Russia’s latest
military moves in Syria have sharpened divisions within the U.S.
administration over whether Russian President Vladimir Putin genuinely
backs a U.N.-led initiative to end the civil war or is using the
negotiations to mask renewed military support for Syrian President
Bashar Assad. Russia has
repositioned artillery near the disputed city of Aleppo, several U.S.
officials told Reuters. Despite withdrawing some fixed-wing aircraft in
March, Russia has also bolstered its forces in Syria with advanced
helicopter gunships, and renewed airstrikes against moderate opposition
groups, said U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity. The
Russian reassertion of military backing has prompted some U.S.
officials to warn that a failure to respond would be seen by Moscow as a
fresh sign of American timidity. That, they say, could encourage Russia
to escalate challenges to U.S. and allied militaries through more
provocative Russian air and naval maneuvers. They
also contend that a U.S. failure to respond would further damage
Washington’s relations with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states seeking
to oust Assad, and with Turkey, which has been firing artillery at
Islamic State targets in Syria. The
answer, they argue, is stepped-up U.S. support for moderate Syrian
rebel factions with more anti-tank missiles and grenade launchers sent
through third countries. However,
other officials, including National Security Advisor Susan Rice, have
vetoed any significant escalation of U.S. involvement in Syria, the
officials said. “Rice is the fly in the ointment,” said a person familiar with the internal debate. Obama
himself has long been reluctant to deepen U.S. involvement in the war,
saying last October that Washington would not get drawn into a "proxy
war" with Moscow. His administration has focused more on pressing the
fight against the militant Islamic State group, which controls a swathe
of northeastern Syria. The White House declined comment about any internal debate on Syria or Putin's intentions. The
United States and other Western nations have struggled to read Putin's
intentions ever since Russian forces launched a surprise deployment in
support of Assad last September. His
abrupt announcement in March of a partial withdrawal and other steps
have continued to leave Western policy makers guessing about his agenda. READING PUTIN The
current debate over how to respond to Russia's military moves partly
reflects a difference of opinion in Washington over whether Putin has
been sincere in his backing for the U.N. peace process which is now
struggling for survival. U.S. officials and
experts question why Putin hasn’t been able, or willing, to press Assad
into making more concessions in the negotiations. “Either
Russia has pulled the wool over Obama’s and (U.S. Secretary of State
John) Kerry’s eyes or they’ve pulled it over their own eyes,” said the
person familiar with the internal debate and who asked not to be
identified. On one side are U.S. military and intelligence officials who think Putin does support the U.N.-backed talks. These
officials argue that Assad then undermined the initiative by
obstructing the Geneva process and ignoring the ceasefire, provoking
responses by the rebels and leaving the truce in shreds. As a result,
Putin had no choice but to ramp up support for his Syrian ally, they
say. “I think the regime played a
very, very sly game,” said Charles Lister, an expert with the Middle
East Institute. “They were playing spoiler with the full knowledge that
the opposition’s patience would wear out.” Other U.S.
officials and experts think Putin has never been sincere about
diplomacy, and that Obama and Kerry were naive to believe Russian
statements of support. Putin
remains wedded to keeping Assad in power and ensuring that Russia
retains a naval port on the Mediterranean coast and an airfield in
northern Syria, the only major military bases it has outside the former
Soviet Union, they said. “This was a
cynical game from the beginning by Putin,” agreed Jeffrey White, a
former senior Defense Intelligence Agency analyst now with the
Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “I don’t believe for a minute
that he was buffaloed by Assad. I think they are in league together.” While
U.S. officials gave conflicting assessments on whether Russia had sent
additional artillery to Syria, the Obama administration on Thursday
openly expressed concern about reports that Russia has shipped more
materiel into the country. The Pentagon has declined to speculate on Russian motives. “I
don’t know what their intentions are. What I do know is that we have
seen regime forces, with some Russian support as well, begin to mass and
concentrate combat power around Aleppo,” Army Colonel Steve Warren, the
Baghdad-based spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition fighting Islamic
State, said on Wednesday. “So this is something that we’re concerned about and something we’re keeping an eye on."
U.S. split deepens over Putin's intentions in Syria war
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