The world fears Putin's actual Goals in Middle East
Putin said he was going after ISIS. He hasn't. Instead he went after rebels trained by the U.S. by the CIA. So, if he's lying about going after ISIS what is he doing? Economically, he needs the price of oil to go up. How would he do that? Force Saudi Arabia to raise the price of Oil somehow by threatening them?
I think just by the unanimous vote in Russian Parliament for military intervention in Syria has threatened all Sunni nations in the Middle East already including Saudi Arabia.
And now, by going after rebels trained by the CIA he is not only giving the finger to the U.S., he is also giving the finger to NATO, and to all Sunni nations and Sunnis in the Middle East.
But then, no one said that Putin wasn't a macho kind of guy. (The kind that might one day get the whole world nuked out of existence). Russians aren't the only ones who should be afraid of this now.
Russia
President Vladimir Putin's sudden escalation of airstrikes inside Syria
is forcing the world to confront his latest military adventure, against
a backdrop of deep distrust over whether defeating the Islamic State is
his only goal.
Russia President Vladimir Putin’s
airstrikesinside Syria are forcing the world to confront his latest
military adventure, against a backdrop of deep distrust over whether
defeating the Islamic State is his only goal.
While the U.S. and
its allies want to see the extremists crushed, Putin’s actions -- the
U.S. said he bombed an area where the terror group doesn’t operate --
fueled fears that he just wants to prop up ally President Bashar
al-Assad, who Western leaders say should step aside. It also raises the
odds of high-stakes accidents as Russian and U.S. jets share the same
air space but potentially different missions.
"If it is a prelude
to a diplomatic process that maybe even makes Russia more willing to
assist in a transition then it could have even a positive aspect," said
Philip Gordon, a former White House Coordinator for the Middle East,
North Africa and Gulf Region. "Anytime you are introducing military
forces into a war zone it’s potentially dangerous."
48 Hours
Damaged
buildings stand in the central Syrian town of Talbisseh, Syria. Russia
confirmed on Septemer 30 that it carried out its first airstrike in
Syria, near the city of Homs, marking the formal start of Moscow's
military intervention in the 4.5-year-old conflict.
Photographer: Mahmoud Taha/AFP/Getty Images
Coming less than 48 hours after Putin and President Barack Obama
failed to reach a breakthrough over Syrian policy at the United Nations,
world powers seemed caught off guard by Russia’s actions. Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry vowed to prevent
“unintended consequences” in a lawless territory that has seen 250,000
people killed and millions sent fleeing since civil war erupted in 2011.
“We agreed that the military should get into contact with each other very soon," Lavrov said alongside Kerry at the UN.
Kerry
earlier in the day said strikes against the self-declared caliphate
were welcome but added that he would have “grave concerns” if Russia
attacks areas where Islamic State isn’t operating. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said that seemed to be the case.
Russia
insists that its initial eight targets were Islamic State militants,
saying its warplanes struck command points, military equipment, arms
depots, and warehouses controlled by the terror group. Yet Putin has
also called other anti-Assad rebels in Syria backed by the U.S.
“terrorists.”
Russia isn’t
the only country accused of using attacks on Islamic State as a pretext
to carry out other operations. Turkey’s airstrikes on Islamic State
morphed into assaults on Kurdish militants inside Turkey and Iraq.
Turkish authorities say they were responding to attacks by the
autonomy-seeking Kurdish PKK, which has killed more than 100 Turkish
police officers and soldiers since fighting intensified in early July.
Propping Assad
The
head of Syria’s main Western-backed opposition, Khaled Khoja, said 36
civilians, including five children, died as a result of Russian bombing:
"They are there to uphold a regime that is on its last legs," he added,
referring to Assad.
Lavrov rejected the accusation.
“We
take full responsibility for our targets,” he told reporters at the UN.
“We are very carefully controlling to ensure that these surgical strikes
have been surgical and that their targets were positions, objects,
equipment and weaponry of terrorist groups.”
The Russian sorties
were welcomed by Iraq, which has seen swaths of its territory overrun by
Islamic State militants. This month it agreed to share intelligence
with Russia and Iran to help combat the terror group. Foreign Affairs
Minister Ibrahim Al-Jaafari said that "weakening ISIS bases in Syria" will "weaken ISIS locations in Iraq as well."
‘Act Preventively’
It’s
not just heightening tensions with the West that are at stake. His
moves threaten to alienate Sunni Muslims and drag Russia ever more
deeply into a deadly conflict that has no end in sight. Putin, in a meeting with officials Wednesday in Moscow, indicated it was a risk worth taking.
“The
only right way to fight international terrorism” is to “act
preventively,” Putin said. “To fight and destroy militants and
terrorists on the territories that they already occupied, not wait for
them to come to our house.”
U.S. officials also flagged the danger
of mid-air crashes that could quickly escalate the situation in
unpredictable and dangerous ways -- and of the greater peril that
Putin’s actions could further destabilize the region.
According to
the State Department, when Russia informed U.S. officials in Baghdad of
their intentions, they asked the Americans to clear their jets from
Syrian airspace. Carter said Wednesday that won’t happen.
“The coalition will continue to fly missions over Iraq and Syria as planned -- as we did today,” Carter said.
The
dispute highlights the mutual suspicions and recriminations at the
heart of U.S.-Russia relations, which Putin himself said Sept. 28 were
at a “low level.” Stephen Sestanovic, U.S. ambassador-at-large for the
former Soviet Union from 1997 to 2001, said that the wariness won’t end
anytime soon.
“In Washington most people still fear that in Syria, Putin will make a bad situation worse,” he said.
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