The National - News

Russia fails in its ‘humanitari­an pause’

Civilians remain trapped and bombs keep falling in Eastern Ghouta

- DAVID ENDERS Beirut

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s call for a pause in fighting in Eastern Ghouta failed to have an effect yesterday, as Syrian government air strikes and shelling hit the area.

Residents of the Damascus suburbs told The National that the bombardmen­t ordered by president Bashar Al Assad had continued. More than 500 people have been killed in almost 10 days of intense bombardmen­t.

Mr Putin called on Monday for the implementa­tion of a five-hour daily “humanitari­an pause”, but residents said they believed the offer of a “humanitari­an corridor” for evacuation was a disingenuo­us.

Russian officials and Syrian government media blamed rebel groups for breaking the ceasefire and accused them of shelling to prevent residents from leaving the besieged area.

Both government­s have previously accused rebels of using civilians as “human shields”.

“At this time there is intense fire from the militants and not a single civilian has come out,” Russia’s Gen Viktor Pankov said.

Rebel groups blamed the Syrian government for continuing ta has led to new allegation­s of chemical weapons attacks by the government.

It was reported yesterday that the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons has opened an investigat­ion into whether chlorine gas attacks were carried out there this month.

British Foreign Secretary Boris Johson said that his government could take military action against the Syrian regime if it were proven to have used chemical weapons.

“If we know that it has happened and we can demonstrat­e it, and if there is a proposal for action where the UK could be useful then I think we should seriously consider it,” Mr Johnson told BBC radio.

Eastern Ghouta was the site in 2013 of an alleged sarin gas attack by the Syrian regime that tested then-US president Barack Obama’s “red line” of chemical weapons use.

Mr Obama declined to directly target the Syrian government after that attack, despite his threat.

US President Donald Trump ordered missile strikes against Mr Al Assad’s government last year after another sarin gas attack in the country’s north. Mr Johnson said he supported Mr Trump’s decision.

“What we need to ask ourselves as a country and what we in the West need to ask ourselves, is can we allow the use of chemical weapons, the use of these illegal weapons to go unreproved, unchecked, unpunished?” he asked.

The UN blamed that attack on the Syrian government and said that sarin was used.

But Mr Johnson warned that there was little internatio­nal appetite for sustained military action against the Syrian regime. the hostilitie­s while residents feared arrest and government reprisals.

“People here don’t want to go to areas controlled by the government,” said one young man living in Eastern Ghouta.

“It’s not an offer, it’s only propaganda. It’s not an option to tell them just to leave. Where will they go?”

He said the fighting made it impossible for people to leave the makeshift bunkers in their basements.

Eastern Ghouta is the last major area under rebel control near the Syrian capital. It has been besieged since 2013 by government forces, cutting off as many as 400,000 people and creating an increasing­ly desperate humanitari­an situation.

The Syrian government, with backing from the Russian air force, renewed its campaign against the area this month and threatened to enter the suburbs, sparking internatio­nal outcry but prompting little change.

French Foreign Minister JeanYves Le Drian said yesterday that it was vital to get the first convoy of humanitari­an aid into Eastern Ghouta.

The UN and other aid agencies said they were ready to deliver aid as soon as the warring parties allowed it.

Speaking in Moscow after talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, Mr Le Drian said the Russian-backed truce was a good step forward but more was needed.

The fighting in Eastern GhouA

The Russian jets bombarded the city with a ferociousn­ess that shocked even seasoned observers of the Syrian civil war.

With hundreds of thousands of civilians trapped, the internatio­nal community expressed anger, warning that the bombings must end.

Terrible images filled western newspapers and television channels, fuelling an impotent rage from those in the West. And then, in the midst of the carnage, Moscow announced a humanitari­an pause that would allow civilians to leave.

This descriptio­n is not of Eastern Ghouta over the past week, but of eastern Aleppo in the winter of 2016.

While the world is focusing on the siege of Ghouta and the estimated 400,000 civilians trapped there, it has been almost forgotten that exactly the same events took place in Syria’s largest city nearly 18 months ago.

The playbook is exactly the same and this is no coincidenc­e.

Now, as then, airstrikes shatter the besieged areas, leading to hundreds of deaths, widespread publicity and a call for “something to be done”.

In the midst of the carnage, Russia declares a brief daily ceasefire – in Aleppo it was eight hours a day, the one announced on Monday in Ghouta is five hours.

(The aim of the “pause” announceme­nt is to showcase Russia as a powerful party that understand­s the humanitari­an crisis. In Aleppo, it was announced by a Russian official. This time, a month away from elections, it was announced by Vladimir Putin himself.)

In tandem with the pause comes the creation of a humanitari­an corridor.

There are then weeks of talks over who will leave and in what manner.

The corridors are opened and then closed; some are subject to attack. But in the end, the civilians leave and the area is retaken by the Assad regime.

Those final steps have not yet happened in Eastern Ghouta, only the proposal for a humanitari­an corridor has been aired.

But it will happen, most likely in a matter of days if not weeks. The playbook worked well for the regime and the Russians in Aleppo and they intend to do it again.

The world is focusing on Ghouta and the horrors of the siege as if they were unique crimes – but they are anything but.

Indeed, this is part of a long-standing plan by the regime to neutralise any threat to Damascus and the seat of the regime’s power.

With the internatio­nal community’s involvemen­t now reduced to mere words, the Assad regime knows that nothing will be done to stop that plan unfolding.

Ghouta is the last rebel-held area close to Damascus and the regime will be glad to see it fall back into its hands. But there is a secondary reason why the enclave has been targeted now.

With less than a month to go before Russian elections, Mr Putin wants to ensure nothing taints his (widely expected) victory.

He is particular­ly concerned about an “October surprise” – the phrase given to a sudden, dramatic revelation in the last weeks of a US presidenti­al election that potentiall­y swings the result.

It is almost impossible to imagine a “March surprise” changing the Russian election results – every major Russian poll conducted in February shows Mr Putin with an insurmount­able lead, with not a single one of his competitor­s breaking into double-digit support – but Mr Putin is aware that the war still has the possibilit­y to shatter the sheen of victory.

Just three weeks ago, Russian mercenarie­s were involved in a botched raid near Deir Ezzor in eastern Syria, which Moscow admitted claimed the lives of “several dozen” of its citizens.

For Mr Putin, victory in Syria is part of a narrative showing him personally responsibl­e for a stronger Russia, one able to face down, as he sees it, the revolution­s fomented on Russia’s borders by the West and expand its power abroad.

A successful attack on the Syrian capital – and rebels from Ghouta have already fired mortars into Damascus – would undo that narrative. So too would a messy entangleme­nt with one of the other militaries in the Syrian conflict.

The botched raid outside Deir Ezzor at the start of February is a good example: it involved not only US-backed Kurdish forces, but also US troops, marking the first time both have clashed inside Syria.

Both Moscow and Washington have remained silent on the issue.

So there are still dangers for Mr Putin in Syria, which is why Moscow wants the conflict to move rapidly from a military campaign to a political one.

A “hot war” in Syria – one that involves guns, tanks and fighter jets – is too risky for Mr Putin. Rather, he was seeking a victory in Syria at a low cost.

But the other countries involved – Iran, Israel, Turkey – have a much longer timeline and much more to both gain and lose.

For now, Mr Putin is focused on turning the conflict into a political one.

That will be harder than it seems – as the Sochi conference last month, when delegates heckled Russia’s foreign minister, shows – but will easier to manage with the Russian public and the internatio­nal community, which remain his primary interests.

Once the military campaign is over, splits will show up between Damascus and Moscow.

But for now, they are in complete agreement, protecting Damascus from any rebel fire, regardless of the cost in Syrian lives and political reputation.

The regime and its backers are barreling towards the next stage in the Syrian civil war, using the same roadmap that guided them in Aleppo – and, for them, the only way to get there is through the rubble of Ghouta.

With less than a month to go before Russian elections, Putin wants to ensure nothing taints his (widely expected) victory

 ?? AFP ?? Smoke rises from Eastern Ghouta in Damascus yesterday
AFP Smoke rises from Eastern Ghouta in Damascus yesterday
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