Cape Argus

Since IS no longer exists, is the Syrian war finally over?

- Gwynne Dyer

LATE last month, Russian President Vladimir Putin met the leaders of Iran, Turkey and Syria, allegedly to discuss a final peace settlement in the Syrian civil war. On Monday, he was in Syria to announce a partial withdrawal of Russian troops because it had inflicted a “total rout” on the jihadist militants of Islamic State.

Is the war really over? IS no longer exists as an actual, physical state in either Iraq or Syria. Last summer it lost Mosul, Iraq’s second city, to Iraqi troops backed by US air power. Over the past four months it has lost all of eastern Syria, including its capital Raqqa, to a variety of forces including Kurdish, Syrian, and Iranian troops and American and Russian bombers.

Just one year ago, IS controlled a territory the size of Belgium and the Netherland­s, with 7 million or 8 million people. Now it is homeless, and even its propaganda output has dropped by 90% as its video production facilities were overrun one after the other. Its credibilit­y among the faithful has taken an even bigger hit.

When IS leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, declared the re-founding of the traditiona­l Islamic Caliphate in the territory controlled by IS in mid-2014, he was claiming quite specifical­ly that the enterprise had God’s blessing.

So it’s deeply embarrassi­ng when it loses all that territory again within 30 months to the local “enemies of God” and their infidel foreign allies.

The standard tactic of prophets, when their prophecies don’t come true, is to say that God is just testing people’s faith. We are already seeing some of this in IS propaganda, but the people who watch it are not complete fools. If they are fanatics interested in waging jihad, they will not abandon the idea, but they will look for some other organisati­on that has a better claim to divine support.

That alternativ­e organisati­on, at least in Syria, is al-Qaeda. It still has credibilit­y because it planned and carried out the 9/11 attacks in the US, and its Syrian branch controls most of the province of Idlib in north-western Syria. It was never as interested as IS in attracting foreign volunteers, but if you’re a Syrian jihadi, it’s now the destinatio­n of choice.

The Syria branch of al-Qaeda was known as al-Nusra for a long time, but in the past two years it has changed its name approximat­ely every second weekend in a bid to disguise its origins. It wasn’t trying to hide its loyalties from potential recruits. It was pretending to be a “moderate” rebel group so that it wouldn’t get hit by American bombers.

This didn’t actually fool the Americans, of course, but it did allow them to denounce the Russians – who were bombing al-Nusra/al-Qaeda – as evil allies of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad who were killing “good” rebels. Oh, and killing innocent civilians, too, as if American bombs never hit civilians.

Al-Nusra was the Russians’ main target because it was a bigger threat to the survival of the Syrian government than IS. It was al-Nusra, for example, that controlled the eastern half of Aleppo, Syria’s biggest city, until Assad’s forces took it back a year ago with the help of Russian bombers and artillery.

Remember how the Western media covered the end of that siege? They never mentioned al-Qaeda or al-Nusra, and you never saw a fighter in the video clips coming out of east Aleppo. They just ran the footage of suffering civilians without any further comment or context.

It was hard to tell whether Barack Obama’s State Department was being delusional or merely hypocritic­al, but it insisted that there was a “third force” of non-jihadi Syrians that was also trying to overthrow Assad. The US was supporting them, and the wicked Russians were trying to kill them. But the “third force” didn’t exist: it had been swallowed up by al-Nusra years ago.

So the US bombed IS and nobody else, while the Russians only did that occasional­ly. Instead, they concentrat­ed on bombing al-Nusra, which held territory much closer to Syria’s big cities.

And Washington scored propaganda points by claiming that the Russians were bombing innocent civilians and “good” rebels.

Now, with IS defeated, the US forces will probably leave eastern Syria. (They have no legal status there, since they were never invited in by the Syrian government or authorised to intervene by the UN.) But most of the Russian forces will stay, because it will probably take another year to destroy al-Nusra in Idlib province.

So why was Putin in Syria to announce a Russian troop withdrawal? Because there’s a presidenti­al election coming up in Russia, and he wanted to declare a victory and bring some troops home now. But the war goes on.

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? GOING? This file photo of May 4, 2015, from a militant website, shows Islamic State members in a convoy in Tel Abyad, north-eastern Syria.
PICTURE: AP GOING? This file photo of May 4, 2015, from a militant website, shows Islamic State members in a convoy in Tel Abyad, north-eastern Syria.

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