(Reuters) - By striking Islamic State in Syria,
the United States would be weakening one of President Bashar al-Assad's
major enemies. But the new U.S. strategy may still unnerve Assad by
helping other opponents determined to overthrow him. The U.S. strategy for tackling Islamic State in Syria is unlikely to yield quick results. Unlike in Iraq,
where U.S. air strikes were able to quickly roll back some Islamic
State advances, Washington has no strong partner on the ground. But
in a war that has already lasted over three years and killed more than
190,000 people, the U.S. plan looks set to bring with it the most
serious effort yet to bolster what is left of the fragmented "moderate"
opposition to Assad. It
could be a long time before rebel fighters loosely defined as "the Free
Syrian Army" can be turned into anything approaching a serious military
force. That may not even be the goal. Both Assad's allies and opponents
agree there can be no military solution to a war that requires a
political settlement. But enhanced support - including training that Saudi Arabia
has agreed to host - may at least provide a life line for the
mainstream rebels who have faced the risk of being wiped out altogether
by Assad and Islamic State. Eventually,
a unified opposition better able to stand its ground could create new
momentum for a stalled diplomatic track involving both the West and
Assad's main allies, Russia and Iran which are also alarmed by the rise of Islamic State. President Barack Obama,
in a major policy speech on confronting Islamic State, said on
Wednesday he would not hesitate to strike the group in Syria, where it
has taken over swathes of territory in the east and northeast. He
also ruled out the idea of cooperation with the Syrian government which
some analysts thought would be an eventual outcome of the fight against
Islamic State. Some still believe indirect cooperation through third
parties may be possible. "The
Assad regime and the Iranians are natural bookends to this in the east
and west, but he (Assad) is not going to get to deal with the West as he
had hoped," said Andrew Tabler, a senior fellow at the Washington
Institute and an expert on Syria. "The United States has decided this is going to be a very long war, and they are going to support the opposition." BOLSTERING REBELS WILL PRESSURE ASSAD - BAHRA Obama
said the United States had already ramped up military assistance to the
Syrian opposition - a possible reference to aid delivered through an
ostensibly covert CIA training program. He also asked Congress to
approve additional resources of $500 million to help the opposition. Mainstream
rebel groups say they have already started to reorganize themselves.
One, the Hazem movement, has reported receiving new supplies of
anti-tank missiles in recent weeks. Opposition activists say tens of thousands of fighters have joined mainstream rebel groups since the start of the revolt. But
rebels say many continue to abandon the moderate opposition units for
better-funded Islamist groups, including not only Islamic State but also
the Nusra Front, which is allied to al Qaeda. Critics of plans to arm mainstream rebels worry that new weapons could end up in the hands of radicals. Any
attempt to bolster the moderates will also face scepticism from
opposition activists who blame a lack of Western support for the failure
of their uprising. Although some have fought against Islamic State,
they say their main enemy is Assad and Washington has so far done too
little to help them. "The
people must have faith in Obama's intentions," said one rebel
commander. "But yes I will accept weapons and training assistance," he
said. Hadi Al Bahra,
head of the main Western-backed opposition group in exile, said
strengthening the mainstream opposition would disabuse Assad of the
notion that he could win a military victory. "Any
strengthening of the FSA will help fortify its situation on the ground,
thereby putting pressure on the regime to go to the negotiating table
to bring about the political transition," said Bahra, head of the
National Coalition. U.N.-backed
peace talks were convened in January between the opposition and the
Assad government but swiftly collapsed. Assad has shown little appetite
for a political solution while his forces have been making gains, aided
by allies including the Iranian-backed Lebanese Shi'ite group Hezbollah. The
government and its allies have managed to shore up control over a
strategic corridor of territory in western Syria stretching from
Damascus to the coast. The authorities held a presidential election in
territories under their control earlier this year, returning Assad for a
third seven year term. But
life in government-controlled areas is still far from normal. Fierce
clashes are still raging to the east and the southeast of Damascus for
example, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which
tracks the war. The
Islamic State's gains in eastern Syria have triggered rare criticism on
social media of the government's military strategy from Assad loyalists,
including one of his cousins, suggesting a possible pressure point for
him. Some of the criticism
surfaced when Islamic State fighters executed scores of Syrian
government soldiers captured at an air base in Raqqa province last
month. "THE GOAL IS IRAQ" The
Syrian air force has escalated its bombardment of Islamic State-held
territory since the group seized the Iraqi city of Mosul in June. Islamic
State now holds much of Raqqa and Deir al-Zor provinces in Syria's east
and has advanced westwards near the Turkish border and north of the
city of Aleppo, an important theater for conflict between rebels and
pro-government forces. If
Islamic State can secure its hold over the territory near Aleppo, it
could sever rebel supply lines into the city, Syria's largest before
hundreds of thousands of refugees fled. Fighters
from the Kurdish minority, who have also fought against Islamic State
but have so far failed to persuade the West to aid them, could also be a
factor. There are increasing signs they are cooperating with the
mainstream rebels. A group
of mainstream rebels joined forces this week with well-organized
Kurdish fighters to fight Islamic State in parts of Raqqa and Aleppo
provinces, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported on
Wednesday. The factions formed a joint operations room and have issued a
statement calling for the international community to eliminate Islamic
State. The scope of
intended action in Syria remains unclear. The Syrian government has said
any military action undertaken without its permission would be an act
of aggression - a view shared by Russia, which has consistently blocked meaningful measures against Syria at the U.N. Security Council. Bahra,
the opposition leader, envisioned an international alliance against
Islamic State going as far as protecting civilian areas from Syrian
government air strikes - an outcome tantamount to a no-fly zone the
opposition had long sought. Assad's
unchallenged air power has given him a decisive advantage in the
conflict. But the West has shown no appetite for imposing a no-fly zone
over Syria, much less bombing to help remove Assad as it did in 2011
against Libya's Muammar Gaddafi. Hezbollah's
deputy leader Sheikh Naim Qassem has forecast a limited U.S.
intervention aimed at containing Islamic State rather than eradicating
it. Amine Kammourieh, a
Lebanese journalist and political analyst, predicted that any air
strikes against Islamic State would be limited to areas on the border
and supply routes. He added that the moderate opposition was "non
existent". "The strike
will be to weaken ISIS, not to eliminate it completely, and it will be
weakened not for the sake of Syria, but Iraq. The American goal today is
always Iraq," he said.
For Assad, U.S. plan will weaken one foe but bolster others
Reuters
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