By Yossef Bodansky, Senior Editor, Global Information System / Defense & Foreign Affairs
[Editor’s note: The following full-length report by Yossef Bodansky details Russia’s unambiguous response to the growing jihadist threat in Syria and the Middle East that has remarkably been aided and abetted at several junctures by Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United States. By late 2014, he writes below, “Putin and the Kremlin no longer believed a word President Barack Obama and the White House were saying.” While too exhaustive for many readers and more sympathetic to Moscow than NATO, this account helps explain Republican candidates’ foreign policy statements criticized by some critics as alarmist.]
Summer 2015 saw the U.S. Barack Obama Administration launching a global media campaign warning about the dangers posed by the Russian presence and military build-up along the Mediterranean shores of Syria.
The White House was most worried about the presence of seven T-90 tanks, 15 howitzers, 35 armored personnel carriers, and about 200 Russian marines in a Latakia area air base, as well as the construction of prefab housing for some 1,500 personnel.
In contrast, the larger Russian military presence in Iraq in support of the Haider al-Abadi Administration (which the U.S. also supports with more than 3,000 troops in advisory capacity) does not, apparently, in the eyes of the Obama White House, constitute a threat to the region and the world.
The Obama White House portrayed the Russian build-up in Syria as a major threat to world peace and stability even though the concurrent U.S.-led NATO build-up in Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Romania, and Bulgaria — that is, right on the Russian border — was significantly larger. In late June 2015, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg announced that NATO had already increased the size of the NATO Response Force in the area from 4,000 to 13,000, and that NATO decided to soon increase this force to a total of 40,000 troops.
Stoltenberg also announced that NATO was building six new command centers in Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Poland, Romania, and Bulgaria which would “facilitate strategic planning, military exercises and the deployment of the newly formed 5,000-strong Very High Readiness Joint Task Force”. The new force “will be tasked with mobilizing against Russia within days, once it is called upon to do so”. U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter announced that the U.S. intended to position “hundreds of American tanks, military vehicles and heavy artillery pieces” in these six states as part of the NATO build-up.
The U.S. was also building a wide network of roads, bases and other military infrastructure in the six states in order to support the forthcoming NATO build-up. In mid-June 2015, a U.S. Air Force B-52 long-range bomber conducted a simulated air strike in Adazi, Latvia, less than 200 miles from the Russian border, as part of a “routine exercise”. Unlike the Russian build-up in Syria, this NATO build-up should be of no concern, for, apparently, it threatened nobody.
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There was, however, little new in these Russian military activities in Syria, although the Washington-guided Western media only recently discovered them, especially those activities occurring in the Tartous and Latakia areas, along the shores of the Mediterranean.
The current Russian military presence in and around Syria dates back to early 2012. The Kremlin gradually realized that the struggle for Syria and the entire Middle East was going to be long and challenging. In early February 2012, then-Russian President Dmitry Medvedev dispatched Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov to Damascus, along with the Director of the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service, Mikhail Fradkov, in order to assess the situation in the country and the prospects of the Bashar al-Assad Administration.
On Feb. 7, 2012, the two held a long and hard conversation with Assad and “discussed in detail the situation in and around Syria”. In Medvedev’s name, they formally informed Assad that “Russia reaffirmed its intention to promote peaceful settlement of the Syrian crisis by Syrians themselves without foreign intervention and with full respect of Syria’s independence”. The Kremlin believed, they told Assad, in “the need to immediately stop violence, regardless of where it may come from, to start an inclusive nation-wide dialogue as early as possible and to implement the long overdue democratic reforms”.
President Assad committed to closely following the advice and ideas of the Kremlin. Lavrov and Fradkov also met with all of Syria’s defense and intelligence senior officials. Back in Moscow, they assured Medvedev that Assad’s Damascus was stable and ready to cooperate.
The Kremlin was prompted into action by the concurrent increase in the U.S.-led sponsorship of the jihadist forces. Turkey and Qatar had already sponsored the initial organization of Syrian and foreign (initially mainly Libyan and Iraqi) jihadist forces in the Autumn of 2011. In April 2012, the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) formally adopted Qatar’s then 2,500-strong jihadist Foreign Legion as a key player in the Syrian insurrection and had Turkish Intelligence provide it with facilities in a converted garrison in Antakya. In the coming months, the United States, Turkey, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia upgraded the overall military and political capabilities of the Syrian jihadist opposition. In July 2012, Turkish Intelligence established a secret facility in Adana, about 60 miles from the Syrian border and adjacent to the U.S.-NATO airbase in Incirlik, to serve as a “nerve center” for the joint effort “to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad”. While the CIA was formally not a part of the Adana “nerve center”, Incirlik-based U.S. officials were present in the Adana facility, and, in effect, guided the Turkish and Qatari senior intelligence officials running it.
Both Ankara and Doha were expecting the U.S. involvement to markedly increase in lieu of the enhanced mandate and latitude the U.S. Intelligence Community had just received from the Finding signed by President Barack Obama.
Russian Navy operations started slowly in the Spring of 2012.
The primary mission of the Black Sea Fleet was to sustain military supplies to the Syrian Armed Forces, as well as food, water, and fuel for the Russian naval maintenance and repair base in the port of Tartous. In April and May, the Smetlivy (a Kashin-class guided missile destroyer) led a two-three combatant contingent patrolling off the coast of Syria. Under their protection, two landing craft — the Nikolai Filchenkov and Tsezar Kunikov — and two-three Navy cargo ships made repeated delivery runs between Novorossiysk and Tartous. As fighting escalated in May 2012, the Smetliviy delivered a small force of about 30 to 40 Marines-Spetsnaz to Tartous. They stayed for a short while, working on the security of the Russian facilities. As well, all Russian naval vessels sailing to Syria started carrying a self-protection force of between 20 and 40 Marines each.
Meanwhile, the numbers of Russian military personnel in Syria kept rising.
A group of area experts and intelligence operatives arrived in order to provide real-time analysis to the Kremlin and expert advice to the Syrian leaders. They were provided with security details of SVR (Sluzhba vneshney razvedki: Foreign Intelligence Service) Spetsnaz from Directorate S.
Russian military experts and technicians were taking over handling the supplies and the maintenance of the newly-arrived weapon systems. A growing number of military advisers and intelligence experts assisted the Syrian Armed Forces to transform from heavy forces optimized for fighting Israel and Turkey to a decentralized, flexible force, optimized for fighting irregular warfare. More and more Russian technical experts were required to keep the weapons functioning, and growing numbers of trainers were required for the new weapon systems delivered. The numbers of Russian military personnel kept growing but all Russians were ordered to remain in secure rear bases and were forbidden to get close to the battlefield.
In May-June 2012, the Kremlin also began contemplating the dispatch of major military and irregular units to Syria ostensibly for exercises with the Syrian Armed Forces, but ultimately as the core of an international peacekeeping force that would ensure Russia’s own interests and also be friendly to the Assad administration. The force the Kremlin was considering might reach 5,000 troops.
Officially, the Russian force would come under the joint headquarters of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), as well as regional Anti-Terrorist Structure of Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO). Around June 1, 2012, CSTO Secretary General Nikolai Bordyuzha was formally instructed to prepare for the possibility of the CSTO’s participation in a peacekeeping force for resolving the crisis in Syria. The Kremlin also ordered an intensive training program for the Airborne Troops, GRU (Glavnoye razvedyvatel’noye upravleniye: Main Intelligence Director of the General Staff of the Armed Forces) Spetsnaz (including semi-regular elements), and light units of the Army and the Navy’s Naval Infantry (Marines).
In the first week of June 2012, the Kremlin formalized the composition of the intervention force in Syria and instructed all assigned units to begin preparations for a possible deployment to Syria. Col.-Gen. Vladimir Shamanov, the Commander-in-Chief of the Airborne Troops, was and still is the force commander. This force structure is also still valid.
The key units assigned to the Syria intervention force include the 76th Air Assault Division in Pskov, the 15th Combined Arms Brigade in Samara, the 810th Naval Infantry Brigade of the Black Sea Fleet, the 336th Naval Infantry Brigade of the Baltic Sea Fleet, and an assortment of GRU, VDV and MP Spetsnaz units. Most important were the GRU’s Spetsnaz units comprised of Chechen veterans of the “West” and “East” battalions. Back in 2006-2007, they had already carried out “peacekeeping missions” in Lebanon which amounted to a relentless and very successful hunting down of Caucasus-based jihadist terrorists.
By now, the Kremlin was increasingly apprehensive about the specter of a Libya-style U.S.-led NATO intervention in Syria. In early July 2012, the Kremlin ordered a major Russian Navy operation which would serve as a clear show of force at a strategic level. Russia would demonstrate the ability to coordinate the move of naval combatants from three Fleets — the North Sea, the Baltic and the Black Sea — into the eastern Mediterranean. The Navy task force was (1) to show the Russian flag prominently in the eastern Mediterranean; and (2) exercise both autonomously and with the Syrian military the establishment of an anti-aircraft and anti-shipping barrier against a possible U.S./NATO attack on Syria. The Kremlin wanted to demonstrate to, and convince, the U.S. and NATO that Russia was adamant on shielding Syria against Western intervention.
“Libya will not be repeated,” was an assertion made by virtually all Russian senior officials involved.
Formally, the Russian Navy deployment was “not linked to the escalation of the situation in Syria.” The deployment in the Mediterranean was expected to last at least until the end of September 2012 and include port visits to Syria, though. “The program of the voyage includes a call in the Syrian port of Tartous,” a Navy senior officer acknowledged. “In Tartous the ships are going to top up on supplies of fuel, water and foodstuffs.”
The first contingent came from the Black Sea Fleet base in Sevastopol. It was led by the destroyer Smetlivy, a veteran of operations off the coast of Syria. The Black Sea Fleet contingent included another combatant, two landing craft with experience in Syria — the Nikolai Filchenkov and Tsezar Kunikov — and two or three Navy cargo ships. All naval vessels carried Naval Infantry detachments for self-protection. According to a Navy officer, the cargo ships were carrying food, water and fuel for the Russian naval maintenance and repair base in Tartous.
The key element of the task force came from the North Sea Fleet. This contingent was led by the Adm. Chabanenko (a Udaloy II-class anti-submarine destroyer), and included the Alexander Otrakovsky, Georgy Pobedonosets and Kondopoga large amphibious assault ships, as well as the Nikolai Chiker and Sergei Osipov support vessels. All of them left their home port of Severomorsk loaded with weapons and supplies for the Syrian Armed Forces. The assault ships also carried Naval Infantry units for training exercises on the Syrian coast, as well as spare parts and supplies for the Tartous base.
In the north Atlantic, the contingent led by the Admiral Chabanenko was joined by “a group of Baltic Fleet ships” led by the Yaroslav Mudryy (a Neustrashimy-class multi-purpose frigate), the tanker Lena, as well as additional combatants and a support vessel. The Baltic Sea Fleet contingent joined the North Sea Fleet contingent and formed a single task force which sailed together into the Mediterranean and Tartous.
Off the Syrian coast, they were joined by the Black Sea Fleet contingent then already in place. The combatants from the Black Sea and Baltic Sea Fleets included anti-aircraft vessels: another signal to Washington.
In early Winter 2012, the Kremlin was shaken again by the unpredictability of the situation in Syria.
Warning signs were everywhere to be seen.
There was a marked escalation in the fighting country wide as larger numbers of jihadists kept crossing from Turkey with better weapons and large quantities of both weapons and funds in order to recruit local fighters. The Turkish Armed Forces escalated their provocations and cross-border fighting along the Turkish-Syrian border, leading to growing fears of Turkish military intervention aimed to topple the Bashar al-Assad Administration. In late November 2012, U.S.-sponsored jihadists trained and equipped in norther Jordan made their way to the Damascus area. The Syrian defenders caught by surprise and fierce fighting erupted near the Damascus International Airport and the nearby Russian facilities.
As well, since early December 2012, jihadist pressure was growing around the main strategic facilities in northwestern Syria. On Dec. 22, 2012, Russian military experts working in the Chemical Weapons arsenal in al-Saphira, north-western Syria, had to fight their way out, carrying the chemical weapons they were evacuating. Under Russian supervision, the Syrian Government consolidated its chemical weapons into a couple of locations. However, the Russian experts remained unsettled about long-term prospects given the incessant jihadist onslaughts on Syria’s strategic facilities.
Starting late-December 2012 and into early January 2013, the Russians maintained teams of the military, intelligence, and Ministry of Emergencies in the airports of Damascus and Aleppo. They were handling the Russian transport aircraft bringing both military and humanitarian supplies. However, they were also prepared and equipped to handle an airlift for the evacuation of Russian and former-Soviet Union citizens. There was a smaller Russian team in the Latakia airport dedicated to the need to evacuate Russian and former-Soviet Union citizens. There are about 20,000 Russian citizens and an unknown number of former-Soviet Union citizens (including at least 5,000 Belorussians and Ukrainians) in Syria.
Meanwhile, there was growing apprehension in Moscow about the stability and survivability of the Assad Administration.
By mid-December 2012, the Kremlin faced for the first time the question of whether Damascus would fall. Russian experts opined that the Assad Administration should be sustained in power if humanly possible. The Kremlin also sought the advice of official Jerusalem. The Israeli team under Maj.-Gen. (Res.) Amos Gilad, the Director of Political-Military Affairs at the Ministry of Defense, concurred with their Russian counterparts. “Suppose he [Assad] does leave, there could be chaos,” Gilad opined. “In the Middle East you never know who will come instead. We need to stay level-headed; the entire world is dealing with this. At the moment, the chemical weapons are under control.”
Just before Christmas 2012, there were irregular Russian military and intelligence activities in the Moscow area in the relation to Syria. These activities suggested that the Kremlin was considering military intervention in Syria. The major unknown was whether the Kremlin aimed to prop-up a government in Damascus which would not be Ikhwani-Islamist (which the Kremlin correctly considered to be U.S.-dominated) and with which Moscow could live, or that the Kremlin just prepared to thoroughly clean-up Damascus of all vestiges of sensitive Soviet and Russian activities (the way Moscow cleaned Baghdad in Spring 2003 before the arrival of the U.S. forces).
The first indication of something irregular came when Airborne units, Special Forces units, and transport aircraft in the Caucasus, Pskov, Samara, and the Moscow area were put on a high state of readiness. The units were told to prepare for combat deployment to Syria. The units mobilized were these earmarked back in June 2012 for intervention in Syria. Then, a special combined force of the SVR was organized in the Moscow area under the direct command of SVR Chief Mikhail Yefimovich Fradkov who answered directly to President Vladimir Putin. The force included at least a Spetsnaz battalion (from Directorate S) and the Zaslon (Screen) unit responsible for “clean-up” of foreign countries of sensitive Russian and Soviet materials (from intelligence systems to archival material to weapons).
In Spring 2003, Zaslon had done an exceptionally good and thorough job in Baghdad, as well as clashing with U.S. Special Forces while evacuating to Syria. Specialized military equipment and vehicles as well as a Naval Infantry Spetsnaz unit for their protection left Novorossiysk for Tartous (more below).
By the first of the new year, 2013, the Syrian Armed Forces went on the offensive in several locations using new Iranian weapons, including long-range rockets. Within a few days, they were able to push the jihadist forces away from key facilities. In both public and private, Bashar al-Assad projected calm and confidence. Official Ankara assured Moscow that no intervention in Syria would be launched from Turkish territory. The Kremlin attributed Ankara’s initiative to the naval presence off the Syrian coast. “The presence of the Russian Marines near the Syrian waters will deter the West from deploying ground forces in Syria,” explained a Russian senior official. In the Kremlin, calm and confidence in Assad were restored in the first days of January 2013.
A thorough security study by Russian Intelligence concluded that if properly propped up, the Assad Administration could hold onto power for the foreseeable future.
The focus was back on ongoing naval operations.
By their inherent character, naval operations have their own momentum and pace, and are thus more resilient to sudden changes.
In the Fall of 2012, the Kremlin had resolved to sustain a permanent Mediterranean Sea task force of 10 warships. The operation was entrusted to the Russian Black Sea Fleet, but the key combatants came from all Fleets. “Since the end of 2012, an average of 10 ships and auxiliary vessels from the Black Sea, Baltic and Northern Fleets are permanently in the Mediterranean Sea, but the command of the permanently deployed Navy in this region is carried by the Black Sea Fleet and the burden of performing the tasks of this group lies mainly on this Fleet’s warships and auxiliary vessels,” Adm. Aleksander Vitko, the Black Sea Fleet’s commander, explained in late July 2015.
The Black Sea Fleet established a dedicated command which was in control of all naval forces in the Mediterranean irrespective of their Fleet of origin.
In early December 2012, the Mediterranean task force was still in organizational phase. Until December 10, the task force was led by the amphibious landing ships Novocherkassk and Saratov of the Black Sea Fleet. Both ships unloaded a lot of military equipment in the port of Tartous on December 5, 2012, before heading back to sea. Significantly, the Novocherkassk delivered Iskander ballistic missile systems and other strategic weapons. Both landing ships returned to Novorossiysk on Dec. 10, 2012. A Black Sea Fleet task force comprised of the missile cruiser Moskva, the patrol ship Smetlivy, the ocean tanker Ivan Bubnov and the sea tugboat MB-304 remained on standby in the Ægean Sea until further notice from the General Staff. The Novocherkassk and Saratov were expected to return to the eastern Mediterranean after loading “specialized equipment”: heavy weapons for the Syrian military.
By mid-December 2012, there was no naval task force off the Syrian coast from the Black Sea Fleet.
With tension mounting, the Kremlin on Dec. 18, 2012, ordered Russian Navy reinforcements to be rushed to the Syrian coast from the North Sea and Baltic Sea Fleets. The Kremlin insisted that the Fleet was preparing to evacuate civilians. The joint task force of the North Sea and Baltic Sea Fleets was led by two large amphibious assault ships — the Alexander Shabalin and Kaliningrad — and included the patrol ship Yaroslav Mudryy, the tugboat SB-921 and the tanker Lena. Additional combatants from the North Sea Fleet were expected to join this task force when ready for sea duty. Both the Alexander Shabalin and the Kaliningrad were carrying heavy military equipment and supplies for the Syrian military. Initially, this task force would reinforce the Moskva-led task force of the Black Sea Fleet in order to create major naval presence.
Concurrently, the Kremlin ordered the deployment of the Severomorsk-led (an Udaloy-class destroyer) task force from the Pacific Fleet to the Gulf of Aden and Sea of Oman. This deployment reflected the growing apprehension in the Kremlin that any development in the Syrian crisis might quickly escalate into a war with Iran. The Severomorsk-led task force also included vessels form the North Sea Fleet. The Severomorsk itself was a North Sea Fleet asset and was last seen in the Barents Sea. The Kremlin was adamant on being present at the eye of the storm.
On Dec. 24, 2012, the two large landing ships of the Black Sea Fleet — the Azov and Nikolai Filchenkov — suddenly left the Novorossiysk port on their way to Tartous, Syria. Russian officials claimed that the two ships were carrying “detachments of Naval Infantry and several pieces of military hardware”, the latter being military equipment for the Syrian army. The Azov and Nikolai Filchenkov were mainly carrying specialized military and intelligence equipment and vehicles that might be required for the evacuation of Damascus, as well as a Spetsnaz Naval Infantry unit for their protection. They were escorted by combatants and technical support vessels. On Dec. 28, 2012, the group linked up with the Black Sea Fleet task force comprised of the missile cruiser Moskva and the frigate Smetlivy which had been loitering in the Ægean Sea. They all headed to Tartous as a single task force.
On Dec. 28, 2012, Russian Deputy Defense Minister Anatoly Antonov stated that Russia would continue to honor contracts on military supplies to Syria. “Russia has always been a reliable partner in fulfilling its obligations under contracts. We were fulfilling, we are fulfilling and we will fulfil our obligations in this field,” he said. “As for Syria, no decisions have been adopted that would limit our arms supplies to that country.” Antonov stressed: “Russia does not supply offensive weapons to Syria.”
On Dec. 30, 2012, the large landing ship of the Russian Black Sea Fleet — the Novocherkassk — suddenly left Novorossiysk on its way to Tartous. According to the Russian General Staff, the Novocherkassk was carrying “Naval Infantry and several units of military hardware” destined for Tartous. This was a highly irregular move because the Novocherkassk was sent to Tartous in early December and had just returned to the Novorossiysk naval base. It was supposed to stay in base for at least a month. Moreover, the other two large landing ships of the Black Sea Fleet — the Azov and the Nikolai Filchenkov — sailed into the Ægean Sea on Dec. 28, 2012, and joined the Task Force heading for the Syrian coast.
Hence, the sudden dispatch of the Novocherkassk to Tartous was an emergency undertaking at a time the Kremlin was less apprehensive about Assad’s immediate survival. Indeed, the Novocherkassk carried mainly strategic weapons and munitions for the Syrian military in order to sustain the impending offensive and heightened war effort.
In early January 2013, the Kremlin decided to transform the emergency naval deployment into an unprecedented show of force in the eastern Mediterranean and the Black Sea. Several Naval combatants from all four Fleets would hold “combined exercises” in late January. “The Russian Navy’s drills of this scope will be held for the first time over the past few decades and are designed to improve control, ensure and practice multi-service force interaction of the fleets in the far-off maritime zones,” the Defense Ministry announced. The objective of the exercise would be to “practice the issues of establishing a multi-service grouping of forces outside Russia” and to help personnel acquire skills needed for “combat training missions in the Black and Mediterranean seas”. The exercise would also include operational loading of Naval Infantry and Airborne troops onto amphibious ships from the “rough coast of the North Caucasus” for a quick deployment to Syria.
By Jan. 21, 2013, numerous combatants and auxiliaries from the Northern Fleet base near Murmansk, the Baltic Fleet base in Kaliningrad, the Black Sea Fleet base in Sevastopol, and the Pacific Fleet base in Vladivostok converged on the eastern Mediterranean. The 10-day exercise was the largest naval exercise since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
At least eight major warships led the maneuvers. Also participating were numerous assault-landing and support craft, submarines and long-range aircraft. Some of the scenarios exercised were Syria-optimized. The Novocherkask led a group of landing ships in accessing hostile coast in order to evacuate Russian citizens still in Syria. The Kaliningrad led a group of ships which exercised breaking a naval blockade on Syria. The Nikolai Filchenko, Azov, and Aleksander Shabalin exercised providing support for operations inside Syria. The combat elements of the entire flotilla exercised establishing air defense barriers, as well anti-ship and anti-submarine warfare against notional major fleets.
Meanwhile, Russian experts continued to study the emerging trends in Syria and the entire Middle East in order to develop long term strategy. Their findings, presented in late April 2013, still guide the Kremlin’s overall strategy and policy. The Russian experts who interact with the upper-most leaders in Damascus concluded that the day-to-day fighting does not constitute the primary yardstick for determining the state of the Assad Administration. The main indicator is the posture of key segments of the population.
Most important was that the minorities — Alawites, Druze, Orthodox Christians, Armenians, Aramaics and Shi’ite Arabs — were all siding with Assad’s Damascus and were formulating their communal long-term plans on the assumption that Assad was going to win the war. This reinvigorated confidence was manifesting itself in the resilience of society and the military, as well as in the military’s assertiveness. Moreover, key elements of Sunni Arab economic élites were also increasingly committing to the Assad camp. The only minority which was not part of this dynamics were the Kurds because they remained fixated on the consolidating of their Kurdish State which had effectively seceded from both Iraq and Syria.
The other key conclusion was that the “neutral majority” — the tribal, rural and urban clan Sunni Arabs — had given up on the ability of the Islamist-jihadist forces to topple the Assad Government. Hence, this tormented, yet silent majority was adamant on not antagonizing both the Syrian military and security forces, as well as the increasingly violent jihadist forces. The majority of Sunni Arabs were inclined to make localized expedient live-and-let-live deals with those capable of harming them, be they the jihadist forces or the government forces. Having been abused by the jihadists, tribal elements were even ready to pick up arms against jihadist forces encroaching into their native zones. With this development, Damascus might no longer fear that the Islamist-jihadist insurrection transform into a genuine popular revolt.
The long-term goal of Assad’s Damascus, the Russian experts concluded, should therefore be the sustenance of the status quo until it was possible to defeat the Sunni jihadists. Given the immense and growing support the jihadists were receiving from the U.S. and its allies (Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, etc.), and given the complete integration of the Sunni jihadist wars in Syria and Iraq, the war in Syria could only be won in a regional context.
Hence, Russia began to examine and focus on long-term regional dynamics involving potential allies, such as the rôles of Israel and Egypt, and mega-trends such as the evolving energy architecture and the future of the Maghreb in view of the jihadist chaos spreading from Libya to Tunisia and Algeria (aggravated by the Bouteflika succession crisis).
These conclusions caused the Kremlin to re-examine the most basic concepts of how to secure and sustain, let alone further, Russia’s vital security and economic interests.
The key to the Russian strategy was to shield the entire region and isolate it to the best possible way from regional forces and U.S.-led intervention. The ultimate long-term objective was to empower grassroots-supported forces over a new regional, post-state tapestry while crushing the jihadist scourge. In practical terms, the Kremlin committed to the two-tier isolation of the jihadist cauldron in al-Jazira (the Sunni heartlands of Syria, Iraq and central Saudi Arabia) before it would be possible to replace the jihadists with indigenous entities.
The internal tier would be the historic buffer and stabilizing force: the Fertile Crescent of Minorities stretching from the Persian Gulf, along the Iranian and Turkish borders, to the shores of the Mediterranean, and all the way to the Gulf of Aqaba. Initially, the Kremlin assessed that the external tier would largely be in the southern and eastern spaces of the Mediterranean, and would be determined by Russia’s naval and military presence on a regional scale.
The Kremlin experts warned that the rising jihadist forces could not be defeated until the U.S.-led sponsorship via Turkey (and increasingly Iran) was brought to an end. On their own, Ankara’s neo-Ottoman aspirations and Tehran’s Mahdist aspirations were providing incentive to intervene in, and exacerbate, the multi-faceted fratricidal carnage engulfing the entire Middle East. Still, neither Turkey nor Iran was immune to regional pressure.
In the face of all this, the U.S. commitments to Turkey (a NATO member state) and Iran (on the coattails of the nuclear agreement) profoundly changed their strategic behavior. Both adopted audacious and risky strategies, protected by the specter of U.S.-led NATO intervention in support of their jihadist-based interests.
This meant that the Kremlin had to rethink Syria in the context of a regional theater stretching from the western Mediterranean, the greater Middle East, and the greater Black Sea Basin, and even (in Sunni jihadist and Iranian contexts) the greater Central Asia.
In addition to major security and jihadism challenges, these regions also contained major economic and energy resources Russia could not ignore. The U.S. and French rush to bomb Syria in August 2013, ostensibly in response for the sarin attack provocation but in reality as a precursor to toppling the Assad Administration, convinced the Kremlin they had been right all along. That the air strikes were averted at the last moment by diplomatic maneuvers gave no guarantee that a new provocation would not elicit U.S.-led NATO intervention.
Therefore, starting in Autumn 2013, the Kremlin ordered an increase in naval deployments and military support in the eastern Mediterranean basin and the Levant. The build-up of naval forces would be on a permanent basis and focus on consolidating anti-U.S./anti-NATO naval capabilities. “Russia will be building up its Mediterranean fleet until it is deemed sufficient to perform the task set,” explained Admiral of the Fleet Viktor Chirkov.
While the size of the task force would remain the same — about a dozen combatants — their quality would improve markedly. Starting in Autumn 2013 and into early 2014, the Russians deployed to the eastern Mediterranean the Moskva (an Atlant-class guided missile cruiser), the Varyag (a Slava-class guided missile cruiser known as “aircraft carrier killer”), and the Pyotr Veliky (a Kirov-class battlecruiser). Finally, the Novorossiysk — the first new Varshavyanka-class diesel-electric stealth submarine — was delivered to the Black Sea Fleet in January 2014.
In early 2014, Russia initiated, sponsored and participated in several international initiatives to mediate and negotiate end to the Syrian fratricidal fighting. All of these efforts failed to take off because of unreasonable and excessive demands by the representatives of “the Syrian opposition” (who lack any legitimacy on the ground in Syria) on the basis of false hopes promised by the U.S. and its allies. As Arab media emphasized the failure of all these efforts, jihadist forces escalated the fighting inside Syria. Consequently, in February 2014, the Russians increased the flow of weapons and other military supplies to Syria. Numerous technicians, trainers and experts arrived with the weapons. By early March, they were joined by several Russian military experts who arrived to help the Syrian military make the best use of the new weaponry and capabilities.
After the annexation of Crimea in mid-March 2014, the Kremlin determined not to compromise with the U.S.-led West on all other issues as well. Russian leaders were apprehensive of a U.S. effort to undermine Russian interests worldwide as a revenge for the Kremlin success in Ukraine. The Kremlin was convinced that the Obama Administration would first concentrate on reversing Russia’s gains and position in Syria and the Middle East. The appearance of U.S.-made weapons — especially TOW ATGMs — in the hands of jihadist forces, including those formally affiliated with Al Qaida, was used by Moscow as a proof of Washington’s commitment to escalating jihadist violence. Indeed, these weapons, including the TOWs, were provided to the jihadists by Saudi Arabian Intelligence with U.S. foreknowledge and tacit approval.
Hence, Putin decided on assertive policy in pursuit of Russia’s geo-strategic and geo-economic interests in the greater Middle East, starting with Syria. In late March 2014, Alexander Malevany, the Deputy Chief of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB), articulated the Kremlin’s new regional policy. In the aftermath of U.S.-led actions related to Crimea and Ukraine, Malevany stated, “Moscow was taking offensive intelligence measures to counter Western efforts to weaken Russian influence in the region.”
In this context, the highest echelons in the Kremlin, starting with Putin in person, reached out to Jerusalem in order to reassure Israel of the Russian intentions and actions. Russia was cognizant of the urgent imperative to address the growing fears in Israel of spill-overs of the war either because of the empowerment and emboldening of Iran-Hizbullah or of jihadist forces. Moscow also knew that Jerusalem was under incessant pressure from Obama’s Washington to get actively involved in Syria and support the jihadist forces that the U.S. was once again training in northern Jordan for a major assault on Damascus.
Jerusalem was extremely reluctant to abide by Washington’s demands, and Moscow sought to further assuage Jerusalem.
In late April 2014, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov assured his Israeli counterpart, Avigdor Lieberman, of the Russian Doctrine as it applied to Israel. “If we are attacked, we would certainly respond. If our interests, our legitimate interests, the interests of Russians have been attacked directly … I do not see any other way but to respond in accordance with international law,” Lavrov explained. He further stressed that “Russian citizens being attacked is an attack against the Russian Federation.” Israel has the largest community of Russian citizens outside the former Soviet Union. According to the Kremlin’s calculations, more than a third of Israel’s six-million-plus strong Jewish population were either Russian citizens or eligible for Russian citizenship.
Hence, the Kremlin’s explicit commitment to the well-being of Russian citizens is of great significance.
Meanwhile, the Kremlin was focusing on the extent of the Islamic State/Caliphate threat to both Syria and Iraq, as well as the rest of the Muslim World. Russian experts warned the Kremlin that the emergence of the Khorasan Pledge and the revival of the Caliphate myth in Spring 2014 would transform the entire Sunni World and create a takfiri jihadist upsurge that would keep spreading on its own and would soon reach Russia’s own restive Muslim communities. As a result, they argued, it was imperative to reverse the rise of ISIL/Caliphate by winning back the Sunni Arab grassroots and not just through military means.
The strategy formulated by the Kremlin required to first contain takfiri jihadism and isolate it from the rest of the Sunni world. This would be attained by a comprehensive approach based anew on the strengthening and sustenance of the Fertile Crescent of Minorities. The Kremlin decided to adopt the strategy even though the evolving U.S.-Iran clandestine relations were complicating the situation regarding the strategic posture on the Levant shores.
Russia remained committed to the ‘Alawite-Druze-Maronite coalition as the key to the greater Syria while the U.S.-sponsored Iran was committed to the Shi’ite Hizbullah. Because of the importance of the Mediterranean coastline, Syria, rather than Iraq, was the key to the Russian regional posture. In early April 2014, the Kremlin was convinced they could rely on the Assad Administration. “Russia’s confidence in Assad’s hold on power has increased as the conflict has evolved in his favor,” noted Alexander Zotov, a former Russian Ambassador to Syria.
On the advice of Moscow, Damascus focused anew on the consolidation of hold over the western parts of Syria. The Syrian military would advance from these safe zones eastwards in order to contain the jihadist and Turkey-sponsored forces in north-western Syria and beyond. To enable the Syrian offensives, the Russians expanded their sealift (mainly by Black Sea Fleet assets) and airlift (mainly by Ministry of Emergencies transport aircraft) of both military supplies and humanitarian aid continues unabated. Russian transports used the airports in Damascus, Latakia, and Aleppo (fighting permitting), while the Fleet used the ports of Tartous and Latakia.
The Russians provided through this “lifeline” large quantities of ammunition, and spare parts for T-72 tanks, BMP, and BTR armored vehicles, Mi-24 attack helicopters and other weapon systems. In February 2014, the Syrians received and started to use long-range Smerch and Uragan rockets. In early March 2014, the Syrian Air Force increased the use of MiG-29 fighters converted to ground-attack modes with a new generation of guided munitions. Between early March and late May 2014, there was a marked improvement in the performance and effectiveness of the Syrian Air Force as a whole. This was attributed to greater serviceability of aircraft and helicopters, improved accuracy of bombing, and larger number of sorties.
By mid-2014, the Russians supplied and started to operate for the Syrian military Yakovlev Pchela-1T tactical UAVs. These Russian UAVs have since markedly improved the tactical intelligence and targeting of the Syrian Armed Forces. All of these developments were the result of on-site Russian training, as well as on-site technical and maintenance support.
Meanwhile, the Russians launched in early Spring 2014 a myriad of intelligence and special operations against jihadists from the North Caucasus and Central Asia. Russian Spetsnaz detachments conducted relentless pursuits after wanted jihadists which resulted most of the times in the target killing of the Russians’ prey. In the process, Russian Intelligence acquired voluminous knowledge of the real situation inside Syria and the grassroots undercurrents. These special operations also exposed the Russians first hand to the extent of the presence of Western intelligence and special forces in the ranks of the jihadists, the extent of their active support and weapons supplies to virtually all jihadists irrespective of their Al Qaida affiliation.
The Russians also noted the extent of the support by Turkish Intelligence for jihadists planning on returning to Russia (mainly the North Caucasus) and the greater Central Asia, as well as the tacit support of U.S. intelligence for these undertakings.
In mid-June 2014, the Kremlin consented to requests from Iraq and Iran, as well as the Obama White House, to provide major military support for Iraq in order to prevent the fall of Baghdad to the rapidly advancing forces of ISIL. The Russians were asked to help address Iraq’s endemic shortages of trained manpower, as well as help training of a new generation. The Russians established forward facilities, mainly in the Iraqi Air Force base al-Muthanna where there was a large U.S. military and contractor presence.
In late-June 2014, the Russians delivered by heavy transport aircraft the first five Su-25 attack aircraft (out of a squadron of 12, the delivery of which would be completed within three to four months) and large quantities of sophisticated guided munitions. With the Su-25s also came a group of Russian technicians who worked around the clock to get all the aircraft operational within three to four days. Officially, Russia sent “trainers” to help the Iraqi pilots learn to use the new aircraft and munitions. “Their objective is to, first of all, assemble the supplied equipment and, secondly, to ensure that the aircraft flies properly. Our pilots will not be flying and taking part in military operations. This is forbidden,” Ilya Morgunov, the Russian Ambassador to Iraq, explained.
In reality, Russian combat pilots flew the majority of the combat sorties which stopped the jihadist advance. The rest of the sorties were flown by Iranian Pasdaran pilots who deployed five Su-25s of Pasdaran Combat Aviation. No Iraqi pilots took part for lack of proper training.
In the first week of July 2014, the Russians started the delivery by air of eight Mi-35M and the first six (out of a total of 32) Mi-28 attack helicopters, as well as large quantities of munitions. Again, the Russians deployed technicians and experts who assembled the helicopters and made them operational within days. Again, Russian “trainers” — both pilots and system operators — who were in Iraq only to check the operability of the helicopters before their handover and to train Iraqi pilots ended up flying combat sorties in support of both the Iraqi military (including U.S.-trained and -mentored units) and Iran-controlled Shi’ite militias. As fighting evolved in late Summer and into Autumn 2014, the U.S. military advisers developed a system of indirect communications via the Iraqi High Command so that they could in effect call upon Russian and Iranian pilots to provide close air support to Iraqi units in duress.
In the Summer of 2014, Russia intensified the strategic naval build-up with intention of both deterring the U.S./NATO from expanding their anti-Caliphate air operations to include anti-Assad operations, and further allying Israel’s fears of adverse ramifications of the growing Russian involvement.
The Kremlin’s primary instrument for raising the confidence in Jerusalem was encouraging and bolstering the Greece-Cyprus-Israel alliance with active Russian participation.
With the increase in NATO air operations — including flights from airbases in Romania and Bulgaria over the eastern Mediterranean, then Israel and Jordan, and into Syria, as well as from Cypriot airbases — the Kremlin’s apprehension about a possible expansion of the operations to include anti-Assad strikes grew. The Russian Fleet increased its air defense, intelligence and surveillance operations in the eastern Mediterranean. Moscow made clear that the base in Tartous was crucial for Russia’s overall strategic posture. The Russian Fleet was using the port facilities for refueling and maintenance for all ships in the Mediterranean. Without Tartous, the Russians explained, the Fleet in the Mediterranean would be dependent on Black Sea facilities, and thus beholden to NATO member Turkey for passage through the Bosphorus.
The strategic-political turning point took place on Oct. 20-23, 2014. Slightly earlier, on Oct. 16, key elements of the Northern Fleet and the Black Sea Fleet met in the central basin of the Ægean Sea and formed a joint task force under the Vice-Admiral Kulakov (an Udaloy-class anti-submarine destroyer) originally from the Northern Fleet. Another key member of the task force was the Novocherkassk that had just delivered military supplies to Syria. The task force started sailing toward the eastern Mediterranean exercising joint maneuvering and the organization of mutual communication, antisubmarine protection and air defense for the entire detachment of warships.
On Oct. 20, 2014, the Vice-Admiral Kulakov and the Novocherkassk detached from the main group and linked up with a group of Cypriot and Israeli Navy vessels exercising jointly between Cyprus and Syria. For the next three days, the Russian, Israeli, and Cypriot navies conducted a joint naval exercise. First the three navies developed and formulated joint operational procedures. They then tested them in joint specialized operations including mutual air defense, repelling underwater attacks, and anti-submarine operations. Live fire operations included shooting rockets against notional land and maritime targets. The Israeli Air Force also participated both as the “target” for the air defense drills and in joint operations. The three-navy exercise concluded with a joint coastal operation led by the Novocherkassk in the western coasts of Cyprus. The naval group were joined there by Greek Navy vessels and continued to train together in the waters between Cyprus and Crete.
Starting late 2014 and well into 2015, the Syria crisis kept escalating as the great powers were being drawn into deeper involvement.
Putin and the Kremlin no longer believed a word Obama and the White House were saying. After the U.S.’ blatant lies concerning Libya, Iran, and Syria, as well as the U.S. provocations around Ukraine, it became impossible for the Kremlin to trust any message coming from Washington.
Lavrov and Mikhail Bogdanov, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and Special Envoy of the Russian President to the Middle East, were increasingly at a loss over the blatant U.S. hypocrisy. In meetings and by telephone, Secretary of State John Kerry and other U.S. senior officials were, at the same time, urging Russia to increase military supplies and support for the Iraqi fight against ISIL while criticizing and threatening Russia for supplying and supporting the Syrian fight against the very same Islamic State. Efforts by Lavrov to reason with Kerry would always yield the assertion that “Assad must go first”.
In the Autumn of 2014, as the U.S.-led bombing of ostensibly jihadist targets in Syria continued, Moscow put pressure on Assad not to interfere with the air operations. Russian experts and advisers deployed with the Syrian Air Defense forces ensured that all air defense systems were turned off when U.S. and allied aircraft were carrying out their raids. Syrian senior officials complained to Putin that giving the U.S. free run over Syria amounted to “a violation of state sovereignty that smacks of shame”. However, Putin interceded with Assad to ensure that nobody threatened the U.S. and allied aircraft.
The Obama White House was aware of the Russian efforts from both conversations with Russian senior officials and intercepts of Russian and Syrian communications. Around the first of 2015, U.S. and European senior officials accused Russia of threatening their countries’ air operations over Syria by the mere presence of Russian officers and advisers in the Syrian facilities.
For the Kremlin, the message was that the U.S.-led West would have long bombed the Syrian air defense facilities, even though they were shut off when U.S. and allied forces were around, had Russians not been present there. Hence, in mid-January 2015, Putin let it be known that Russia was willing to supply strategic weapons including the latest long-range air defense and point air defense systems to Iran, Iraq and Syria. The stated objective of such supplies would be to deter or block U.S.-led bombing against the Assad Administration and other allies of Russia. On a visit to Tehran, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu explained that “Iran and Russia had a shared analysis of U.S. global strategy, its interference in regional and international affairs, and the need to cooperate in the struggle against the interference of foreign forces in the region”. The Kremlin was worried that the U.S.-led bombing campaign against ISIL would soon expand into a Libya-style attempt at “regime change” in Damascus.
In Spring 2015, the Kremlin watched as U.S. and Turkish intelligence, using lavish Qatari funding, started to reorganize and train a myriad of jihadist forces into the Jaysh al-Fath (The Army of Conquest), a semi-regular jihadist Army whose primary mission would be advancing on Damascus and toppling Bashar al-Assad. Meanwhile, U.S. and other Western intelligence services started buying huge quantities of Soviet-origin weaponry and ammunition, including shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles, battle tanks, artillery pieces, anti-aircraft artillery and armored combat vehicles, on top of the usual small arms and anti-tank missiles. Qatari and Saudi Arabian government paymasters paid the sellers exuberant prices, no question asked. These weapons were immediately shipped to Turkey.
The majority of these weapons, as well as U.S.-origin weapons and missiles arriving from Saudi Arabia and other Gulf States, were handed to a wide variety of jihadist forces, including those formally affiliated with Al Qaida. Moreover, major military supplies and funding were provided to jihadist forces from Russia’s North Caucasus and the greater Central Asia bordering Russia. All these jihadist forces received extensive military training from Turkish and Gulf States Special Forces officers, as well as military-age English-speaking “contractors” who were in command. Jihadist commanders also received large sums of money to recruit and supply additional jihadist elements inside Syria. The training and equipping focused on confronting the Syrian Army.
The forces of the Islamic State/Caliphate were never mentioned, let alone considered a target.
By the time large elements of the Jaysh al-Fath and other jihadist forces crossed into Syria, they attacked the Syrian military forces in the Aleppo area and northwestern Syria, mainly Idlib. By late May 2015, the Syrian Army was forced to vacate several outlaying large bases and consolidate defensive lines closer to the ‘Alawite-inhabited areas.
Moscow was sufficiently alarmed by the sudden setbacks to increase the number of Il-76 transports of the Ministry of Emergencies which flew to Jablah (near Latakia) with humanitarian supplies and evacuated Russian family members and other civilians. Russian exerts presented the Kremlin with indisputable evidence that despite the repeated assurances of the Obama White House that ISIL/Caliphate was the primary foe of the U.S. in Syria and Iraq, the actual primary mission of the U.S., their Western allies and jihadist proxies, was the Assad Administration in Damascus.
Anticipating an escalating great power struggle, Moscow reached out to major allies starting with Beijing. From May 17 to 21, 2015, the Russian and Chinese (PRC) navies held “escort drills” in the eastern Mediterranean code-named Joint Sea 2015. This was their first-ever joint naval exercise in the Mediterranean.
The Russian task force included six ships under the command of Vice Adm. Alexander Fedotenkov, the Deputy Commander of the Russian Navy. The command ship was the cruiser Moskva, a veteran of Mediterranean operations. The other ships were the Ladny (a Burevestnik-class frigate), the Samum (a Bora-class hoverborne guided missile corvette), the Alexander Shabalin and the Alexander Otrakovsky (both Ropucha-class assault landing ships), and the MB-31 tug. The Chinese People’s Liberation Army-Navy (PLAN) task force included three ships under the command of Rear Adm. Du Jingchen, Deputy Commander of the Navy of the People’s Liberation Army of China. The PLAN ships were the Linyi and Weifang (both Type 054A multi-role frigates) and the Weishanhu (a Type 903 replenishment ship).
The main missions practiced reflected the political-military challenges which Russia was facing in the eastern Mediterranean.
“Russian Navy and the Navy of the People’s Liberation Army of China ships held a joint practice of maritime escorts … in a drill episode simulating the protection of safe shipping in remote areas of the World Ocean,” explained the Russian Navy Captain 1st Class Igor Dygalo. He elaborated that “the combined naval group of Russia and China practiced underway replenishment, cargo transfer and escorting missions” during daylight. Both sides also practiced maritime defense against hostile ships and aircraft, including live-fire exercises. The navies also “practiced troop control by use of lighted aids” and no radio during darkness. “Naval forces of both countries made concerted efforts to explore new formats of joint exercises, and learn valuable experience from each other, which has made the drills a success,” explained Du Jingchen. “The exercises, held far away from the Russian and Chinese naval bases, showed our readiness to jointly face new threats and challenges at sea, and the ability to safeguard stability practically in any area of the World Ocean,” Alexander Fedotenkov stated.
Russian Navy Commander Adm. Viktor Chirkov added that “Russian-Chinese naval cooperation will continue to promote peace and stability” in all pertinent remote corners of the world. Simply put, Russia was not alone in its interest to ensure the safe resupply by sea of Syria.
In late June 2015, tensions between Russia and the United States were rapidly growing.
The Kremlin and the White House disagreed profoundly on a host of hot issues including the situation in Ukraine, Iran and Syria. On June 26, 2015, Putin called Obama in an effort to talk through the disagreements over the crises spots. Putin raised the possibility of a U.S.-sponsored military intervention in Syria in order to create safe zones and stressed the Russian opposition to such a move. In response, Obama warned Putin not to intervene in the U.S. handling of the crisis and its aftermath: the toppling of the Assad administration. The communiqué noted that both presidents referred to the “dangerous situation” in Syria.
Meanwhile, the U.S. and Turkey focused once again on establishing “no-fly safe zones” in northern Syria. In Ankara, President Reçep Tayyip Erdoğan announced that Turkish forces were put on alert in anticipation for “Western intervention” in the coming days.
On June 29, 2015, Putin theatrically interrupted a scheduled meeting between Lavrov and Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem, and summoned the latter to his Kremlin office. Putin used the occasion to declare that Russia’s “policy to support Syria, the Syrian leadership and the Syrian people remains unchanged”. Putin then advised Western governments not to contemplate military intervention in the Syrian war or to attempt to oust Assad. Should foreign troops enter Syria, Purin warned, Moscow “will respond in kind”. Shortly afterwards, Putin ordered a new round of naval exercises in the eastern Mediterranean and particularly off the Syrian coast. This round of Fleet activities would peak in mid-September 2015.
Meanwhile, since early Summer 2015, the Russians had continued to pour weapons, ammunition, and military supplies into Syria by sea and air.
For the first time, the Russians also reached out to friendly countries such as Egypt to purchase large quantities of locally-made Soviet-origin munitions of types no longer in production in Russia. For example, the Russians replenished the Syrian stockpiles of rockets for older launchers with Egyptian-made rockets. The number of military advisers, technicians and experts rose accordingly in an effort to cope with the escalation.
However, no foreign help could counterbalance the continued exhaustion and depletion of the Syrian Armed Forces. The years of continued fighting were suddenly taking their long expected toll on the Syrian military. That, when thousands of fresh and well equipped jihadists, both Syrian and foreign, kept pouring into north-western Syria from camps across the Turkish border in Hatay Province.
On July 26, 2015, President Assad publicly acknowledged the manpower shortages and their adverse impact on the Syrian war effort.
“There is a lack of human resources,” he said. “But that doesn’t mean we can talk about collapse.” Assad conceded that the military was stressed and strained by the years of continued fighting. But there was no thought of defeat. “We will resist,” Assad said. “The armed forces are capable of defending the motherland.” Assad confirmed that the military was no longer trying to regain all of the areas lost to the jihadists. “There were areas where we wanted to show our commitment,” he explained. “But the Army cannot be on every part of the territory. In some areas, residents have taken up weapons alongside the Army and that has had a decisive impact on the fighting.”
The growing manpower shortages were also responsible for the recent consolidation of defense lines and loss of major facilities. “Sometimes, in some circumstances, we are forced to give up areas to move those forces to the areas that we want to hold onto,” Assad acknowledged. “We must define the important regions that the armed forces hold onto so it doesn’t allow the collapse of the rest of the areas.”
The Kremlin was, of course, acutely aware of the deteriorating situation in Syria.
The key units earmarked for intervention were ordered to refresh their knowledge of contingency plans and inspect the readiness of their equipment. It was in this context that Shamanov was hosting local and foreign press on Aug. 5, 2015: the Airborne Troops Day. A Syrian journalist asked Shamanov whether the Airborne Troops were “ready to assist Syria in countering terrorists” should they be ordered to do so “by Russia’s leaders”. Shamanov immediately answered in the affirmative. “Of course we will execute the decisions set forth by the country’s leadership, if there is a task at hand,” Shamanov stated. He quickly added that Russia and Syria had had “long-term good relations” for many years. “Many Syrian experts, including military, received education in the Soviet Union and in Russia,” Shamanov noted.
In the coming days, the Kremlin sought to avert the looming escalation and crisis.
Moscow increased the effort to convince the Arab World, and particularly Riyadh, to abandon their struggle against Assad’s Damascus and instead focus on an uncompromising struggle against all jihadists. The Kremlin argued that priority should be given to fighting jihadist entities such as the Caliphate and Al Qaida-affiliates which were threatening all Arab countries and not just Syria. The Obama White House reacted with fury, threatening the Arab capitals with abandonment to Iran should they decide not to give priority to the effort to topple the Assad Administration and rely on a myriad of jihadist forces toward that end.
On Aug. 11, 2015, Moscow made a final effort to convince Riyadh during discussions in Moscow between Lavrov and Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir.
The Kremlin failed. Lavrov argued that “coalition’s strikes on Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (ISIL) did not fulfill their targets” and that “toppling Assad will pave the way for ISIL to seize the power and control the whole country”. Once in control of Syria and Iraq, the jihadists would set their sights on Saudi Arabia. Jubeir would hear nothing of this and refused to budge from the long-standing policy line. Jubeir reiterated the unwavering position of the Saudi Government. “Assad must go either through a political operation or by military one.”
The Kremlin made a last ditch effort on Aug. 25, 2015, when several Arab leaders visited Moscow to attend the International Aviation and Space Show, MAKS 2015.
These were Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, King Abdullah II of Jordan, and Sheikh Muhammad bin Zayed al-Nahyan, the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces. Putin met all of them together during the demonstrations of Russia’s latest combat aircraft and then separately in the Kremlin. Putin tried to persuade them to agree with Russia that priority should be given to the defeat of the jihadists before seeking a political solution for post-war Syria and deciding the fate of Bashar al-Assad.
Al-Nahyan stuck to the Saudi position that Assad must be toppled and replaced with an Islamic government before confronting the jihadists. King Abdullah stressed that Moscow had a vital role to play in bringing together rival sides in Syria for political negotiations on ending the war. While Abdullah acknowledged the threat of the jihadists and reminded Putin of the heavy price paid by Jordan, he would not commit Jordan to abandoning the U.S.-led anti-Assad campaign. Only Egypt’s Sisi supported the Kremlin’s idea to create a broad anti-terrorist coalition — specifically including Assad’s Syria — in order to fight and defeat ISIL and other jihadist forces.
The challenge facing the Kremlin in Summer 2015 was largely political.
The military situation in and around Syria is complex. ISIL/Caliphate was then — and remained through September 2015 — rising and consolidating its hold over al-Jazira without any real challenge or viable effort to contain or defeat them. The Syrian military is desperate to consolidate defense lines protecting the strategically crucial areas in western Syria. Their secondary task would be to stall or defeat the jihadist forces pouring in from across the Turkish border.
However, no matter how many weapons and how much ammunition the Russians are supplying, the key impediments to Syrian military operations are the shortages in Syrian manpower and the long time it would take to recruit and properly train new units. This weakness has been known to all, including the U.S.. Hence, the political challenge facing the Kremlin is creating a situation whereupon the U.S. and the allies are deterred from capitalizing on Syria’s temporary weakness in order to push for the Libya-style toppling of Assad’s Damascus through the use of jihadist forces and U.S.-led air strikes.
In the longer term, the Kremlin has concluded, the Obama White House would not take kindly the Russian frustrating of their latest effort to take down Assad, and therefore Russia should expect longer-term escalation of the regional crisis with prospects of a need for a growing direct involvement in protection of Russia’s vital interests against the U.S.-le