daesh continues. US officials believe that several thousand fighters remain in “sleeper cells” in the eastern desert areas of Syria. The killing of a Russian major general near Deir Ezzor on Aug. 18 and the blowing up of a gas pipeline near Damascus on Aug. 24 have been attributed to Daesh militants by US officials. Alongside these sporadic skirmishes and preparatio­ns for larger conflicts, there has also been some recent Syria-related diplomatic activity. In order to maintain its ties with the Kurds, Russia hosted a conclave of the political wing of the SDF, the Syrian Democratic Council (SDC), and the Popular Will Party that it supports. The conference affirmed that, while the SDC is crucially dependent on US support, it is also anxious to retain relations with Russia as the other influentia­l player in the country, particular­ly as it is capable of restrainin­g Turkey. Another meeting saw an attempt to restart the UN-sponsored political process for Syria by bringing together government and opposition figures in Geneva to rewrite the country’s constituti­on. At the conference, an opposition leader called for a nationwide cease-fire as a necessary precursor to reviving the political process in the country. As the principal roleplayer­s in the Syrian theater seemingly plan to take their competitio­ns to outright conflict in the coming weeks, this call was responded to with silence.

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