The National - News

Will Putin’s miscalcula­ted attack on Deir Ezzor finally cost him support in the US?

- DAVID ROTHKOPF David Rothkopf is CEO of The Rothkopf Group, senior fellow at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies, a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace and author of The Great Questions of Tomorrow

Prior to a few weeks ago, few people knew the name Yevgeny Prigozhin. The Russian businessma­n, who was arrested and spent years in prison during the Soviet-era, came to sudden prominence in the West when he was indicted on February 16 by the US government for managing a “troll farm” operation that sought to influence the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Just over one week earlier, Mr Prigozhin was involved in an entirely different kind of attack on Americans. A mercenary unit from a company he reportedly funds called Wagner PMC (Private Military Company) attacked a base of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces in the Deir Ezzor region of Syria.

American special forces were also stationed there and in the firefight that ensued, “dozens” of the Russians were killed or wounded.

As average westerners came to learn more about Mr Prigozhin’s closeness to Mr Putin, his humble beginnings as a hot-dog vendor and his multibilli­on dollar media empire, the extraordin­ary details of Russia’s costly miscalcula­tion in the Deir Ezzor attack trickled out. Recordings indicating the scope of the attack have been made public, which suggest the toll was much higher, perhaps more than 200 men.

It’s a dramatic story. More so when you consider how inflammato­ry such a direct US-Russian battle might have been at any other moment in the past 70 years. Or that the man behind the mercenarie­s was seen as so close to the Russian leader as to be an extension of him. It is almost impossible to imagine that Mr Prigozhin would have taken either of his potentiall­y explosive operations against the US without Mr Putin’s knowledge and approval. Indeed, it is virtually certain both operations were funded thanks to Mr Putin.

Mr Putin has been emboldened by America’s reluctance to respond forcefully to him for years. When George W Bush was president, he took parts of Georgia with negative consequenc­es he could easily manage. When Barack Obama was president, the same was true in Ukraine. Also during the Obama years, Mr Putin began to support Bashar Al Assad and his depraved war against his own people.

Horrific weapons have been used against the Syrian people with the support of the Russians. Today, in Ghouta near Damascus, one of the world’s worst humanitari­an catastroph­es is unfolding.

Throughout his Syria experience, first under Mr Obama and later under Mr Trump, Mr Putin has found he could act with virtual impunity.

Occasional­ly the US would issue a strongly worded statement or make a military gesture. But most of America’s body language – starting with Mr Obama’s failure to follow through on his assertion that were Syria to use chemical weapons, that would be crossing a “red line” demanding US action –has been interprete­d by Mr Putin as a green light to support Mr Al Assad and his own geopolitic­al ambitions while playing entirely by his own rules.

Mr Putin no doubt felt that with the election of Mr Trump, he would have even more licence. And why not? He tampered with the US election process and Mr Trump not only defended him, but he also cheered him on and treated Mr Putin and his emissaries with a respect and deference he offers few others in the world.

In Syria, Mr Trump has done likewise, even going so far as to sweep this Russian attack on US special forces under the rug.

But the US is more than its presidents. And while Mr Putin might have had Mr Obama’s number and understood Mr Trump’s weaknesses, Mr Prigozhin’s initiative­s might both have brought him into contact with forces he had not reckoned on operating independen­tly of the US president.

Mr Prigozhin’s election meddling has been called out by a special counsel whose investigat­ion seems certain to draw a devastatin­g picture of Russian culpabilit­y quite apart from whatever it may say about Mr Trump and his team. There, he is up against the profession­als of the US Justice Department and intelligen­ce community. In Syria, Mr Trump notwithsta­nding, the Wagner mercenarie­s went too far in attacking US special forces, more than their match.

Mr Putin might have thought he could send a message to the US to back off, but attacking the US military may presage bigger problems to come.

Mr Putin is counting on Americans reluctant to stand up to him. But it now seems certain that whether Mr Trump survives the investigat­ions into him or not, very soon the hugely unpopular president will be gone.

Whether that is in a few months or a couple of years, his successor is very likely, thanks to interventi­ons like both of those cited here, to come back much harder against Russia. In fact, Mr Putin, like all world leaders, needs to be wary of the snap-back that will follow Mr Trump, as his successors undo and reverse what are seen as his most tainted policies.

Does that mean the US will finally push back on Mr Putin and Mr Al Assad militarily? That is uncertain but it grows more likely with events like those at Deir Ezzor.

But will they finally work hard with US allies to squeeze Mr Putin with much more aggressive sanctions and political pressure? Count on it.

The result is that Russia’s cold warrior president may well have unwittingl­y prompted a second act in the Cold War and restored the spine to an adversary that has let him, his cronies and his allies get away with too much for too long.

Russian election meddling has been called out by a special counsel whose investigat­ion seems certain to draw a devastatin­g picture

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