Withdrawing From Syria: Trump Sets Cats Among Flocks
Of Pigeons
Saeed Naqvi
When Dore
Gold, one of the most powerful voices in Israel’s strategic community, raises
his hands, skywards, and exclaims “today I feel as vulnerable as the Kurds”,
who have been abandoned by Donald Trump, one fact can be cast in stone: West
Asia has changed. A panic war cannot be ruled out. But war with whom? Situated
in a comparable circumstance, Saudi Crown Prince, Mohammad bin Salman, on his
knees in Yemen and the Aramco compound, is flourishing the flag of peace at
Tehran. But then who hit the Iranian tanker outside Jeddah? These regional
conflicts will not tamely wind down; they will zig-zag their way out.
The Saudi
“messenger” to Tehran, happens to be Pakistan’s Prime Minister. Surely, Imran
Khan will carry the peace message, but he will also unfurl his Jammu and
Kashmir agenda before the Iranian leadership. This, when Narendra Modi and Xi
Jinping will also be circling around that issue and addressing a host of
others. It must be clear as daylight to New Delhi that Trump’s withdrawal from
West Asia is synchronizing with his “pivot to Asia”, which means expanded
conflict with China. Western media’s dedicated coverage of the disturbances in
Hong Kong, human rights in Xinxiang, all signal a long term Sino-US standoff.
Since the days of Manmohan Singh as Prime Minister, India has been active in
the “Quard” with Japan, Australia and the US. Ambiguities in the international
system made it possible to play both the options – quard and bilateral
relations with Beijing. But Trump is likely to be more jealous as US-China
tensions rise? New Delhi will have to toss up a coin with the same image on
both sides.
It is exactly
33 years ago that President Ronald Reagan and the General Secretary of the
Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev mooted such innovative arms control ideas at Reykjavik,
Iceland, that even strategist like Henry Kissinger found them unacceptably
radical. And yet, when sense sank in, the intermediate Range Nuclear Forces
Treaty was signed the next year paving the way to a changed world order. Change
is in air, but of a different order.
Trump has been
characteristically blunt. “The United States has spent eight trillion dollars
fighting in and policing the Middle East (West Asia). Thousands of our great
soldiers have died or been badly wounded. Millions of people have died on the
other side.”
“Going into
the Middle East is the worst decision ever made in the history of our country.
We went to war under a false and now disproven premise: weapons of mass
destruction. There were none.” This is Trump’s rationale for “slowly and
carefully bringing our great soldiers and military home”. He says his focus is
on the Big Picture. “USA is now greater than ever before.” That is his line for
the 2020 elections.
Trump has been
making allegations against his predecessors even before. Watch his interview to
Jake Tapper of the CNN on the eve of the 2016 elections. He was vehement that
Obama and Hillary Clinton spent millions “in Syria which, in fact, went to
terrorists”. Soon after this allegation, Obama’s Defence Secretary, Ashton
Carter, told a Congressional hearing before live TV cameras that a $500 million
project to train militants had to be terminated because the “Jihadis” so
trained had walked away with all the expensive equipment and joined some other
group.
This was quite
as mysterious as the origins of the Islamic State. The sudden establishment of
the Islamic state in Mosul remains an uninvestigated whodunit. When the IS
charged towards Baghdad in 2014, wielding the latest arms mounted on Humvees
straight from the showroom, sources in Baghdad and Najaf were quite convinced that
the IS was a US project.
What Erdogan
has been offered is a poisoned chalice. This is clear as daylight in Trump’s
own words. The tone is of malicious glee: “Turkey, Europe, Syria, Iran, Iraq,
Russia and the Kurds will now have to figure the situation out.”
The recipe for
the countries listed above to stew in their own juices is available possibly
unknowingly even in Turkish statements. The Kurdish forces Erdogan is bombing had
in their custody thousands of Islamic State detainees, many of them foreigners.
State Department spokesmen are on record: “The US has pressed France, Germany
and other European nations to take back captured IS fighters, but they
refused.” In fact Turkish sources have amplified this statement. Some 12,000 IS
fighters are distributed over seven prisons in north-east Syria. Of these,
4,000 are “foreigners”, which means neither Syrian nor Iraqi. List of IS members
and their families taken back by western countries is almost comical: France
(18 children), US (16 adults and children), Germany (fewer than 10), Australia
(8 children), Sweden (7 children) and Norway (5 children). It is in the nature
of groups like the IS to slip through even well laid nets. How many IS fighters
are lying low in Syria’s north is anybody’s guess. But the Kurds along the
Syria-Turkey border, who kept a steady gaze on the IS will now be hopelessly
distracted by the Turkish offensive. Until the other day, the US was with the
Kurds. What if these IS jihadis are let loose, say, across the border into
Turkey? Erdogan will have to cope with trouble makers of a more lethal make
than the Syrian Kurds.
Pundits like
New York Times, Thomas Friedman, see West Asia exposed to a different kind of
danger as a result of US withdrawal. Ever since the Iraq-Syria border was
opened, the Iranians have an easy land bridge from Tehran, Iraq, Syria to
Lebanon. Friedman’s anxiety is that this “tightening of the noose around
Israel” will now go unchecked because that was one of the roles the US played
in the region. “This brings the Iran-Israel shadow war into the open.” By the
act of pulling out, Trump has set several cats among several flocks of pigeons
all over the place.
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