Source: Financial Times – by Mehul Srivastava, Erika Solomon, Simeon Kerr, and Geoff Dyer (Saudis make plans to deploy ground troops in Syria)
Saudi Arabia is discussing plans to deploy ground troops with regional allies, including Turkey, for a safe zone in Syria, in a last-ditch effort to keep alive a rebellion at risk of collapse as a Russian-backed offensive by Syrian regime forces encroaches on the northern province of Aleppo.
Although western officials have dismissed the plans as lacking credibility, they are a sign of the desperation that many of Syria’s opposition backers feel towards what looks like an increasingly bleak outcome in the war. Two people familiar with Saudi plans told the Financial Times that high-ranking Gulf officials are in Riyadh meeting Turkish officials to discuss options for deploying ground troops to head a coalition of fighters inside Syria.
Aleppo city, Syria’s former business hub, is the last significant urban centre controlled by the rebels. Its countryside, on the northern border with Turkey, is their lifeline.
President [psychopath] Bashar al-Assad’s forces, bolstered by Iranian-funded Shia militias, advanced last week into opposition-held territory in Aleppo’s northern countryside under the cover of Russian air strikes. The violence prompted thousands of civilians to flee, exacerbating the already vast humanitarian crisis.
Publicly, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain are calling for troops to be deployed as part of the US-led international coalition already ranged against Isis. This comes after Washington singled out Arab countries for not doing more to fight the Islamist group. But regional observers say the moves are cover for an intervention to help the Syrian rebels.
Saudi officials are aiming to come up with a plan in the next few weeks. Brigadier General Ahmed Asiri, spokesman for the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, said on Monday that Saudi Arabia would be willing to join any broader international ground force in Syria. “We’re not there yet, but we are very close,” one person familiar with the plans told the FT, asking not to be identified.
The plans appear to be led by Riyadh’s defence minister and deputy crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, whose involvement makes some diplomats reluctant to rule out an attempted intervention. “I see all kinds of red flags. But there is a new level of unpredictability and erratic behaviour in the new Saudi government,” said one western diplomat. “With Mohammed bin Salman, you just don’t know.”
A Saudi official said that “there is not a single plan yet [on military action], the coalition is yet to decide”.
Turkey, frustrated with US support for a Syrian Kurdish militia, the YPG, has its own reasons for intervening. It is keen to undo advances made by the Kurds along its border, said one Turkish official.
However, a senior official in the Turkish prime minister’s office denies that it is preparing to send ground forces. “All these reports regarding this huge number of troops are baseless — yes, we are talking to the Saudis and to all partners on how to support the moderate opposition. As a coalition partner to fight Daesh [Isis], Turkey has a close dialogue and co-operation with a large number of countries.”
The exact location and details of any intervention are disputed. Most options need US air support, which is unlikely to be forthcoming. And any action risks causing an escalation in the multi-sided Syrian war, which has killed about 300,000 people, incubated jihadi militants and driven hundreds of thousands of refugees to Europe.
If Saudi and Turkish forces were deployed at Syria’s northwestern border crossings with Turkey, for example, they would be inside Russia’s operational theatre. They would also be adjacent to territory controlled by the YPG, which is both a US ally against Isis and a PKK affiliate.
“This would be a total nightmare for the US,” said analyst Aaron Stein, of the Atlantic Council in Washington. “What happens if Russia kills a Turk? They would be killing a Nato member.”
Those familiar with the Saudi plans say back-channel conversations are being held between Saudi and Russian officials over outlining theatres of operations — one for the Gulf and Turkish-backed rebels, and a region for Mr Assad and his backers.
If true, the most likely option would be to try to set up a base for rebels in eastern Syria, which is currently held by Isis. That would likely entail a long and bloody battle, and many rebels may be unwilling to give up fighting the regime for Aleppo and north-west Syria.
A third option would be to create a safe zone in the south, adjacent to Jordan. But diplomats say Amman, wary of instability on its borders, looks less willing to support rebels who could attract an upsurge in violence. Russia is already backing a second regime offensive in the area, and Jordan may be more interested in reaching a deal with Moscow.
Turkey has one means of exerting pressure on western countries: the tens of thousands of Syrians who fled the offensive and are being held back at its borders. It may try to demand a safe zone for them inside Syria or else threaten to allow them to flow unhindered toward Europe.
In the absence of a safe zone, the most likely scenario is that Turkey and the Gulf countries simply increase the supply of higher quality weapons to rebel fighters. That option worries some Syrian rebel leaders, who say Moscow would simply respond with more powerful arms.
“We are heading for major escalation,” a commander in the Syrian opposition’s Southern Front, said. “I have lost all hope for the revolution. But the war is far from over.”
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