Behind the lines: Syrian scenarios

Will Vladimir Putin back a de facto federal solution for Syria, or will he opt for total victory for the Assad regime – and how will Donald Trump respond?

RUSSIAN PRESIDENT Vladimir Putin (right) shakes hands with Syrian President Bashar Assad during a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow in 2015. (photo credit: REUTERS)
RUSSIAN PRESIDENT Vladimir Putin (right) shakes hands with Syrian President Bashar Assad during a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow in 2015.
(photo credit: REUTERS)
The latest reports from Syria indicate that the cease-fire brokered by Russia and Turkey in Syria is already in trouble. Fighting has continued in the Wadi Barada area northwest of Damascus, as regime forces and Hezbollah seek to pry the rebels out of this area. Clashes have also taken place in the southern Aleppo and Deraa areas.
The shaky cease-fire places a question mark over whether the planned mid-January talks in the Kazakhstan capital, Astana, between rebels and the regime will in fact take place.
More fundamentally, however, the direction of events in Syria raises a number of questions about the current diplomacy of the Syrian war, questions that have possible implications far beyond Syria itself. These relate primarily to the intentions of Russia in the Syrian conflict, and also to the stance that the new US administration will take after January 20.
Regarding Russia, the question is what Vladimir Putin is looking for in Syria – how do the Russians see the endgame? A cloud of misinformation and contradiction surrounds this point. There are, in effect, two possibilities.
The first is that by preserving the existence of the Assad regime, safeguarding Russia’s naval assets in Tartus and Latakia, and showing the lethal efficacy of Russian air power, Putin now sees himself as having proved his point.
In this scenario, the recent cease-fire is intended as a prelude to a deal that will largely leave the current balance of forces in Syria in place on the ground. Give or take some final clearing out of rebel pockets close to Damascus and in the northwest, any agreement that follows the cease-fire would usher in a loose, federal arrangement for an essentially divided Syria, leaving Alawis, Sunni Arabs and Kurds with their own de facto entities.
Such an approach is quite imaginable. Putin’s behavior in Ukraine and elsewhere in Eastern Europe indicates that he has no problem with ongoing, semi-frozen conflicts in which the Russian client is alive and on the board. Indeed, he appears to well understand the value of such situations as instruments for pressure on the hapless West, making himself an indispensable part of any discussion. Russian statements regarding an imminent reduction of forces in Syria and suggestions by Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov last February that Moscow might favor a federal solution in Syria are evidence in favor of this scenario.
In the Syrian context, such an outcome would run entirely against the wishes of the other members of the pro-Russian alliance. The determined desire of the Assad regime, as expressed both by the dictator himself and by various mouthpieces of his in the Western media, is to reunite Syria under his own exclusive rule.
Iran clearly also wants all opponents of the regime destroyed – though Tehran differs from Assad in preferring a weak regime in which the independently controlled Iranian interest can continue to operate according to its desire.
But these forces are too weak to achieve the goal of total victory without the involvement of Russian air power and special forces. So the Russians effectively have a veto on any such effort. This is why the Russian decision is crucial.
The second possibility is that the Russians have themselves adopted the goal of complete regime victory. If this is the case, the current diplomacy is merely chatter beneath which the effort at military conquest will continue, stage by stage.
One way in which this might take place would be for ongoing efforts by the regime against the remains of the rebellion in Idlib and Deraa provinces. At the same time, the US-supported Syrian Democratic Forces would be permitted to continue to grind down Islamic State in the east of the country. Once these processes are complete – that is, the rebellion and Islamic State are destroyed or pushed to the margins – Moscow would present the US and the West with the fait accompli of the defeated rebellion, and suggest that with the war against Islamic State now complete, coalition air power could be withdrawn.
Once that has taken place, the Kurdish dominated SDF would then be presented with the choice of cooperating with the regime and its allies or being destroyed by them.
Vitaly Naumkin, a Russian expert on Syria who is regarded as close to the government, hinted at a Russian preference for the reunification of Syria under Assad in a statement this week. Naumkin told the pro-Putin Sputnik news agency that “Moscow has made some concessions to Ankara by reacting very gently to the de facto establishment of a buffer zone in the north of Syria. There was no harsh reaction from Russia, but it does not mean that Moscow... will accept that some part of Syria is occupied by a foreign state for a long time, regardless of which state it is.”
In the event that the first scenario accurately reflects reality, we are into the realm of deal-making which the US president-elect evidently favors, and there is a chance for the Syrian war to wind down, or at least decline sharply in intensity and significance.
If the second scenario turns out to more accurately reflect Russian thinking and intentions, however, there is trouble ahead. A complete victory for the Assad/ Iranian side in the Syrian war, under Russian tutelage, would genuinely give rise to a new strategic dispensation in the region. It would leave the Iranians in control of a huge swath of contiguous territory, from the Iraq-Iran border to the Mediterranean, all made possible because of Russian patronage and in the face of a flailing, accommodating, retreating US.
In this scenario, there cannot be two winners, and there would be no deals to be made. The new US administration would have the choice of accommodating to the Russian/Iranian strategy, at the cost of US humiliation and growing irrelevance, or sharply resisting it. Either way, the implications would be grave: either the birth of a new, Iran-dominated dispensation in the northern Levant, or the chance of a face-off between major global powers.
Which choice a president Trump would choose in such a situation is impossible to know. The president-elect combines a conciliatory approach to Russia with a sharp desire to curb Iranian influence, and an isolationist streak with an apparently strong, instinctive, street-type knowledge that rolling over and then cleverly justifying it is not the way for a superpower to behave. Who knows which element would win out at such a moment?
It may well be that Putin favors the first scenario. He is interested in power projection and influence building, but not in any way in the triumph of Shi’a political Islam.
On the other hand, he has grown used to an absence of serious consequences for his actions. This is a process that was learned and will need to be unlearned if the US wishes to return as a force of consequence in Middle Eastern affairs. Will Syria prove to be the arena in which this takes place? The months ahead will tell.