Russia Moves Into Syria

Russia is shipping massive quantities of offensive weapons, materiel and soldiers to Syria
Russia is ship­ping mas­sive quan­ti­ties of offen­sive weapons, matériel and sol­diers to Syria

Russia is ship­ping mas­sive quan­ti­ties of offen­sive weapons, matériel and sol­diers to Syria.

The mas­sive Condor flights car­ry­ing all kinds of sup­plies now arrive twice a day through Iran and Iraq into Bassel Al-Assad International Airport out­side the port city of Latakia. The car­go is for Russian sol­diers, not Syrian gov­ern­ment forces, but is seen as a build-up to aid Bashar Assad’s embat­tled régime.

The defense offi­cial, briefed on the lat­est satel­lite pho­tos of the Syrian coast­line, said: “This is the largest deploy­ment of Russian forces out­side the for­mer Soviet Union since the col­lapse of the USSR.”

The only thing sur­pris­ing about this is that it took so long.

Syria has been a Russian client state since the 1970s. The rea­son for its orig­i­nal alliance with Soviet Russia is obvi­ous enough. The Arab Socialist Baath Party was a nat­ur­al ally of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Syria’s take on sec­u­lar­ism and social­ism isn’t as severe as Soviet Russia’s, but Syria was ide­o­log­i­cal­ly much clos­er to Russia than to, say, Sweden. That was for damn sure.

And Russia want­ed prox­ies and influ­ence wher­ev­er it could get them even if the ide­o­log­i­cal over­lap was just par­tial. It still does. All great pow­ers and aspir­ing great pow­ers and used-to-be great pow­ers are inter­est­ed in prox­ies and influ­ence wher­ev­er they can get them.

Russia has what is some­times referred to as its only Mediterranean naval base in Syria’s medi­um-sized city of Tartus, but it’s not much more than a gas sta­tion and repair shop. Russia’s big war­ships won’t even fit there. It’s not par­tic­u­lar­ly impor­tant. What mat­ters far more to Russia is its influ­ence in the world, which is still dras­ti­cal­ly down from the great and ter­ri­ble days of the Soviet Union.

Syria’s Bashar al-Assad, of course, wants all the help he can get at this late date. He has been get­ting it from Iran and Hezbollah all along, and from Russia at least diplo­mat­i­cal­ly. He’d cer­tain­ly take help from the United States at this point. He want­ed help from the United States at the very begin­ning. That’s why he char­ac­ter­ized the upheaval in Syria as a war against ter­ror­ism long before a sin­gle ISIS or Nusra fight­er fired a shot, back when it was just him against unarmed pro­test­ers demand­ing some kind of polit­i­cal reform.

Assad might even take help from the Israelis at this point. Not that the Israelis would lift a fin­ger to assist Hezbollah’s co-patron and co-armor­er. That won’t hap­pen under any circumstances.

So here comes dad­dy Russia, rid­ing to the res­cue of its old total­i­tar­i­an client.

Maybe the Russians will go ahead and smash ISIS. Maybe they’ll do the dirty work that has the West so fatigued. Maybe they’ll do every­body a favor.

The result won’t be pret­ty, how­ev­er. Soviet Russia did every­body a favor when it smashed through the east­ern front of Hitler’s Nazi régime, but Poland sure paid the price. As did a lot of oth­er coun­tries in Europe.

The Wall Street Journal isn’t hap­py about this at all.

For 70 years American Presidents from both par­ties have sought to thwart Russian influ­ence in the Middle East. Harry Truman forced the Red Army to with­draw from north­ern Iran in 1946. Richard Nixon raised a nuclear alert to deter Moscow from resup­ply­ing its Arab clients dur­ing the Yom Kippur War in 1973. Even Jimmy Carter threat­ened mil­i­tary force to pro­tect the Persian Gulf after the 1979 Soviet inva­sion of Afghanistan.

America wasn’t quite as burned out then.

We’re all tired of try­ing to fix a part of the world that refused to be fixed, but nature abhors a vacuum.
Story orig­i­nat­ed here: Russia moves into syria