Saker.png

 

 

Turkey and Saudi Arabia:

to fight, or to flight?

 

 

Ghassan Kadi, The Saker, 14 February 2016

 

No one knows how the “War On Syria” is going to end, let alone what turns it
will take in a year from now, a month, and even a week. There are many
variables, new developments, twists and turns, and they happen quickly, and
sometimes unexpectedly. And because we do not really what is going on behind
the scenes in the corridors of Washington, Ankara and Riyadh, we cannot say
from a position of knowledge that the trio are indeed conjuring for a land
invasion of Syria. To make any plausible interpretations and predictions
therefore, we can only base them on the revealed information, albeit it is
perhaps mainly designed to feed the news-hungry media and their news-thirsty
consumers. The analyses that we can produce cannot be based on more than
this information.

 

This is an uneasy task because to confound the situation further, the recent
information is not only incomplete, but in itself it is confounding and
contradictory. We are seeing adversaries making statements that portray
accord, whilst on the other hand, we see allies, or at least supposed
allies, lashing at each other, and for different reasons, and unless we use
common sense, we won’t make any sense of this at all; it only adds to the
confusion.

 

To this effect, and to begin unraveling the information segment by segment,
we must stop at a recent statement that Erdogan made. What he said to his
American “allies” recently was not very different from saying “you are
either with us or with our enemies” (ie the Kurds). Yet, Erdogan and the USA
are meant to be allies and co-NATO members.

 

Looting

 

To say that Erdogan is unhappy to see northern Syria going back under Syrian
control bit by bit, is a gross understatement. For nearly five years, he has
flooded the region with tens of thousands of militants, supplies, munitions,
and this is not to mention all the looting that was done to Aleppo’s
industrial infra-structure. And now, almost in a blink, he can see this
slipping out of his hands, all the while the USA is watching and incapable
of or unwilling to do anything, or perhaps both. Erdogan has been very vocal
in criticizing the USA and questioning its loyalty to him. He is furious to
the extreme.

 

A few days before making his statement, Russia stated that Turkey is
preparing for a ground attack in Syria, a claim denied by Turkey. Both of
the Russian claim and its Turkish denial received little attention by
American officials. Now, this is the America that makes it its business to
poke its nose into the tiniest incidents and considers building a chicken
pen in Peru a matter of national security. Why would America not comment
about a serious matter such as the above; unless it is clearly saying to
observers that it chooses not to comment because if Turkey launches a ground
attack on Syria, then this is not America’s business!

 

But if we go back a few weeks further to the extra-ordinary NATO meeting
that Erdogan asked for immediately after the downing of the Su-24, the
resolution was for Turkey and Russia to work out their differences. NATO did
not want a bar of it.

 

Megalomania

 

Erdogan is possibly the most dangerous man on earth at the moment. If not
the most dangerous, he is definitely in the top ten list. If anything, he is
a mega megalomaniac. He regards himself as a supreme being who was God-sent
in order to restore the former glories of both Islam and the Ottoman Empire.
He sees everyone else as inferior to him, and when he goes to confer with
his allies, including Obama, in his mind, he is using them and not taking
orders from them. Any observer and critic of Erdogan who is unaware of this
fact is missing a very important reality, and probably the most pertinent
link in the chain of this very complex and perverted personality.

 

In a recent article, Andrew Korybko brilliantly outlaid Russia’s options
vis-à-vis a Turkish land attack on Syria (1). There are many options indeed,
and in such an event, Andrew predicted that Russia will not engage in an
all-out war with Turkey and may even allow Erdogan to vent a bit of steam
provided that he does not go too far.

 

This seems to be happening now, or at least to some degree. Recent news is
reporting Turkish shelling of Kurds in Northern Syria. Another report that
followed later said that even Syrian Army positions have been targeted by
Turkey.

 

There are even some unconfirmed news reports of Washington asking Ankara to
stop its shelling of Kurdish and Syrian Army positions.

 

Obama made it very clear that he does not intend to have direct
confrontation with Russia in Syria (2). On the other hand. Russia is warning
against such intervention. Those warnings, do not only apply to Turkey, but
also to Saudi Arabia no doubt.

 

Escalation?

 

In his latest article (3), The Saker predicts that “in the next few days, we
are probably going to witness a dramatic escalation of the conflict in
Syria”. This is possible, and even probable, but to what extent shall we see
this escalation?

 

Then we look south of Ankara, at Riyadh to be specific. The Saudis are very
restless and upset by the American inaction ever since the “War On Syria”
started. They have been literally begging the USA and NATO for direct
intervention, but to no avail. Now here’s the question, if America did not
want to intervene directly in Syria before Russia entered the scene, why
would they do it now risking a direct confrontation with Russia?

 

It is not uncommon for politicians to lie and to make deceptive remarks. It
is very possible that America is trying to appear to look as if it is
seeking peaceful outcomes whilst behind the scenes pushing its Turkish
cronies into war.

 

Allies however, do not slander each other, not in public, not unless they
are having a serious crisis. And allies do not plan to go into wars together
if they are having a crisis. If we join the dots, the likelihood of direct
American/NATO intervention in Syria looks very remote. They will most
probably provide a tacit support for a joint Saudi-Turkish intervention, but
NATO is highly unlikely to get involved directly in the conflict.

 

Furthermore, and this has been said many times by many analysts, Saudi
Arabia is already bogged down in a war against the ill-equipped ill-funded
Yemeni Army and remains unable to score a victory after many months of heavy
bombardment. This is needless to say that the Saudi economy is in tatters.
The Saudis are already using mercenaries from different countries such as
Sudan, Pakistan and even Yemen itself in Yemen. They have also hired
mercenaries from what is commonly known as Blackwater. The prospect of
Saudis sending troops to Syria to fight and win is as farcical as them
trying to put the first camel on the moon.

 

The Turks and the Saudis are extremely frustrated that their war efforts in
Syria have been turned upside down. Foreign Minister Jubair is still
preconditioning the “removal” of President Assad for any peace deal to be
endorsed. No one is regurgitating his rhetoric with any sympathy, and his
kingdom and Turkey must have reached the stage of thinking that if the tens
of thousands of militants could not do the job, if America and NATO won’t
step in, then we shall pull our sleeves up and do it.

 

Compliance or destabilisation

 

For many decades, Saudi Arabia had been the perfect model that America seeks
in places like the Middle East. Saudi Arabia has been stable and compliant.
This is what America seeks as an ultimate objective; a compliance-based
stability. When compliance cannot be achieved, creating instability becomes
contingency plan B.

 

However, the tides of Saudi Arabia are turning, or will soon be turning.
Saudi compliance is beginning to wane. The Saudis are very unhappy to see
the Iranian nuclear deal with the USA coming to fruition. They are
vocalizing their grievances and this spells danger for the Americans because
it reeks with the smell of compliance-under-threat.

 

The same can be said about Erdogan with respect to his recent attacks on
American foreign policies. And when compliance weakens, America puts
contingency plans into action. This is the scenario when the American bully
steps in and creates instability, but Turkey is not Saudi Arabia. If America
now suddenly tries to pull the rug from underneath Erdogan’s feet, he will
become the sacrificial lamb; not Turkey. But in the case of Saudi Arabia,
and unless the royal family sacrifices the king and his arrogant son Prince
Mohamed Bin Salman, then the whole royal family may be sacrificed.

 

In a not so recent article (4), Sharmine Narwani articulates why America is
losing interest and ability to engage in more action in the Middle East, and
again, I stand to be corrected, but the way I see it, America will not step
in defence of either Erdogan or Saudi Arabia in any invasion they plan for
Syria. They may give them moral support, diplomatic support, and even arm
supplies, but they will not engage militarily and will cut them loose.

 

This in itself puts the onus of winning on Saudi Arabia and Turkey. In this
event, they will have two options; either send troops inside Syria, or just
use her air space to launch limited aerial attacks and borders for some
artillery attacks.

 

With the Syrian-Turkish borders now mostly in the hands of the Kurds and
Syrian Army, ground troops will have little chance, and with the S-400
deployed, aerial attacks will not be a walk in the park.

 

The options of Saudi Arabia and Turkey are to pull back, engage in very
limited skirmishes to save face, or expand the conflict and face grave
consequences.

 

 

1.
http://sputniknews.com/columnists/20160206/1034335764/saudi-arabia-turkey-sy
ria-invasion.html 

 

2.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/2015/10/02/44c1f7fc-6
932-11e5-9223-70cb36460919_story.html 

 

3.
http://thesaker.is/week-eighteen-of-the-russian-intervention-in-syria-a-dram
atic-escalation-appears-imminent/ 

 

4.
http://mideastshuffle.com/2015/08/11/iran-nuclear-deal-why-empire-blinked-fi
rst/ 

 

 

From: http://thesaker.is/turkey-and-saudi-arabia-to-fight-or-to-flight/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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