INSIGHT: The Consequences of Intervening in Syria
jihhttp://middleeastvoices.voanews.com/2013/02/insight-the-consequences-of-intervening-in-syria-88385/
The French military’s current campaign to dislodge adist
militants from northern Mali
and the recent
high-profile attack against a natural gas facility in Algeria are both
directly linked to the foreign intervention in Libya
that overthrew the Gadhafi regime. There is also a strong connection
between these events and foreign powers’ decision not to intervene in Mali
when the military
conducted a coup in March 2012. The coup occurred as thousands of heavily
armed Tuareg tribesmen were returning home to northern Mali
after serving in Moammar Gadhafi’s military, and the confluence of these events
resulted in an implosion of the Malian military and a power vacuum in the
north. Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb and other jihadists were able to take
advantage of this situation to seize power in the northern part of the African
nation.
As all these events transpire in northern Africa ,
another type of foreign intervention is occurring in Syria .
Instead of direct foreign military intervention, like that taken against the
Gadhafi regime in Libya
in 2011, or the lack of intervention seen in Mali
in March 2012, the West – and its Middle Eastern partners – have pursued
a middle-ground
approach in Syria. That is, these powers are providing logistical aid to
the various Syrian rebel factions but are not intervening directly.
Just as there were repercussions for the decisions to
conduct a direct intervention in Libya
and not to intervene in Mali ,
there will be repercussions for the partial intervention approach in Syria . Those
consequences are becoming more apparent as the crisis drags on.
Intervention in Syria
For more than a year now, countries such as the United
States , Turkey ,
Saudi Arabia , Qatar
and European states have been providing aid to the Syrian rebels. Much of this
aid has been in the form of humanitarian assistance, providing things such as
shelter, food and medical care for refugees. Other aid has helped provide the
rebels with non-lethal military supplies such as radios and ballistic vests.
But a review of the weapons spotted on the battlefield reveals that the rebels
are also receiving an increasing number of lethal supplies.
“[W]ar – and particularly a brutal, drawn-out war – tends to
make extremists out of the fighters involved in it.” – Scott Stewart, Stratfor
For example, there have been numerous videos released
showing Syrian rebels using weapons such as the M79 Osa rocket launcher, the
RPG-22, the M-60 recoilless rifle and the RBG-6 multiple grenade launcher. The
Syrian government has also released videos of these weapons after seizing them
in arms caches. What is so interesting about these weapons is that they were
not in the Syrian military’s inventory prior to the crisis, and they all likely
were purchased from Croatia .
We have also seen many reports and photos of Syrian rebels carrying Austrian
Steyr Aug rifles, and the Swiss government has complained that Swiss-made hand
grenades sold to the United Arab Emirates are making their way to the Syrian
rebels.
Free Syrian Army fighters look out of a window during heavy
fighting in the Mleha suburb of Damascus
January 25, 2013 . (Reuters)
With Syrian rebel groups using predominantly second-hand
weapons from the region, weapons captured from the regime, or an assortment of
odd ordnance they have manufactured themselves, the appearance and spread of
these exogenous weapons in rebel arsenals over the past several months is at
first glance evidence of external arms supply. The appearance of a single Steyr
Aug or RBG-6 on the battlefield could be an interesting anomaly, but the
variety and concentration of these weapons seen in Syria
are well beyond the point where they could be considered coincidental.
This means that the current level of external intervention
in Syria is
similar to the level exercised against the Soviet Union
and its communist proxies following the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan .
The external supporters are providing not only training, intelligence and
assistance, but also weapons – exogenous weapons that make the external
provision of weapons obvious to the world. It is also interesting that in Syria ,
like Afghanistan ,
two of the major external supporters are Washington
and Riyadh – though in Syria
they are joined by regional powers such as Turkey ,
Jordan , Qatar
and the United Arab Emirates ,
rather than Pakistan .
In Afghanistan ,
the Saudis and the Americans allowed their partners in Pakistan ’s
Inter-Services Intelligence agency to determine which of the myriad militant
groups in Afghanistan
received the bulk of the funds and weapons they were providing. This resulted
in two things. First, the Pakistanis funded and armed groups that they thought
they could best use as surrogates in Afghanistan
after the Soviet withdrawal. Second, they pragmatically tended to funnel cash
and weapons to the groups that were the most successful on the battlefield –
groups such as those led by Gulbuddin
Hekmatyar and Jalaluddin
Haqqani, whose effectiveness on the battlefield was tied directly to their
zealous theology that made waging jihad against the infidels a religious duty
and death during such a struggle the ultimate accomplishment.
A similar process has been taking place for nearly two years
in Syria . The
opposition groups that have been the most effective on the battlefield have
tended to be the jihadist-oriented groups such as Jabhat
al-Nusra. Not surprisingly, one reason for their effectiveness was the
skills and tactics they learned fighting the coalition forces in Iraq .
Yet despite this, the Saudis – along with the Qataris and the Emiratis – have
been arming and funding the jihadist groups in large part because of their
success on the battlefield. As my colleague Kamran Bokhari noted in February
2012, the situation in Syria was
providing an opportunity for jihadists, even without external support. In
the fractured landscape of the Syrian opposition, the unity of purpose and
battlefield effectiveness of the jihadists was in itself enough to ensure that
these groups attracted a large number of new recruits.
Free Syrian Army fighters rest in Aleppo 's
al-Huluk district October 21, 2012 .
(Reuters)
But that is not the only factor conducive to the
radicalization of Syrian rebels. First, war – and particularly a brutal,
drawn-out war – tends to make extremists out of the fighters involved in it.
Think Stalingrad , the Cold War struggles in Central
America or the ethnic cleansing in the Balkans following the dissolution
of Yugoslavia ;
this degree of struggle and suffering tends to make even non-ideological people
ideological. In Syria ,
we have seen many secular Muslims become stringent jihadists. Second, the lack
of hope for an intervention by the West removed any impetus for maintaining a
secular narrative. Many fighters who had pinned their hopes on NATO were
greatly disappointed and angered that their suffering was ignored. It is not
unusual for Syrian fighters to say something akin to, “What has the West done for
us? We now have only God.”
When these ideological factors were combined with the
infusion of money and arms that has been channeled to jihadist groups in Syria
over the past year, the growth of Syrian jihadist groups accelerated
dramatically. Not only are they a factor on the battlefield today, but they
also will be a force to be reckoned with in the future.
The Saudi gambit
Despite the jihadist
blowback the Saudis experienced after the end of the war against the
Soviets in Afghanistan
– and the current object lesson of the jihadists Syria
sent to fight U.S.
forces in Iraq
now leading groups such as Jabhat al-Nusra – the Saudi government has
apparently calculated that its use of jihadist proxies in Syria
is worth the inherent risk.
There are some immediate benefits for Riyadh .
First, the Saudis hope to be able to break the arc of
Shiite influence that reaches from Iran
through Iraq
and Syria to Lebanon .
Having lost the Sunni counterweight to Iranian power in the
region with the fall of Saddam Hussein in Iraq
and the installation of a Shiite-led government friendly to Iran ,
the Saudis view the possibility of installing a friendly Sunni regime in Syria
as a dramatic improvement to their national security.
Supporting the jihad in Syria
as a weapon against Iranian influence also gives the Saudis a chance to burnish
their Islamic credentials internally in an effort to help stave off criticism
that they are too secular and Westernized. It allows the Saudi regime the
opportunity to show that it is helping Muslims under assault by the vicious
Syrian regime.
A Free Syrian Army fighter checks weapons in Hawa village,
north Aleppo December 23, 2012 . (Reuters)
Supporting jihadists in Syria
also gives the Saudis an opportunity to ship their own radicals to Syria ,
where they can fight and possibly die. With a large number of unemployed,
underemployed and radicalized young men, the jihad in Syria
provides a pressure valve similar to the past struggles in Iraq ,
Chechnya , Bosnia
and Afghanistan .
The Saudis are not only trying to winnow down their own troubled youth; we have
received reports from a credible source that the Saudis are also facilitating
the travel of Yemeni men to training camps in Turkey, where they are trained
and equipped before being sent to Syria to fight. The reports also indicate
that the young men are traveling for free and receiving a stipend for their
service. These young radicals from Saudi Arabia
and Yemen will
even further strengthen the jihadist groups in Syria
by providing them with fresh troops.
The Saudis are gaining temporary domestic benefits from
supporting jihad in Syria ,
but the conflict will not last forever, nor will it result in the deaths of all
the young men who go there to fight. This means that someday the men who
survive will come back home, and through the process we refer to as “tactical
Darwinism” the inept fighters will have been weeded out, leaving a
core of competent militants that the Saudis will have to deal with.
But the problems posed by jihadist proxies in Syria
will have
effects beyond the House of Saud. The Syrian jihadists will pose a threat
to the stability of Syria
in much the same way the Afghan groups did in the civil war they launched for
control of Afghanistan
after the fall of the Najibullah regime. Indeed, the violence in Afghanistan
got worse after Najibullah’s fall in 1992, and the suffering endured by Afghan
civilians in particular was egregious.
Now we are seeing that the jihadist militants in Libya pose
a threat not only to the Libyan regime – there are serious problems in eastern
Libya – but also to foreign interests in the country, as seen in the attack on
the British ambassador and the U.S.
diplomatic mission in Benghazi. Moreover, the events in Mali
and Algeria in
recent months show that Libya-based militants and the weapons they possess also
pose a regional threat. Similar long-lasting and wide-ranging repercussions can
be expected to flow from the intervention in Syria .
The analysis The Consequences of Intervening in Syria is
republished with the permission of Stratfor.
The views expressed in this Insight are the author’s own and
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Scott Stewart is vice president of analysis at Stratfor, a
privately-owned subscription-based provider of geopolitical analysis. Before joining
Stratfor, he was a special agent with the US State Department for 10 years,
where he was involved in hundreds of terrorism investigations.
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