Dictatorships seem stable and almost invulnerable, until the day they fall. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime crumbled in days in the face of an offensive led by Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, a group that the United States considers a terrorist organization. But the Syrian civil war is, for now, mostly over. Hundreds of thousands are dead.
I wrote more than a decade ago in favor of Western intervention in Syria, back when the butcher’s bill was still in the tens of thousands, and finally gave up when Assad repeatedly used chemical weapons and got away with it. I predicted at the time that President Barack Obama’s decision against military action would undermine America’s position in the Middle East, embolden Iran, and give Russia its first major outpost in the region. Some of my worst fears, sadly, came true, while bodies piled up in the Syrian rubble for the next decade.
I would not even begin to predict Syria’s future, but I can identify one of the biggest losers (besides Assad, of course) now that this nightmare is over: Vladimir Putin.
That is, unless Donald Trump rides to his rescue.
Syria was a symbol of Russia’s desire to return to superpower status, a perch in the Middle East that even Putin’s Soviet predecessors never achieved. It’s hard to overestimate the value of such a position—close to the West’s energy resources and important waterways—to any Russian government, past or present.
As Russia’s geopolitical position in Syria has collapsed, Putin’s prestige and credibility have taken a serious hit. Putin has long prided himself on being an ally who never cuts and runs. . . . . “In the Middle East, Putin has often contrasted the fecklessness of American presidents with his steadfast support to those he views as Russia’s loyal partners. He has marketed this consistency as a selling point as to why he is a better mediator for regional disputes.”
Putin, however, helped seal Assad’s fate when Russia invaded Ukraine, dividing Russian attention and capabilities so badly that when HTS and other rebels launched their offensives, Moscow was unable to offer much help. Now the world has seen Assad chased from his own palace while Putin did nothing, a spectacle that casts doubt both on Putin’s power and on the value of his word.
Putin is also in other jams of his own making. The Russian economy is suffering from sanctions and from the costs of his military adventure in Ukraine. On the ground in Ukraine, his troops are advancing slowly through a meat grinder in a war that was supposed to be over in a week. North Koreans are fighting alongside Russians, and a senior Russian military officer was blown up in the streets of Moscow. The sprawling Russian Federation now looks like a banana republic that needs assistance from Pyongyang’s hermit kingdom and can’t even keep one of its own generals safe in the national capital.
Putin’s very bad year could be a very good opportunity for the West and for the besieged Ukrainians, if the Americans and their allies continue to strain Russia’s military on the battlefield and Russia’s economy in the global marketplace—in other words, if someone other than Trump were about to become the leader of the free world.
Trump openly admires Putin, and has reportedly spoken with him multiple times since leaving the White House in 2021. He is unlikely to press the West’s advantage.
And what exactly would Trump do differently? During his campaign, Trump said he could end the war in a day. Now he says that the war is “a tough one; it’s a nasty one,” with people “being killed at levels that nobody’s ever seen.” (Fact check: People have been killed at such levels in many modern wars, but it’s to Trump’s credit if he’s concerned.) Trump claims to want a peace deal; the problem is that in practice, any “peace deal” means letting Putin keep his imperial acquisitions while he gears up for renewed fighting.
Trump has named retired General Keith Kellogg as his special envoy for Ukraine and Russia. Kellogg (who accepts the risible Russian line that the war was spurred in part by Moscow’s fears that Ukraine would join NATO) has argued for continuing to arm Ukraine if Russia won’t agree to a cease-fire. This might seem a hard line, but it’s pure theater: Putin knows this game, and he will simply repeat his Crimea playbook from 2014 and 2015, agreeing to peace negotiations while engaging in chicanery and cease-fire violations behind the scenes. The weapons to Ukraine will dry up, the West will look away in shame, and Putin’s tanks will roll again as soon as he’s caught his breath.
I hope I’m wrong and that wiser heads prevail on Trump to take advantage of Putin’s misfortunes. . . . . More likely, Trump will go on with his campaign of retribution at home while the Russians do as they please.
Events in Syria have opened a historic opportunity, but sometimes the man and the moment do not meet.
Thoughts on Life, Love, Politics, Hypocrisy and Coming Out in Mid-Life
Thursday, December 19, 2024
Trump to Russia's Rescue
We may never know with certainty whether Donald Trump is a Russian asset or merely a hostage to "kompromat,: but one big winner in the 2024 presidential election was Vladimir Putin. Trump panders to Putin and, I suspect, wants to rule like Putin. Indeed, with media outlets and tech moguls all capitulating to Trump and congressional Republicans following his dictates, America may be on its way towards a Russia style rule by Trump and his billionaire oligarchs being placed in important positions regardless of competence or relevant experience. Now, with Russia's goals for influence and military bases in the Middle East in ruins with the collapse of the al-Assad dictatorship in Syria and the war in Ukraine grinding on, Putin must be ecstatic that Trump will be returning to the White House with the intent to weaken NATO, disrupt America's foreign trade and move the country towards isolationism reminiscent of how America in directly contributed to the advent of WWII. A piece in The Atlantic looks at how Trump is coming to Putin's rescue. Here are highlights:
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1 comment:
You know Mango Mussolini is going to help Vlad in whatever he needs. And he's going to need a lot of help. Ukraine did not fall in a weekend, as he expected, so there's that.
Ugh. I hate them.
XOXO
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