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Global Mercury Regulations Seen Having Major Economic Benefits For US

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Mercury pollution is a global problem with local consequences: Emissions from coal-fired power plants and other sources travel around the world through the atmosphere, eventually settling in oceans and waterways, where the pollutant gradually accumulates in fish. Consumption of mercury-contaminated seafood leads to increased risk for cardiovascular disease and cognitive impairments.

In the past several years, a global treaty and a domestic policy have been put in place to curb mercury emissions. But how will such policies directly benefit the U.S.?

In a new study published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, MIT researchers report that global action on reducing mercury emissions will lead to twice the economic benefits for the U.S., compared with domestic action, by 2050. However, those in the U.S. who consume locally caught freshwater fish, rather than seafood from the global market, will benefit more from domestic rather than international mercury regulations.

The researchers calculated the projected U.S. economic benefits from the Minamata Convention on Mercury, a global treaty adopted in 2013 to reduce mercury emissions worldwide, compared with the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS), a national regulation set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to reduce mercury pollution from the country’s coal-fired power plants.

Overall, while both policies are projected to lead to roughly the same amount of reductions in mercury deposited on U.S. soil compared to a no-policy case, Americans’ consumption of mercury by 2050 are estimated to be 91 percent lower under the global treaty, compared to 32 percent under U.S. policy alone. The researchers say these numbers reflect the U.S. commercial fish market, 90 percent of which is sourced from Pacific and Atlantic Ocean basins — regions that are heavily influenced by emissions from non-U.S. sources, including China.

From their projections of reduced mercury consumption, the researchers estimated health impacts to the U.S. population under both policies, then translated these impacts into economic benefits. They characterized these in two ways: projected lifetime benefits from an individual’s reduced exposure to mercury, including willingness to pay for lowering the risk of a fatal heart attack, cost savings from avoided medical care, and increased earnings; and economy-wide benefits, or the associated productivity gains of a national labor force with improved IQ and fewer heart attacks, as a result of reduced exposure to mercury.

Based on these calculations, the team estimated that by 2050, emissions reductions under the Minamata Convention on Mercury would lead to $339 billion in lifetime benefits and $104 billion in economy-wide benefits in the U.S., compared to $147 billion and $43 billion, respectively, from MATS. The global treaty, then, should lead to more than twice the benefits projected from the domestic policy.

“Historically it’s been hard to quantify benefits for global treaties,” said Noelle Selin, the Esther and Harold E. Edgerton Career Development Associate Professor in MIT’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences. “Would we be able to see a U.S. benefit, given you’re spreading reductions and benefits around the world? And we were.”

Tracing the policy-to-impacts pathway

Determining how regulatory policies will ultimately lead to health and economic benefits is a complex and convoluted problem. To trace the pathway from policy to impacts, Selin and co-author Amanda Giang, a graduate student in MIT’s Institute for Data, Systems, and Society, began with estimates of mercury reductions set by both the Minamata Convention and MATS.

The team then used an atmospheric transport model to trace where emissions would settle over time, based on the reductions proposed by each policy scenario. From regional depositions of mercury, they then estimated the resulting mercury concentrations in fish and mapped these concentrations to seafood sources throughout the world.

Next, the team correlated seafood sources to fish consumption in the U.S., and calculated changes in human exposure to mercury through time. They used epidemiological models to estimate how changes in mercury exposure affect incidence of health impacts, such as heart attacks and IQ deficits. From there, Selin and Giang used economic valuation methods to translate heath impacts into economic benefits — namely, lifetime and economy-wide benefits to the U.S.

Understanding the drivers

While the researchers were able to come up with benefits in the billions for both the global and domestic policies, they acknowledge that these numbers come with a significant amount of uncertainty, which they also explored.

“We’re trying to understand different drivers in the variability of these numbers,” Giang said. “There’s a lot of uncertainty in this system, and we want to understand what shifts these numbers up and down.”

For example, scientists are unsure how far different forms of mercury will travel through the atmosphere, as well as how long it will take for mercury to accumulate in fish. In their analysis, Giang found that, even taking into account most of these uncertainties, the economic benefits from the global treaty outweighed those from the domestic policy, except when it came to one key uncertainty: where people’s seafood originates.

“We do find that in our scenario where everyone is eating local fish, the benefits of domestic policy are going to be larger than the Minamata convention,” Giang says. “Our study points to the importance of domestic policy in terms of protecting vulnerable populations such as subsistence fishers or other communities that do rely on U.S. freshwater fish.”

“There are a ton of uncertainties here, but we know that mercury is a dangerous pollutant,” Selin adds. “When you put in a policy, how do you think about its ultimate environmental and human effects? We think this method is really a way to try and move that forward.”


India: Heated Debate On New Juvenile Justice Law – Analysis

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By Shastri Ramachandran*

The release of a convicted rapist, who committed the crime when he was just 17, on December 20, 2015 amid high drama in Indian capital has triggered public outcry and revived debate over issues of juvenile justice.

One outcome of the protests against the release of the juvenile convict is that two days later, on December 22, India’s Parliament passed the Juvenile Justice Bill, under which minors from 16 to 18 can be tried as adults for heinous crimes such as rape, murder and terror-related acts. As political parties were divided over this legislation, it took the public outrage to push it through.

However, the debate over provisions of the Bill is unlikely to die down as social activists, legal luminaries and political parties continue to be deeply divided on whether juveniles should be dealt with harshly when the public is furious.

In December 2012, the recently released rapist was one of the six in a gang that raped a 23-year-old student and brutally beat up her male companion in a bus in Delhi. The girl, Jyoti Singh, known by the pseudonym “Nirbhaya” (fearless) until recently, died 13 days later. The incident provoked outrage across India and anger against the rapists, including the 17-year-old. There were protests with placards demanding the death sentence.

All the six accused were arrested and charged with sexual assault and murder. One of them, Ram Singh, died in custody. The rest were tried in a fast-track court. The juvenile was convicted of rape and murder and given the maximum sentence of three years’ imprisonment in a reform facility. The remaining four adults, who were found guilty of rape and murder, were sentenced to death. The Delhi High Court, on appeal, upheld the lower court’s verdict.

In the aftermath, the government, lawmakers, the police and the judiciary came under great pressure to amend the Juvenile Justice Act of 2000 to create harsher sentences as a deterrent. The parents of the girl, Jyoti Singh, who recently revealed her name to the public, have been in the forefront of the campaign opposing the convict’s release and demanding justice for their daughter.

However, not everyone supports this standpoint. There is another viewpoint – that offenders under 18 should be treated as juveniles with the stress on reform and counselling, and that they should be given a second chance rather than the death penalty.

On December 20, when the convict was released, after undergoing the maximum punishment of three years in a correctional facility, he had served his term under the law. Although the law was amended by executive order, it was after his conviction and, therefore, not applicable in his case.

Under the Indian Constitution, a criminal law cannot be amended with retrospective effect vide Article 20(1), which states: “No person shall be convicted of any offence except for violation of the law in force at the time of the commission of the act charged as an offence, nor be subjected to a penalty greater than that which might have been inflicted under the law in force at the time of the commission of the offence.”

It was both predictable and legally correct, therefore, when the Supreme Court, on December 21, dismissed the Delhi Commission for Women’s plea for staying the convict’s release. “We share your concern but under existing law, detention cannot go beyond three years,” the judges said.

The convict, now aged 20, has been taken to an NGO from a correction home in Delhi amid concerns that there was a threat to his life.

The sheer force of public sentiment in favour of extreme punishment is so overwhelming that the law is being ignored. Regardless of how painful this may be for the victim’s family and those outraged by the heinous crime, the fact is that he was given the strongest punishment possible. He cannot be tried for a second time for the same crime under the same (amended) law and given a different sentence.

Public sentiment, outraged protests and popular demand cannot dictate the course of law and justice. Justice must be dispensed dispassionately, and the Supreme Court has upheld the principle that the law of the land shall prevail.

*Shastri Ramachandran is an Indian journalist and commentator and has worked in both India and China. He can be contacted at shastriji@hotmail.com.This article first appeared in The Global TImes with the headline Public anger can’t rewrite law retrospectively. It is being reproduced with the author’s permission.

Pakistan PM Sharif Praises Sri Lanka President Sirisena’s Dedicated Leadership

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Sri Lanka’s President Maithripala Sirisena can honorably be introduced as a leader with a genuine desire to take Sri Lanka forward as great country in the world, according to Pakistan’s Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif.

Additionally, Sharif commended the program by Sirisena to bring about good governance by eliminating corruption and fraud.

Prime Minister Sharif, who is on a two days official visit to Sri Lanka, made these remarks during the bilateral discussions with President Maithripala Sirisena at the Presidential Secretariat on Tuesday.

The Pakistani Prime Minister who arrived in the Presidential Secretariat was warmly welcomed by President Sirisena. A Guard of Honor was also held to welcome him. After the official welcome ceremony the two leaders held bilateral discussions.

President Sirisena, expressing his happiness over the visit of Pakistani Prime Minister, stated that this visit would further strengthen the lasting friendship between the two countries.

The two leaders discussed about further strengthening of the economic, commercial and cultural relationships between Sri Lanka and Pakistan. Prime Minister Sharif said that Pakistan is willing to strengthen relationships on services and investments in Sri Lanka.

Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif pledged to provide assistance in producing rice and sugar to ensure food security in Sri Lanka.

Sirisena also requested Pakistan Prime Minister to provide assistance in promoting dairy industry and cement industry of the country and the Premier has promised to provide necessary assistance and investments in this regard.

Discussions also held to exchange training programs for higher education and the field of sports between the two countries. Pakistan Prime Minister requested the service of Sri Lanka cricket Coaches for the Pakistan cricket team to further develop their team.

He also expressed his willingness to provide Pakistan Squash Coaches to develop the sport of Squash in the country.

Discussions were also held to conduct an exhibition in Pakistan in the near future to showcase Sri Lankan products and the two leaders agreed to further expand the cooperation between the two countries on the Gem and Jewellery industry.

Acceding to a request made by Prime Minister Sharif, President Sirisena said that in the future, he will make the necessary arrangements to gift Elephant to Pakistan.

Sirisena also presented a proposal to celebrate Independence Days of Sri Lanka, Pakistan and India under a common program as these countries were received freedom from British rule.

Sirisena wished every success to the SAARC Summit, which is to be held in Pakistan and said that he wished to attend the Summit.

Maldives: Democracy Back Sliding – Analysis

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By Dr. S. Chandrasekharan

The Maldivian Democracy Network said that Maldives is back sliding into repression with the government stifling dissent and restricting constitutional rights. This appears to be a very mild statement! Maldives is going back to medieval era with all powers concentrated in President Yameen.

For Yameen the incident of the explosion? in the Presidential boat on arrival from Haj has come as a “God send” to purge his kingdom of all opposition. With the judiciary and other constitutional bodies under his full control, Yameen is purging every known and would be personalities who may obstruct his passage to a second term as President. His fall out with his second in command for the second time can only be explained that the latter was emerging as his probable rival!

In this process, two Vice Presidents, two Defence chiefs, Attorney General, Election commission members, two inconvenient judges, former President who had obtained almost fifty percent of popular votes, and scores of others have been either imprisoned or driven to exile.

President of the Adhalat party has been slapped with terror charges for leading a May day rally and no charges or trials were initiated for six months. He is still languishing in jail.

The President of the Jumhooree party the third largest Gasim Ibrahim with whose help President Yameen got elected, was humiliated and made to bow down when his assets were to be seized by the government.

Public rallies by the opposition in demanding the release of former President Nasheed have been banned indirectly using other constitutional agencies. The only two opposing parties have been heavily fined by the Election Commission for displaying the UN symbol in the rallies.

A new rule was introduced by the EC that all members will have to be re registered forcing the main opposition to fan out to the whole kingdom to get the thumb impressions. Legal and procedural hurdles were placed in getting the fingerprints of former president Nasheed now confined to jail.

Lawyers licenses are being suspended at the drop of a hat and the individuals are not being informed of the reasons either. This is being done selectively to those defending purged leaders who are in jail. One particular case is worth noting. The Supreme Court suspended former Vice Presidents lawyer Hussain Shammed for “contempt of court” and the Police are now after him for framing charges!

On 18 November, the Home Minister, a loose cannon in his own right declared that he would influence the judiciary in order to punish those responsible for the blast in the Presidential speed boat. No action was taken by the ever vigilant judiciary for this statement and on the other hand there was a pious declaration that the government of Maldives respects the rule of law and reaffirm the position that its judiciary is “fully independent and impartial”. What hypocrisy?

Political dissenters and inconvenient opposition members have all been put in jail on terrorism charges and given long years of sentence.

The new anti terrorism law now promulgated has many vague formulations and there is full scope for the present government to misuse the provisions even more when the judiciary and other constitutional arms are fully under the control of the President. Terms like “undue influence against the government,” unlawful promotion of a particular political, religious or other ideology,” “creation of fear among the public or within specified groups” are all too general and waiting to be exploited by any authoritarian dispensation.

Surprisingly, the new anti terror law does not include religious extremism and more surprisingly the judiciary has been given discretionary powers to decide which literature promotes terrorism.

It may be recalled that the opposition MDP was tricked into cooperation for constitutional amendments to be passed in the Majlis in return for release of former president Nasheed. A genuine document with government seal was handed over to Nasheed’s relatives commuting the sentence to house arrest. The Security authorities who could not have acted without instructions from “above’ forcibly took Nasheed away from his home to Mafushii jail claiming that the document was a forged one. The forensic authorities have since declared ( on 7th Dec) that the document was genuine. The government is silent still and no action has been taken against the security personnel who created a big drama before Nasheed’s house and no action has been taken either to implement the order.

Now Nasheed has been forced to appeal over his sentence and the President is “waiting” for the entire judiciary process to be over before taking a view on the continued detention of Nasheed. The judiciary will take its own time unless Yameen wants to expedite it..

A favorite of the President, Hussein Sharief who had been running the office of President since Gayoom’s times was made to resign when it was found that he had given a contract of 3.7 million MV to his favourite contractor and then overspent double that amount for a banquet by the President. Based on documentary evidence alone Sharief could have been convicted. But the Prosecution has already dropped the charges against him for “want of evidence.”

The list could go on. There are many more. But this paper will not be complete without discussing the case of former Vice President Adheeb in whom President Yameen had earlier 500 percent confidence!

Former Vice President who was inducted after a major constitutional amendment is now awaiting trial on some specific and some unspecified charges. One who was sipping tea with Chinese President Xi jinping is now within a few days being made to count cockroaches in a solitary jail.

It all started with an explosion in the Presidential speed boat on 28 September. It is still doubtful whether it was an explosion at all as the FBI with ten samples did not find any trace of any explosive substance while the Saudis with their superior skills discovered explosive material with a lesser number of samples.

The Vice President’s absence to receive the President was the first indication that he was involved. Subsequently the home minister and everyone downwards had already convicted him through direct and indirect statements. He was summarily expelled from the ruling party and impeached in the parliament in a hurry after an emergency was declared.

Initially when the arrest was made, it was mentioned that it was to prevent his influencing the investigations that he was being isolated. Subsequently his close associate Abdulla Ziyath and his distant relative Hamid Ismail were arrested and defalcations running into millions were discovered in running the tourism industry.

Yet no concrete evidence of Adheeb being involved in any terrorism act has been found by the Police so far. Suddenly, there was a discovery of someone having seen a hand gun in Adheeb’s house five months ago. This should be sufficient for the Police to put Adheeb under terrorism laws and it is a question of time before more such evidence leading to charges under terrorism will be produced.

While India and China are bending backwards to please Yameen and enter into long term strategic and economic cooperation, it is Britain and particularly David Cameron who has consistently opposed the regime. One can understand China doing it as they love dictators but I am not sure what is driving India to do so.

Pathankot Incident And Indo-Pak Reprochment – OpEd

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It is hard to be an optimist when it comes to Indo-Pak bilateral relations, unfortunately there is not much evidence available to believe otherwise — even at the risk of being tagged a pessimist.

Although the recent engagements between the two states during the year 2015 were marked by both, the negative and positive trends, a general feeling of skepticism prevailed. Despite witnessing a breakthrough in relations in December that garnered worldwide appreciation, the prudent political experts in Pakistan observed the sudden change in the disposition of Indian leadership with their breath held anticipating something bad to happen as has become the norm whenever improvements start to show between India and Pakistan.

As was feared, the bomb exploded, this time in Pathankot. A loud bang and gun shots, with which India started its New Year, will not be without severe repercussions for Pakistan and the peace process that is being hoped to resume between the two states. So far no one has claimed the responsibility for the attack, but Jash-e-Muhammad led by Mullah Masood Azhar is being credited for the incident by Indian authorities. The reports have also alleged that the attacks were planned in Rawalpindi, Pakistan.

Even though both sides have issued statements showing a strong resolve to continue with the peace process, AICC communication department Chief Randeep Surjewala has openly implicated Pakistan in his statement, saying: “Two things are very clear, first, despite the PM’s visit to Pakistan, ISI continues to sustain and support terror activities against India… Secondly, the terror camps that are run by terrorists for carrying on anti-India activity in PoK continues to be supported by Pakistani establishments…”

So much for the short lived honeymoon period that hardly lasted a month.

Interestingly enough none of this comes as a surprise. There is a passive-aggressive tactic that India has often adopted in its dealings with Pakistan which has now become a routine. Nonetheless it does leave one to wonder whether the apparent flexibility in the previously rigid posture was an intentional calculated move by the Indians where they wanted to put across a positive image of India as fully committed towards regional peace and going all out embracing Pakistan with open arms or the future of Indo-Pak relations has actually fallen prey to the anti-peace entities on both sides of the border.

A look at the events in the latter half of 2015 might help find an answer to this query. In the month of July, PM Nawaz and PM Modi met at the sidelines of SCO summit in Ufa where PM Nawaz proposed a five point plan to start a composite dialogue. However, the NSA level talks could not take place owing to the rigid positions on both sides where in August, Indian FM Sushma Sawaraj categorically stated that talks were only possible if meeting stayed focused on the issue of terrorism. For Pakistan it was impossible to go ahead with the talks without having Kashmir included in the agenda.

Later in September during his speech at the United Nations General Assembly, PM Nawaz again proposed a four point peace initiative to ease tensions with India, but the efforts were once again thwarted by a single-lined reply from Indian FM Sushma where she reiterated that Pakistan should “give up terrorism”.

However, India’s hard position underwent a sudden transformation in November when PM Modi approached PM Nawaz on the sidelines of COP21 meeting in Paris. This was followed by FM Sushma Sawaraj’s official visit to Pakistan in early December for the Heart of Asia Conference. This time she agreed to restart composite dialogue on all the outstanding issues important for both India and Pakistan. It is important to note here that this was the only occasion when India displayed some flexibility and agreed to consider Pakistan’s concerns too. Later, PM Modi’s unplanned and unofficial visit to Lahore in late December ended the year on a positive note while at the same time became instrumental in portraying India as a benevolent nation.

One can’t help but think what brought about this abrupt change of mind and the motive behind India’s cordial behavior. It seems as if India’s political persona carries two distinct yet enduring personalities that exist concurrently, each having a unique style of viewing and understanding the regional politics. While one alter ego is stubborn and hegemonistic, the other tends to be slightly accommodating. The question arises if India is actually indecisive about which line of action to adopt while dealing with Pakistan or is it part of India’s well-thought out strategy based on Chanakya’s famous dictum of deception and cunning intelligence. Was the unofficial meeting, impromptu visit and willingness to resume dialogue, all planned to overwhelm Pakistan with too much nicety so that later on India could orchestrate an attack like Pathankot incident (as some of the controversial news outlets claim) and make Pakistan yield to Indian pressure to concentrate only on terrorism in composite dialogue and leave Kashmir and other issues aside.

As per Sushma’s statement, the Heart of Asia rapprochement is primarily based on a commitment by Pakistan that it would expedite the trial of Mumbai accused. Also series of events show that most of the time India refused to discuss anything but terrorism. In this context the timings of Pathankot terror incident is just ideal to further press Pakistan to make terrorism the focus of talks.

However, if this is actually a terror attack then the ease with which India’s most sensitive strategic area was targeted, hints at major security loophole. India needs to seriously think about the mole in its official ranks. Also one cannot rule out the possibility that it could be the doing of local disgruntled extremist Hindus as was the case with Samjhota Express bombings. This also exposes India as a failed state incapable of defending itself from terrorist elements operating from within its borders that may not even be Muslims or related to Pakistan in anyway. Aaker Patel in a digital daily of political and cultural news for India stated that most terrorists in India are not even Muslims but are Hindus.

Therefore instead of blaming Pakistan, India should look into its own weaknesses, otherwise regional harmony and peace would remain a dream, while violence, distrust, suspicion and blame game would be the only way for India and Pakistan to “co-exisit”.

*The author, Sadia Kazmi, is a Senior Research Associate at the Strategic Vision Institute, Islamabad. She is pursuing a PhD in the Department of Strategic Studies at the National Defence University, Islamabad. She can be reached at sadia.kazmi.svi@gmail.com

‘Bio-Digester’ Supplies Energy To 3,000 Farms

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The principle of action of the digestive system of a cow served as a model to Camilo Pagés and Alexander Eaton to create a container that receives organic waste, mostly livestock manure, where it is mixed with millions of bacteria to obtain natural gas integrated mostly of methane, called biogas, as well as a high quality bio-fertilizer.

The biodigester, commercially called Biobolsa (bio-bag), transform the waste in a container made of high density geomembrane where polyethylene components and bacteria generate gas that is used as fuel for stoves or heaters, and even in the form of electricity.

Alex Eaton, one of the creators, said in an interview that technologies such as the anaerobic Biobolsa have been used for decades in industrialized farms, and now seek to bring its benefits to small and medium producers, who generate 99 percent of the country’s food and 80 percent globally.

“We have visited families who have small farms for subsistence, or less than a hundred dairy cows, those families are without access to credit or financing. They also make up the social fabric of rural areas, as the caretakers of watersheds, land and soil. This is a way of empowering them in climate change, soil management, food safety, water pollution and more,” Eaton said.

In very simple terms, Alex Eaton explains that his technology is a huge bag of 15 meters long and two meters wide and two more in height, which can contain up to 40,000 liters of liquid capacity, and treat one ton waste per day.

However, they have adapted it to specific needs and created smaller Bio-bags of two by two meters, working with 20 kilos of manure.

“The system is modular and can interface, it also is deployable and adjustable. On average, the return on investment is contemplated in a year and a half, and if you consider that the material used for the Biobolsa lasts longer than 20 years, there is much room for profit,” said the journalist with a graduate degree in environmental protection.

He adds that there are many small producers who are not aware that there are economic and environmental options to leverage what usually is waste, in this case, that the manure can generate revenue.

The first Biobolsa was placed in 2007 in Jalisco (center state of Mexico), the patent was achieved in 2010 and to date it has profited with nearly 50 million pesos, says Alex Eaton. He adds that by the end of the year they will be covering 3000 farms, just in Mexico, while acknowledging that they have a presence in nine countries of Latin America, and have implemented two pilot plants in Africa.

Biobolsa technological transfer includes training and implementation, as well as monitoring its operation and efficiency.

The Mexican anaerobic technology has had support from various foundations and government institutions for its development and implementation, which have managed to provide partial subsidies to stakeholders. “Today we manage a credit fund with zero rate for small producers to participate,” said the ecologist of American origin.

Biobolsa has received several international awards, both scientific as for social entrepreneurship, among others, the Network Business in Development (BiD Network), of Holland, which gave an award for 10,000 euros which served to give a major boost to the company.

“We have improved the process and have a number of engines for generating electricity. We already have a contract to produce light for the electrical network of the Federal Electricity Commission in Cuernavaca (south of Mexico City), through interconnection with biodigesters to produce five, 10 or 15 kilowatts. “We want to impact four million homes that, we estimate, could use Biobolsa today in Mexico,” Eaton said.

Russia’s Interests In Syria – OpEd

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The economy of Russia, one of the largest sources for arms and technology, depends on the sale of arms and energy resources. Recent sanctions by the US and Europe have considerably weakened its economy.

When Russian President Putin directed the Russian fighter planes to cross into Syrian air space and begin attacking the “enemies” of President Assad, it was assumed he did so in defending the troubled Syrian leader and Syrian regime against the US-Saudi-Turkey led Syrian opposition, or in other words, the crucial goal in Syria of Russia, a major supplier of arms to Syria and Iran, therefore, is to guarantee the life of Assad.

But, Russia’s military intervention in Syria cannot be understood as a simple Syrian defense strategy.

Apparently, Russia has intervened in Syria, attacking Muslims not only to sell its weapon systems to Syria and showcase its new high precision arms other components of military equipment to other regional powers that seek them, but above all, it pursues it regional interests to reassert its perceived status as a global super power.

The Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in December 1979 ostensibly to defend Socialism there from its sworn capitalist enemies, and which led to an acute civil war, killing thousands. The Soviet–Afghan War lasted over nine years from 1979 to February 1989. The United States had been supporting anti-Soviet Afghan Mujahideen and foreign “Afghan Arab” fighters through Pakistan’s ISI as early as mid-1979.

The Soviet occupational war in Afghanistan resulted in the deaths of over 1 million Afghans, mostly civilians, and the creation of about 6 million refugees who fled Afghanistan, mainly to Pakistan and Iran. Faced with mounting international pressure and numerous casualties, the Soviets withdrew in 1989. After that, the US planned to occupy Afghanistan and engineered a detailed plan and ultimately has killed millions more of Afghans than what Russia managed.

After its sudden exit from Afghanistan, Russia almost lost its link with the Islamic world – something it has been trying to somehow establish via economic and political ties with the Islamic world, especially in West Asia. Nevertheless, Moscow has not been quite at home with the Arab world and Turkey.

Saudi Arabia’s track record of encouraging the spread of hardline Salafist and Wahabbist ideologies, including among Russian Muslims and others in the former Soviet Union, remains a point of contention in Saudi-Russo ties. The central role played by Saudi Arabia in supporting the mujahedeen struggle against the Soviet Union after it had invaded Afghanistan continues to color Russian perceptions of the kingdom.

Russia’s entry now into Syria provides the Russian military the necessary infrastructure to stay in West Asia, expanding its military access. After the fall of Soviet system, the new ruler Vladimir Putin fought the Muslims in Chechnya to later ascended to the presidency in 2000 while all the central Asian states formed separate independent Muslim nations.

The incremental expansion of NATO into its former sphere of influence in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union represents an affront to Russia’s sovereignty and an existential threat to its existence.

Russia has maintained strong military links with Iran and its allies, particularly Syria. Russia has already maintained a modest naval refueling station in Syria’s port city of Tartus since the end of the Cold War. In a region dominated by pro-US regimes, Syria represents a critical ally.

Russia is keen to weaken Turkish presence in Syria. The recent victory of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party in November’s Grand National Assembly elections has likely provided his government with the mandate it needs to press ahead with its agenda in Syria. In this context, the growing convergence of interests between Saudi Arabia and Turkey over Syria raises another set of alarm bells in Moscow.

Moscow’s intervention in Syria must also be viewed through a wider geopolitical lens that is reflective of Russia’s attempt to reassert its perceived status as a global power. The potential fall of the Ba’athist regime may serve as a springboard for insurrection in the Caucasus and Central Asia. Russia is eager to stop that.

Saudi-Iran discord and Moscow’s approach towards both would explain the Russian policy with respect to Syria. Thanks to Russia, the Assad regime remains without question the most powerful actor in Syria’s civil war. Against the prowess of US and Turkish militaries and other Western nations and their allies in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), Moscow’s support for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s Ba’athist regime, in concert with ongoing support of Iran, Lebanese Hezbollah, and Iraq, has proved critical to its survival in the face of an ever expansive insurgency.

Syria, backed by Russia, is now able to fight the armed opposition factions in Syria represented by competing radical Islamist currents led by Daesh (“Islamic State”) and al-Qaeda’s Syrian-based franchise Jabhat al-Nusra and a host of other hardline Islamist militants that straddle the ideological divide between both camps, as well as the far less powerful, yet nevertheless notable, cohort of insurgents associated with the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and its multiple iterations.

The impact of Russia’s direct intervention in the form of air strikes and other kinetic military operations in support of the Ba’athist regime is profound. Russia at this juncture remains committed to the Ba’athist regime, in one form or another, a prospect that likely includes the continuation of al-Assad at the helm for the foreseeable future. This reality leaves it irreconcilable with the objectives pursued by Saudi Arabia. Russia has attempted to outmaneuver the efforts of Saudi Arabia and other opponents of the Assad’s Ba’athist regime by hosting its own diplomatic initiatives.

Despite its strategic alliance with the US and assurances from Washington over its commitment to the preservation of close relations with Riyadh, Saudi Arabia worries that the emerging détente between Washington and Tehran portends an eventual rapprochement that will reshape the regional and international landscape at the kingdom’s expense.

Iran has already elicited strong interest from major international energy companies eager to reap the rewards of Iran’s vast wealth of untapped potential in the oil and natural gas sectors. Even as it continues to tout its longtime position as a major swing producer and exporter of crude oil, the prospect that Iran, an energy powerhouse in its own right, will realize its full potential as a producer and exporter of both crude oil and natural gas represents another cause of deep concern in Riyadh, which fears having to contend with greater Iranian supply and the residual negative impacts on energy prices that would result.

Iran’s isolation had also helped foster close diplomatic and economic ties between Moscow and Tehran that had come to resemble a special relationship. Russia found common cause with Iran in their shared opposition to the US and numerous other Western-led institutions and policies and mutual advocacy for the creation of alternative structures and approaches.

The Saudi government is unhappy with US for not doing enough with respect to Iran and Syria; Riyadh is eager to use Russia as its new ally in Mideast to coerce the US to come closer to Saudi Arabia and also resolve the Palestine issue. Consequently, the logic that underlined Saudi Arabia’s apparent openness toward Russia was couched as an attempt on the part of Riyadh to diversify its portfolio of diplomatic relations to lessen its dependence on Washington.

Russia is satisfied with US-Iran and US-Saudi tensions. Hostilities between the US and Iran have served a useful purpose in the form of distracting and otherwise preoccupying Washington, forcing it to devote significant attention and resources that could have otherwise been concentrated toward Moscow. Russia has leveraged its diplomatic and economic influence over Iran as both a lever of influence over Washington and the international community.

Iran’s foreign policy as such has worked well. As a major producer of oil and natural gas, the economic sanctions levied against Iran have helped to protect Russia’s market share and favorable energy pricing schemes even given the prospects for Russian investment in the Iranian energy sector. The Iranian energy sector is poised to compete with Russian exporters in the vital European market.

The statement by the Russian Orthodox Church describing Russia’s actions in Syria as a “holy war” has also inflamed tensions between Saudi Arabia and Russia. Saudi Arabia has initiated a retaliatory policy against Russia. The kingdom, alongside other benefactors of the armed opposition, has strongly condemned Moscow’s decision to launch air strikes in Syria. Saudi Arabia is also reported to have increased its material support for the armed opposition, specifically in the forms of facilitating the transfer of US-made BGM-71 TOW (Tube-launched, Optically-tracked, Wire-guided) anti-tank missiles provided by US intelligence, to various armed factions.

Saudi Arabia is leveraging its economic influence to confront the Kremlin over Syria in future if the war does not end. There is speculation that Saudi Arabia is intent on keeping oil prices low by way of boosting its overall production and incorporating price discounting in order to undermine rivals such as Russia that depend heavily on oil and other energy-generated revenues. In doing so, the kingdom is able to gain leverage in critical markets such as Europe and Asia at the expense of competitors such as Russia. Saudi Arabia resorted to similar measures during the Cold War to undermine the Soviet Union.

Saudi Arabia is one of the principal sources of political, military, and economic support for a number of armed opposition factions, including various radical Islamist currents, which have taken up arms against the Ba’athist regime. The degree of mutual enmity shared between Saudi Arabia and Russia regarding the conflict in Syria and a host of other matters would suggest that any potential breakthrough in relations would be illusory.

Similarly, having found a golden opportunity to militarily intervene in Syrian crisis with the US approval, Russia would not be in a hurry to quit Syria or Middle East. Rather the Kremlin would certainly try to expand its regional influence.

The Ten Most Important Developments In Syria In 2015 – OpEd

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By Aron Lund for Syria Comment*

I wrote an article for Syria Comment last year listing the top events of 2014 and what to look for in 2015. So here’s another one—a very long one, in fact. It has been compiled in bits and pieces over a few weeks but was finalized only now, a few days after the fact.

In keeping with the buzzfeedification of international political writing, I have decided to make it a top ten list and to provide very few useful sources, just a lot of speculative opinion.

I’ll rank them from bottom to top, starting with number ten and moving on to the biggest deal of them all. Enjoy!

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10. The Death of Zahran Alloush.

Zahran Alloush. Photo via Syria Comment.

Zahran Alloush. Photo via Syria Comment.

In October 2013, the esteemed proprietor of Syria Comment, Professor Joshua Landis, compiled a top five list of Syria’s most important insurgent leaders, excluding al-Qaeda, the Islamic State, and the Kurdish YPG. It contained the following five names:

  • Hassane Abboud (Ahrar al-Sham)
  • Zahran Alloush (Islam Army)
  • Ahmed Eissa al-Sheikh (Suqour al-Sham)
  • Abdelqader Saleh (Tawhid Brigade)
  • Bashar al-Zoubi (Yarmouk Brigade)

Of these five, two remain alive but have been demoted to second-tier ranks in their factions. In March 2015, Ahmed Eissa al-Sheikh merged his group into Ahrar al-Sham and took up a less prestigious job in the new outfit. In October, the Free Syrian Army heavyweight Bashar al-Zoubi was reassigned to run the political office of the Yarmouk Army, as it is now called, and replaced as general commander by Abu Kinan al-Sharif.

The other three are dead. Abdelqader Saleh was hit by a missile in Aleppo in November 2013. Soon after, his powerful Tawhid Brigade began to fall apart. Most of its subunits are now dispersed across two rival-but-allied outfits, called the Levant Front and the First Corps, which are both active in Aleppo. Hassane Abboud was killed alongside other Ahrar al-Sham leaders in a September 2014 bombing—or whatever that was. And on Christmas Day 2015, Zahran Alloush suffered the same fate. A missile hit a building in the Eastern Ghouta where he was meeting with other local rebel leaders.

Since Zahran Alloush died just a week ago, we don’t know how much this will matter in the end. But he was indisputably one of the best-known rebel commanders in Syria, the one best positioned to dominate Damascus if Assad lost power, one of the very rare effective (because ruthless) centralizers within the Syrian opposition, a trusted ally of the Saudi government, and the most powerful Islamist leader willing to engage in UN-led peace talks. Those five qualities all seemed to promise him a major role in Syria’s future. But now he’s dead. And since his group always seemed like it had been built around him as a person, many now fear/hope that it will start unraveling like Saleh’s Tawhid Brigade in Aleppo. We’ll see. If the rebels start to lose their footing east of Damascus, it will be an enormous relief for Assad.

9. The Failure of the Southern Storm Offensive.

Map by @desyracuse

Map by @desyracuse

This summer, the loose coalition of rebel units known as the FSA’s Southern Front got ready to capitalize on a year of slow and steady progress, during which Sheikh Miskin and other towns had been captured from Assad. They encircled the provincial capital, Deraa, for a final offensive dubbed Southern Storm. The city actually looked ready to fall. After Idleb, Jisr al-Shughour, Ariha, Palmyra, and Sukhna, the fall of Deraa was intended to be the nail in Assad’s coffin and a show of strength for the Western-vetted FSA factions in the south, drawing support away from their Islamist rivals.

Stories differ on what happened next, but the Southern Storm campaign was a fiasco. Regime frontlines hardly budged, the Allahu Akbars trailed off into a confused mumble, and commanders were called back to Jordan. Half a year later, with Russian air support, Assad has begun an offensive to retake Sheikh Miskin in the hope of finally loosening the rebel stranglehold on Deraa—although at the time of writing, this is still a work in progress.

What happened? I really don’t know. Many things, probably. The operation seems to have been poorly coordinated, with rebels pursuing a plan that their foreign funder-managers in the Military Operations Center in Jordan didn’t agree on. Stories have been told about some nations cutting support, rebels defecting to Assad or heading for Europe, arms having been sold on to jihadis, and groups splitting over obscure internal intrigues. Some of those stories may be false, but the failure was a fact and the rebels have since been restrained from further advances.

Of course, it might seem strange to say that rebels not taking a city was Syria’s ninth most significant event in 2015. It is not even a Dog Bit Man story, it’s a Dog Didn’t Bite Man story. But the Deraa affair seems to have done a great deal of damage to Western and Arab hopes for the FSA’s Southern Front, which had until then been portrayed as a model for the rest of Syria’s insurgency. Unless the southern rebels manage to reorganize, unify, and go back on the offensive, I think the events of summer 2015 might end up being seen as a turning point in the southern war.

8. Operation Decisive Quagmire.

afp-15a98bf10482c310755007248667f3649b607c81-150x150In keeping with local tradition, the princes of Saudi Arabia can be wedded to four regional crises at once. In early 2015, they were sulking over Syria, emotionally drained by Egypt, flustered by unfaithful Libya, and at wits’ end over that shrew in Baghdad, when Yemen suddenly walked into their lives—a huge, incoherent, boiling mess of splintering armed factions, collapsing institutions, Africa-level poverty, jihadi terrorism of every imaginable stripe, and aggressive interference by rival foreign governments.

It was love at first sight.

Since then, the March 2015 Saudi-led military intervention in Yemen has of course turned out to be exactly the self-defeating, facepalm-inducing clusterfuck that everyone who is not a member of the Saudi royal family had predicted.

To make a long story short, the Saudis are still in Yemen with no victory on the horizon and no face-saving exit available. This means they have much less time and resources left for Syria than they did a year ago. They have become more exposed to Iranian pestering and are more dependent on their regional and Western allies, several of whom do not share their views on how to deal with Bashar al-Assad. Rather than being able to leverage their intervention in Yemen against Iran and Assad in Syria, the Saudis now seem at risk of having it leveraged against them.

Thanks to the over-confidence and under-competence of the Saudi royal family, Syrian rebels may therefore turn out to be among the biggest losers of the Yemeni war.

7. Europe’s Syria Fatigue vs. Assad’s Viability

European Union flag. Source: Wikipedia Commons.

European Union flag. Source: Wikipedia Commons.

The huge numbers of refugees coming from Syria and other countries to the European Union in 2015 had many causes, but one of the effects was to rearrange Europe’s list of priorities in the Middle East. Goals number one through three are now as follows: stability, stability, and stability. Number four is anti-terrorism, number five is economic growth, and then there are a few others along those lines. Promoting democracy is also on the list, right after ”fix the nose of the Sphinx.”

In 2015, we have also seen a slow but persistent drip of terror scares and occasional massacres, including two big ones in Paris in January and November. This is obviously not the refugees’ fault, but many Europeans link these attacks to Syria anyway—including some of the attackers, like the wanker that began stabbing random people in the London Underground this December.

These things tap into the West’s darkest impulses. Reactions to immigration, painful social change, and terrorist pin-pricks may be irrational—in fact, they mostly are—but they carry real weight and win votes. Policy specialists might recommend some mixture of strategic patience, cautious reform, and nuanced rhetoric, but European rightwing populists eat policy specialists for breakfast.

Islamophobic far-right movements were already growing all over Europe, for reasons largely related to the continent’s own internal diseases, but the refugee crisis and the terror attacks are a godsend for them. Some of these groups are not content with merely hating and fearing the Syrian rebels for their Islamism, but also adopt pro-Assad positions. In addition, European extremists on both the far right and the far left are increasingly friendly with Putin’s Russia; some are even funded by the Kremlin. These parties are no longer bit players. They’re going to be in government soon, or close enough to government to shape policy. Add to that the old-school authoritarian national-conservatism that has begun to resurface in Eastern Europe, including Hungary, Poland, and other places, and the fact that countries like the Czech Republic and Hungary are already the Baath’s best advocates in the EU, and you have the nucleus of a slowly forming pro-Assad constituency.

Of course, many European politicians are also re-evaluating their views on Syria for perfectly non-racist and non-paranoid reasons. The most common one is probably a widespread and profound loss of faith in the Syrian opposition, not merely as an alternative to Assad, but even as a tool for pressuring him and engineering a solution. Others were never interested in a policy to overthrow Assad, although they happen to think he’s a crook.

The point is that all of these things now reinforce each other and for the Syrian regime, it looks like vindication. In 2011, Bashar al-Assad made a bet, wagering that (1) the West would one day recoil from its love affair with Middle Eastern revolution and return to the familiar comfort of secular authoritarianism, and that (2) his own regime would still be standing when that happened.

It is now happening, but whether or not Assad’s regime is still standing, qua regime, is a matter of definition. The Syrian president has so far shown little ability to exploit political openings like these. To an increasing number of European politicians, he does indeed look like the lesser evil, but also like a spectacularly incompetent evil. His regime appears to them to be too broken, too poor, too polarizing, too sectarian, too inflexible, and too unreliable to work with—more like a spent force than a least-bad-option. Assad’s diplomacy may be far more elegant but is ultimately no more constructive than that of Moammar al-Gaddafi, who, as you may recall, kept refusing every kind of compromise and even shied away from purely tactical concessions, until he was finally beaten to death by screaming Islamists in a country so broken it will perhaps never recover.

Then there is the question of Assad’s own longterm viability. Even in pre-2011 Syria, no one could be quite sure whether the Baathist regime would remain in one piece without an Assad at the helm. In a conflict like this, there must be dozens of assassins trying to worm their way into the Presidential Palace at any given moment and for all we know one of them could get lucky in 2016, 2017, or tomorrow. And what about his health? The Syrian president turned 50 this September. That’s no age for an Arab head of state and he looks perfectly fine in interviews. But if Western intelligence services have done their due diligence, they’ll know that his father Hafez suffered a ruinous stroke or heart attack at age 53, which nearly knocked him out of power. Who knows, maybe it runs in the family?

At this point, however, a growing number of European policymakers are so tired of Syria and its problems that they’ll happily roll the dice on Assad being the healthy, happy autocrat that he looks like. They would be quietly relieved to see Syria’s ruler reemerge in force to tamp down the jihadi menace and stem refugee flows with whatever methods, as long as they don’t have to shake his bloody hands in public and on the condition that he delivers a semi-functional rump state for them to work with, at some unspecified point in the future.

Obviously, Assad isn’t going to become best friends with the EU anytime soon, but it might be enough for him if major cracks start to appear in the West’s Syria policy. If so, there is now a window of opportunity opening up that wasn’t there for him a year ago. If the Syrian president manages to break some bad habits, tries his hand at real politics instead of Baathist sloganeering, and produces a stabilization plan slightly more sophisticated than murdering everyone who talks back to him, then 2016 could be the year that he starts breaking out of international isolation. If not, he’s likely to stay in the freeze box for at least another year—and since his regime keeps growing weaker, nastier, and less state-like by the day, it’s uncertain if he’ll get another chance.

This is a potential game changer worth watching, but don’t get too excited. Given the way that the Assad regime has conducted itself in the past half-century, the odds are long for transformative politics and persuasive diplomacy from Syria’s strongman.

6. The Vienna Meeting, the ISSG, and Geneva III.

b03582e6b20396c6ed25a6cb72406b35f8745e5d-150x150While not the most important, the November 14 creation of the International Support Group for Syria (ISSG, not to be confused with ISIS or ISIL) was certainly the most unambiguously positive piece of news of the year.

A debating club of interested nations and international organs won’t be enough to end the Syrian war, but it means that the terms of the debate have been readjusted for the better. Recognizing the conflict’s international dimension and engaging constructively with the fact that this is now partly a proxy war was long overdue. As currently construed, the ISSG might be too broad and unwieldy to function properly, since the core players (USA, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, etc) always seem to have to hold preparatory pre-meetings before settling down in the ISSG format. But if that’s what it takes to get the screaming and sulking teenagers that rule Tehran, Ankara, and Riyadh to sit down and talk like adults, then so be it.

That the creation of the ISSG has for the first time made Iran a formal party to the Syria talks is a good thing, whatever Syrian rebels and their Saudi paymasters may think of it. Iran is a key player both on the ground and in the diplomatic struggle over Syria; that’s not something you can change by pretending otherwise, though many have tried. Of course, now we’re all waiting for Iran to come to the same conclusion about the Syrian rebels, instead of childishly insisting that Assad must be allowed to negotiate with an opposition of his own choosing.

After its meetings in Vienna and New York, the ISSG has empowered UN envoy Staffan de Mistura to call for a new round of Syrian-Syrian talks, currently scheduled for January 25 in Geneva. As many have already pointed out, these talks are unlikely to solve Syria’s problems. The ISSG-backed goal of a transition through free and fair elections by 2017 is almost cartoonishly unrealistic.

So, what to do about that? Many pundits have reacted to the Vienna statement and the Geneva peace process only by ridiculing it and then restating their preferences for the outcome. That’s not helping. The talks are indeed almost certain to fail to reach their overly ambitious goals, but then let’s work from that assumption instead of scoffing at it.

The actors involved in Syria’s war should plan for failure even more than they plan for success. They should already be preparing for a post-Geneva situation where they need to salvage, secure, and build on any shred of progress achieved in the talks.

Reaching a comprehensive ceasefire by June seems incredibly difficult, but a dampening of violence just might be possible, with some luck. If serious about it, Syrian negotiators could presumably also reach meaningful agreement on more limited and less controversial issues.

They could also agree to keep talking. Since so many now favor some sort of political resolution, and unsuccessful negotiations may give way to military escalation, it would be useful to avoid a full stop and the taste of failure. A faltering Geneva process could be drawn out into many sessions and postponed, with negotiators on both sides sent back for a couple of months to do their homework, instead of ended. Transforming the Geneva process into a semi-permanent platform for negotiations on a talk-while-you-fight model would transfer some of the combatants’ attention to a political track. That would be a good thing, both in the hope of achieving a breakthrough later on and for day-to-day crisis management.

Most of all, international actors should make sure to safeguard the ISSG framework, or some version of it, against an underwhelming performance in Geneva. Even if the war goes on and intensifies, some form of international contact group will be useful to facilitate communication and solve side-issues, and it remains a necessary ingredient in any future de-escalation deal.

5. The Donald.

Donald Trump. Photo by Michael Vadon, Wikimedia Commons.

Donald Trump. Photo by Michael Vadon, Wikimedia Commons.

The politics of the United States is a key part of the politics of Syria, although the reverse is rarely true.

Right now, it looks very likely that Donald Trump will either win the Republican nomination for president, or run as an independent and split the Republican vote out of pure spite. If so, Hillary Clinton is almost certain to be elected president of the United States, which would give her final say over the superpower’s Syria policy from January 2017 to 2020, or even 2024.

Of course, one never knows: some extraordinary scandal could knock her out of the race, or maybe Trump slinks away or is bought off after losing the primaries. We’ll see. But right now, Clinton seems like the smart person’s bet.

From what we know of her performance as President Obama’s secretary of state during the first three years of the Syrian war, a Clinton presidency would probably mean a more hawkish attitude to Assad. For example, she keeps declaring herself in favor of a no fly zone to ground the Syrian air force. Whether that is feasible is another matter, what with these Russian jets and air defense systems all over the place, and tough talk on the campaign trail will not necessarily translate into White House policy. But a more interventionist American line in Syria could definitely make a difference in the war, for good or bad or both.

The high likelihood of a Clinton presidency also means that we can tentatively exclude the sort of radical break in American Syria policy that might have followed a Republican restoration. Some of the GOP candidates are more aggressively anti-Assad than Clinton and have no interest in preserving any part of Obama’s legacy. Others are the exact opposite: more or less pro-Assad and starkly opposed to the rebels, whether for pandering to the anti-Muslim vote or out of anti-interventionist principle. But because of Donald Trump, it now seems like those points of view are going to get schlonged back into permanent opposition.

4. The Iran Deal.

Flag of Iran. Photo by Farzaaaad2000, Wikipedia Commons.

Flag of Iran. Photo by Farzaaaad2000, Wikipedia Commons.

The effects of the Iranian nuclear agreement, which was finalized between April and June 2015, are only very gradually becoming apparent. But unless the deal is somehow scuttled by the combined efforts of hawks in the United States, Iran, Israel, and Saudi Arabia, it could reshape the region.

As a consequence of the agreement and the American-Iranian thaw, the international isolation of Tehran is withering away. After four years of being shut out of Syria diplomacy, but not out of Syria, Iran has been invited to the UN-led negotiation process via the ISSG. The United States is also starting to accept Tehran as a regional power to be engaged coldly but constructively, although this is still unfamiliar terrain for all involved.

Meanwhile, European companies are flocking to Tehran to get a slice of the end-of-sanctions pie. Expecting billion-dollar construction contracts and racing to beat their Russian, Chinese, American, and Arab competition, the EU governments will soon start to pay a lot of attention to what Iranian diplomats have to say. More soft power for the ayatollahs, then.

Though often viewed, somewhat inexplicably, as a third-tier actor in the Iran talks, Russia is also paying the greatest attention to this process. Once the nuclear deal was done, Putin swiftly began to transform a complicated but friendly relationship into an emerging pact, seeing in Iran’s combination of oil, gas, military muscle, and poor ties to the West a perfect regional ally for Russia. Russian state media just announced that Moscow will start shipping its powerful S-300 air defense system to Iran next month.

This is all great news for Bashar al-Assad, of course, though it’s not yet clear whether his regime can stick around long enough to fully capitalize on Iran’s growing influence.

3. The Continuing Structural Decay of the Syrian Government. 


Syria's Bashar Al-Assad. Photo by Fabio Rodrigues Pozzebom / ABr, Wikimedia Commons.

Syria’s Bashar Al-Assad. Photo by Fabio Rodrigues Pozzebom / ABr, Wikimedia Commons.

Assad took some real body blows in spring and summer 2015. After an upward curve in 2014, the Syrian army started to seem exhausted by the end of the year and its offensive in Aleppo petered out after a last hurrah in spring 2015. With rising support for the rebels, the hollowed-out base of Assad’s regime began to show.

Most obviously, Assad lost a lot of territory in the first half of 2015. In March, a coalition of Islamist rebels captured Idleb City in the north and Bosra in the south. In April, Jisr al-Shughour fell, followed by the Nassib border crossing to Jordan. In May, it was time for Ariha in Idleb, with other rebels pushing into the Ghab Plains. Further east, the Islamic State took Sokhna and Palmyra. Southern rebels grabbed a military base known as Brigade 52 in the Houran in June and began preparing their (ultimately ill-fated) assault on Deraa, the provincial capital. That same month, Assad’s forces in Hassakeh were mauled by the Islamic State. They survived only thanks to an uneasy alliance with the Kurds, which increasingly turned into dependence on them. In July, Assad was hard pressed and held a speech declaring that the army would have to focus on keeping the most strategic areas of Syria, though it would not stop striving for total victory.

The rebel and Islamic State offensives have mostly been blunted since then, thanks to raised levels of Russian and Iranian support, and they did not go far enough to deal critical damage to the regime. Yet, at the time of writing, Assad remains unable to recapture any of the cities he lost in the first half of 2015. The northern Hama front, in particular, continues to cause headaches for his government.

Even though you can’t see it on a map, Assad has also lost strength in other ways in 2015. His primary source of power—apart from the military—was always the fact that he controlled the state, and along with it a number of institutions on which every Syrian family relies, including courts, police, public services, state-run businesses and banks, and a system of food and fuel subsidies. While it does not mean that the regime’s subjects love their president, it has allowed Assad to co-opt, control, and mobilize millions of Syrians in ways that the insurgents cannot. Owning the government also allows Assad to hold out the promise of continued central control, institutional rollback in the provinces, and coordinated reconstruction—i.e., some sort of plan for a post-war Syria.

By contrast, his opponents may be skilled at breaking down existing institutions, but they have so far proven unable to build new ones that stretch further than a few towns. This weakness is a primary source of Assad’s strength.

The Islamic State and the Kurdish PKK are partial exceptions to the rule, clearly capable of organizing rudimentary governance after destroying, expelling, or subjugating regime-connected local elites. But, for various reasons, they are not credible alternatives to the existing central state. As for the situation in the remaining Sunni rebel regions, it is very bleak. After nearly five years, there is a handful of multi-province militias, three or so regional networks of Sharia courts (the Sharia Commission of Ahrar al-Sham & Co. and the Nusra Front’s Dar al-Qada in the north, and the more broadly based Dar al-Adl in the south), a lot of little local councils linked to the exile opposition, and a web of foreign-funded aid services operating out of Turkey and Jordan, but not much more.

When Idleb fell to the insurgency earlier this year, it was only the second provincial capital to slide out of Assad’s hands, after Raqqa. It was destined to become an example of what rebel rule would mean. And what happened? The city started out at a disadvantage because of the war, Assad’s retaliatory bombings, and so on. A decent number of public employees seems to have stayed and continued in their jobs, but salaries and electricity provision dried up. That meant that things like water pumps and schools went out of commission. Rebel factions did what they could to organize civilian life, such as forming a joint council, which has administered the city through some combination of inherited municipal regulations and Sharia law. Despite the prominent role of al-Qaeda in the Jaish al-Fath coalition now running Idleb, foreign governments have chipped in by donating food and medical supplies to avoid a humanitarian disaster. Still, even under a comparatively well-organized, broadly based, and locally rooted coalition like Jaish al-Fath, the basics of a new political order never seem to fall in place. After eight months of insecurity, crime, and armed men swarming the city, the new rulers have yet to organize a credible police force. Whatever the opposition may claim, such failures are not merely the result of Assad’s barrel bombing.

The rebels’ manifest inability to govern, along with merciless airstrikes on nonregime territory, is what makes Assad able to compel most of the population to live under his rule; and the fear of irreversible state collapse is what has made foreign states hold back support from the rebels at critical junctures. However, this key advantage of the Assad regime is also slowly fading away, along with the state itself. The resulting problems are almost too many to list.

For one thing, the Syrian army’s manpower deficit is turning into a major issue. Assad has mobilized his security apparatus to hunt down draft dodgers through house calls and flying checkpoints, in order to replenish thinning ranks. The main effect seems to have been to send a growing stream of seventeen and eighteen year old men across the border, often with their families in tow. They may or may not prefer the government over the rebels, it doesn’t matter. In a Syria at peace they would have grumblingly gone for their one-and-a-half years of army training. But as things stand, they know full well that army service has no time limit: discharge is equal to death. As it turns out, most Syrians have no intention of giving their lives in service of Bashar al-Assad and draft dodging is now pervasive. Tensions have become so great that in the Druze-majority Sweida region in the south, the government apparently decided in 2015 to abstain from normal recruitment to the Syrian Arab Army out of fear of provoking a local rebellion. Druze men can instead report for home defense units, on the understanding that they won’t be shipped away to die in distant Hassakeh or Latakia. A similar arrangement reportedly applies in Aleppo and they seem to be creeping into other regions as well.

On the frontlines, Shia foreign fighters are taking a greater role. They appear to be behind much of the successful offensive south of Aleppo. Iran is rallying Iraqi and Lebanese fighters with both religious and financial inducements, but its client groups—Hezbollah, the Badr Organization, Asaeb al-Haqq etc—do not seem able to mobilize enough fighters. According to some reports, Iranian authorities have resorted to press-ganging young Hazara Shia refugees into going to Syria, under threat of deporting their families back to Afghanistan.

Russia has acted even more decisively, by sending its own air force and huge amounts of military materiel to shore Assad up.

Drawing on all of these resources, the Syrian president and his allies have managed to supply the army with the manpower it needed to regain some sort of strategic composure after the difficult first half of 2015. The army now seems to stand its ground again. But though the regime’s counterinsurgency apparatus is now back in working order, this is still the military-logistical equivalent of fixing your car engine with chewing gum and a prayer.

Though it remains the country’s single most powerful armed force, the Syrian Arab Army appears to have boiled down to a skeletal organization. Many elite and specialist units remain in service, but officers have far fewer regular soldiers under their command and are haphazardly recruiting local hangers-on to pad out the ranks in their sector. A huge number of more or less local militias have been set up by pro-Assad civil society figures, including businessmen, neighborhood strongmen, and tribal leaders, and Iran has helped Assad to organize tens of thousands of fighters under the National Defense Forces umbrella. Much of the broader ground force has thus been replaced by local irregulars, although army and intelligence officers still appear to oversee the action and report back to Damascus.

An example of what the Syrian Arab Army now looks like is Brigade General Soheil al-Hassan’s Tiger Force. So called after its commander, whose nickname is ”The Tiger,” it is one of the government’s most acclaimed elite units, which shuttles back and forth across northern Syria to put out fires and break up stalemates. While the Tiger Force is presented in regime media as an exemplary representative of the regular Syrian Arab Army, Hassan is in fact an air force officer who reportedly served as part of Air Force Intelligence at the Hama Airport when the conflict began. Having moved into a frontline role from 2011 onwards, he does not seem to control a huge force, instead relying on local troops and a smaller entourage of personal loyalists from varied backgrounds. Even now, when he is stationed on the front against the Islamic State east of Aleppo, he is surrounded by some of the local militias he worked with in Hama earlier in the war.

The civilian side of the government is also suffering. The state economy has declined at an accelerated pace since summer 2014. Then, the Syrian pound began to lose value quicker, fuel supplies dwindled, and the government was forced to begin a painful retreat from its costly system of subsidies for basic goods. Assad also lost access to the Jordanian border in 2015, complicating trade with Iran and the Gulf Arab markets and hurting farmers and other exporters. Iran’s decision to turn the credit tap back on in spring 2015 surely helped to slow the decay. But with Assad having run down his currency reserves and facing an array of other problems, the value of the pound continues to melt away, the lack of fuel causes cascading problems throughout the economy, the institutional rot worsens, and we’re seeing an accelerating middle class exodus from Damascus and the big cities.

When I recently polled some specialists on the Syrian economy, answers were uniformly pessimistic. Jihad Yazigi, who publishes the well-regarded economic newsletter The Syria Report, concluded that 2016 will see Syrians ”poorer, living a more miserable life, and emigrating in higher numbers.” José Ciro Martínez, an expert on food in conflicts, noted that bread prices have tripled in government-controlled areas (and also in the parts of Syria under Islamic State control), while they are stabilizing in rebel-held regions, where foreign governments are trucking in flour and food.

For the Baathist government, which still today controls a sizable majority of the Syrian people, this has started to eat away at one of Assad’s most important competitive advantages: his ability to provide basic goods and salaries in areas under his control, which draws civilians away from the bombed out and broken rebel badlands and places them under the control of his state, army, and security apparatus. In the past year, humanitarian workers and diplomats monitoring these issues have started to speak about internally displaced people being turned away from government areas that no longer feel that they can afford to care for them, or view them as potential fifth-columnists for the Sunni insurgency. The situation is so bad that in northern Syria, thousands have headed for Islamic State-run Raqqa—a city ruled by fundamentalist psychopaths and targeted by a dozen different air forces, but still safer and more livable than wherever they came from.

The decay of the central government, the army, state institutions, and the Syrian economy more generally means that Assad is growing less credible as the steward of all or part of post-war Syria, even for those inclined to imagine him as such. For years, the Syrian government has spent considerable resources running basic governmental functions even in areas outside of its control—for example by paying salaries to government workers, teachers, and hospital staff in some opposition-held regions. As a consequence, many insurgent areas are paradoxically enough dependent on regular payments and institutional services from the government they’re fighting.

In some cases, these are quid pro quo deals, where the government tries to leverage its ability to shut down services, in order to get the rebels to let traffic through a checkpoint or stay out of certain towns. In other cases, there are overriding shared interests, such as when the government and Islamists work out arrangements to keep Damascus and Aleppo supplied with potable water. There is also the spectacle of unhappy government oil workers sent out to run power plants under Islamic State supervision, because both sides want to keep the lights on and hope to make money off of the other.

But in many other cases, the central government simply seems to be paying for services in areas it does not control. This is not a humanitarian measure and neither is it mere bureaucratic inertia. (Sometimes, the government shuts down services and stops food deliveries as a means of collective punishment.) Rather, it appears to result from a strategic choice to maintain a skeletal grid of institutions in as many regions as possible. That’s a core interest for the Syrian state as such, but also for Assad personally, who hopes to win the war by safeguarding the government’s institutional base and making it contingent on the continued existence of his regime.

Given current trends, it seems unlikely that the central government will be able to keep these payments up forever. In so far as the current rulers of the state are forced to chose, they will no doubt prioritize loyalist areas. (Or corruption and clientelism will make that choice for them.) Also, many areas have already lost any presence of the state and functioning public institutions, whether due to the war, rebel depravations, or regime terror bombing. Recreating them will be even more costly than just keeping them in operation. If Assad’s government does not have the resources or the institutional capacity to rebuild reconquered areas, then it will rule no more effectively than the rebels. If it turns out to be too dependent on radical sectarians to allow Sunni refugees back, and cannot in fact operate as an institutional state and a national government, then President Assad is just a warlord with a fancy title.

For the regime, this is a do or die issue. Unless it manages to bring these structural problems under control in 2016, Syria may be heading into unknown territory.

2. The American-Kurdish Alliance.

Coalition airstrike on Islamic State position, October 2014. Photo Credit: Voice of America News: Scott Bobb reports from the Suruç, Turkey/ Kobane, Syrian border; "Turkish Border Towns Hosting Thousands of Kobani Refugees", Wikipedia Commons.

Coalition airstrike on Islamic State position, October 2014. Photo Credit: Voice of America News: Scott Bobb reports from the Suruç, Turkey/ Kobane, Syrian border; “Turkish Border Towns Hosting Thousands of Kobani Refugees”, Wikipedia Commons.

Since late 2014 and early 2015, the United States Air Force has transformed itself into something that more closely resembles the Western Kurdistan Air Force. Under U.S. air cover, Kurdish forces are constructing their own autonomous region (called Rojava) and in autumn this year, the U.S. started delivering ammunition and small arms directly to Arab units working under the Kurdish umbrella, currently called the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). We’re still in the early stages of what may or may not turn out to be a longterm relationship, although certainly not a monogamous one.

Militarily, it is a match made in heaven and the results are impressive. Despite their limited numbers, the Kurds have created a disciplined force that uses air support effectively. They’re chewing up jihadis and spitting them out from Kobane to Hassakeh. At the moment, they’re threatening to march against Shedadi near the Iraqi border and have just seized the October Dam on the Euphrates, giving them land access to Manbij and the Aleppo hinterland.

Such victories do not look like much on the map, but they are doing systematic and significant damage to the jihadis in sensitive areas. Oil fields, roads, border crossings, and bridges: these are things the Islamic State cannot live without. Now, the American-Kurdish coalition is buzzing around northern Syria like a giant vacuum cleaner, gobbling up all those goodies and leaving nothing for anyone else. If 2016 turns out to be the year when the Islamic State begins to crack and contract, the Syrian Kurds will have played a huge role in getting us there.

Politically speaking, however, the American-Kurdish alliance is not such a perfect marriage. It’s more like an unfortunate Tinder date: initial ambitions align, but you don’t have a lot of interests in common and your friends roll their eyes.

First of all, the Kurds are an ethnic minority with a very particular set of problems and ambitions in Syria, which have little to do with the wider war within the Sunni Arab majority. Their current crop of leaders are ideologically doctrinaire PKK loyalists. They have atrociously poor relations to the rest of the U.S.-backed opposition and disturbingly (as seen from the White House) close contacts with Moscow. If it wishes to act on the central stage of Syrian politics, the United States ultimately needs to win strong allies within the religiously flavored Sunni Arab majority, but it has instead come to rely on a foreign-linked, Russian-friendly, authoritarian, and secular Kurdish group with a (partly undeserved) reputation for separatism. Needless to say, this rubs every dominant ideological camp within the popular majority the wrong way: Islamists, Baathists, Syrian nationalists.

Secondly, the PKK is listed as a foreign terrorist organization in the United States. That means it is illegal for American citizens to provide it with any form of ”material support or resources,” possibly including enormous truckloads of ammunition and billions of dollars worth of close air support. Of course, the sanctioning of the PKK is more due to its violent conflict with Turkey than because of any Kurdish attacks against Americans. Therefore, one would logically expect there to be at least a debate in the United States about whether this key anti-jihadi ally should perhaps be removed from the black list, since this would seem to be an urgent national security interest. But there is nothing of the kind. Instead, the executive branch just goes about its business and the PKK gets its guns as intended. It is a rare case of a political system being so dysfunctional that it becomes super-functional, but it might not last forever.

Third and last, but not least—you may have heard of NATO. The United States is in a military alliance with Turkey, which is a key backer of the Syrian Sunni Arab opposition but also the PKK’s arch-enemy. Both Ankara and the Kurds rank each other far higher than Assad or the Islamic State on their respective lists of evils for urgent destruction. It’s getting worse, too. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is currently sending jets and tanks to bomb Kurdish cities, and he is backing attempts to destroy the HDP, which serves as PKK’s Sinn Féin and is a necessary component of any peaceful solution to Turkey’s conflict. If Turkey-PKK relations were antagonistic before, they are positively murderous right now.

These contradictions threaten to rip apart the United States’ Syrian alliance network, undermining its policy to pressure both Assad and the Islamic State. Resolving them is probably impossible; ignoring or transcending them won’t be much easier. At the moment, the United States is drifting towards the PKK almost by default. This is both because the Kurds have offered something that actually works on the ground and because Erdogan has been such a singularly unhelpful ally in Syria. Turkish obstructionism may have started to fade away now, with Ankara belatedly realizing its need for Western support and the costs of playing spoiler. That could change things. But unless Turkey’s behavior changes radically and other current trends continue, the unlikely alliance between the Pentagon and the PKK looks like it might just beat the odds and survive for the long term.

1. The Russian Intervention.

A screenshot from a video released by Russia's defense ministry shows a Russian warship firing cruise missiles into Syria from the Caspian Sea.

A screenshot from a video released by Russia’s defense ministry shows a Russian warship firing cruise missiles into Syria from the Caspian Sea.

Here we are, at number one, and it’s an easy choice. The single most important event of the Syrian war in 2015 was of course Russia’s September 30 military intervention. Unfortunately, it’s much harder to pin down exactly why this is so important: because it strengthened Assad so much or because it didn’t strengthen him enough?

Most of the discussion in Western Europe and the United States has been over whether Russia intervened against the Islamic State, as it claims, or against other rebels backed by the United States, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia. That question is easy to answer: Russia did not intervene against anyone in particular, it intervened for Assad. Who gets hurt depends on who stands in his way. So far, attacks overwhelmingly focus on the other rebels, not the Islamic State—although the Russian government and its media toadies continue to claim otherwise with a sanctimonious pigheadedness unseen since Baghdad Bob.

If we instead judge the Russian intervention against its undeclared but actual goal, which is to aid Assad, a nuanced picture emerges. The airstrikes themselves are intense and seem effective, but they will ultimately matter little unless a capable ground force can exploit the openings created. Assad’s army leaves much to be desired, as already noted, and his government will struggle to resume firm control over the areas and populations it might capture.

So far, there have been limited gains on the ground, mostly in low-value areas south of Aleppo and some hard-won mountain terrain in northern Latakia. The Syrian army is also seeking to wrest back control of Sheikh Miskin in the south, to make Deraa easier to hold. Less visibly but perhaps more importantly, a series of local ceasefire-and-evacuation deals have helped neutralize rebel strongholds in the Homs and Damascus regions. Since the costs to Russia seem to be fairly limited, they can probably keep this up for a long time, meaning that Assad is in no hurry and can focus on preserving cohesion and manpower.

But on the other hand, three months have already passed and Assad has not recaptured a single one of the cities he lost in spring and summer 2015. Not Jisr al-Shughour, not Bosra, not Idleb, not Palmyra. And on the North Hama front, which has been a main focus for the Russian Air Force, Assad has actually been pushed backwards. Soon after the Russians intervened, he lost Morek, a small town that has been fiercely contested for both sides; that was no sign of strength. If the rebels were to move just a few villages further south of Morek, they’d be within comfortable range of Hama City and could start shelling the crucially important Hama Military Airport. (Perhaps that is a reason for why Assad and the Russians are now hastily restoring the discontinued Shaayrat Airport southeast of Homs?)

In other words, while the intervention has helped Assad turn the tide, he’s nowhere near as effective at capturing territory as his enemies were half a year ago. By now, the initial shock and awe has started to wear off. The Russian state media continues to claim that they’re winning, winning, winning, but if people were willing to listen to that on September 30, they don’t any longer. After three months of nonstop lying and braggadocio, the progress reports from Russia’s ministries of defense and foreign affairs seem no more credible than the shrill propaganda we’ve grown accustomed to from Syria’s rebels and regime.

That said, I think it is quite possible that the Russian bombings will have made a deep cut in the rebellion’s fortunes by spring 2016. The longterm and cumulative effect of all this pressure should not be ignored. How long can the Idleb insurgents fight a three-front war against forces coming from Aleppo in the east, Latakia in the west, and Hama in the south? Both the Syrian and the Russian air forces are now hitting munitions storages, supply routes, and transports all over Idleb and Aleppo. The longer-term effects of these bombings may remain invisible to us still. They are also bombing civilian trade and points of access for food and medical aid in areas that had previously been off limits to the Syrian air force. This is either a calculated gamble or part of a deliberate strategy to create a humanitarian disaster, since the Russians are well aware that hundreds of thousands of people depend on deliveries channeled through these areas. Whatever the case, it stirs up the situation all over northern Syria. Rebel forces could theoretically begin to unravel structurally in the same way that the Islamic State is now doing on some fronts, after a year of mostly Iraqi, Kurdish, and American pressure.

Indeed, we are seeing signs that all is not well in the Syrian rebel movement. The Jaish al-Fath coalition, a powerful Idlebi alliance built on the Nusra-Ahrar axis, has just issued a desperate-sounding call for outside support and foreign fighters. The fact that the alliance now openly invites foreign jihadis to come join them breaches a longstanding redline for the non-Qaida segments of the Islamist opposition. One of Jaish al-Fath’s founding factions, the Muslim Brotherhood-aligned Feilaq al-Sham militia, was so troubled by this (and perhaps by how their funders would react) that they pulled out of the alliance days after the statement. That Jaish al-Fath’s dominant factions would throw caution to the wind in this way, to the extent that the alliance is starting to wither, is a sign of how much pressure they are under since September 30.

Another possible metric is the death of senior commanders. There is no shortage of new recruits for the rebellion, so one shouldn’t overstate the overall significance, but if leaders get killed it’s at the very least a sign that something is wrong. Since September 30, there has been a lot of reports about dead and injured senior figures in the insurgency. The most well known victim is of course Zahran Alloush in Damascus, though we do not know if the Russians were involved in that attack. Further north, recent deaths include Abu Abdessalam al-Shami, an Ahrar al-Sham member who served as Jaish al-Fath’s governor of Idleb City, Ismail Nassif, who was the military chief of the Noureddine Zengi Brigades, and his counterpart in the Thuwwar al-Sham Front, Yasser Abu Said. All three were killed on the south Aleppo front. Jaish al-Fath’s chief judge, the Saudi celebrity jihadi Abdullah al-Moheisini, was wounded just before Christmas (but survived), while Sheikh Osama al-Yatim, who ran the Dar al-Adl court system in the Houran, was killed in mid-December. The list could be made a lot longer.

It’s also worth noting that the political effect outside Syria has been far bigger than the military gains inside Syria. September 30 shook up conventional wisdom about the conflict and increased Putin’s influence across the board, for having yet again out-escalated the West and proven his commitment to Assad. It created some hard-to-win debates for John Kerry, added to an already growing European pessimism about the wisdom of backing Syrian rebels, and made it less likely that a no fly zone would be imposed in Syria by Obama or his successor. By focusing the minds of people in Moscow, Washington, and elsewhere, the Russian intervention has also helped bring about the Vienna meetings, the creation of the ISSG, and consequently also the upcoming Geneva III talks in January. The November 14 Vienna Communiqué (which Assad doesn’t like) is now overtaking the Geneva Communiqué of June 2012 (which Assad really hated). However you rate these things, they’re not nothing.

Most analysis of the Russian involvement has been so politicized as to be almost useless. Putin’s and Assad’s supporters have been quick to pronounce the operation a resounding success, while rebel backers dismiss it as a murderous fiasco. The safe bet is, as always, to look for the truth somewhere in between those extremes. My best guess is that Putin is probably worried over the Syrian Arab Army’s underwhelming achievements and increasingly concerned over what he has gotten himself into. Nevertheless, Assad is definitely in a stronger position than he was half a year ago and can still hope for a bigger dividend in 2016. One also has to consider the alternatives: the Syrian army would no doubt have been much worse off now if the intervention had not happened, and that would have undercut Russia’s influence as well.

Finally, one must note the risks involved in raising the stakes. If the Geneva III talks falter and Assad fails to achieve a decisive breakthrough in 2016, then what? Russia can hardly pull back, now that Assad has grown dependent on its support, not without losing face and seeing its investments frittered away. And what then, Mr. Putin: will you just keep going with no end in sight, or will you escalate even further? In other words, Russia is now at risk of getting stuck in an intractable conflict without an exit strategy and without clear political gain. It would be like Saudi Arabia in Yemen, but on a much bigger scale. If Putin ends up sending ground troops into battle, the risks and costs involved would rise considerably—but even that might not be enough to bring about a Kremlin-friendly conclusion to the Syrian mess.

Some of the less responsible actors on the pro-rebel side (you know who you are) might find this scenario to be in their interest. By exposing himself to injury in Syria while simultaneously continuing to provoke Western and Sunni Arab nations in Ukraine, Iran, and elsewhere, Putin has effectively offered them the choice of a full-blown proxy war. Once he seems to have tied his personal prestige firmly enough to Assad’s fate, they just need to abandon any lingering hopes they might have for stability in Syria and start kicking at the pillars that still keep the state standing, thereby turning Syria into Putin’s own Afghanistan. It would be very bad news for the Russians, but it would be a catastrophe for Syrians.

Barring a military breakthrough, much could depend on the outcome of the otherwise uninspiring Geneva III talks in January. The behavior of Russia and the Assad government will be watched closely by Western states. If Putin acts constructively and demonstrates real leverage over his ally, or meaningful agreements between Syrians seem to be within reach, then so far so good. But if it turns out that Putin refuses to fulfill his side of the deal, which is to deliver Assad’s approval of a transition plan, or if Assad simply ignores Moscow’s advice, then what good is the Russian presence in Syria to Arabs, Americans, and Europeans? We would be back in a purely military contest. The ramped-up Russian investment in Assad’s regime would then look less like a unilateral readjustment of Syria’s balance of power and more like a target of opportunity.

*Aron Lund, editor of Syria in Crisis


Saudi-Iran Dispute Won’t Cause Lasting Oil Price Rally – Analysis

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By Nick Cunningham

Oil prices jumped on the first trading day of 2016 as Middle East tension outweighed a selloff in financial markets around the world.

Oil markets remain oversupplied and depressed, but geopolitical flashpoints have a historical tendency to disrupt market trends. Over the weekend, Saudi Arabia carried out a mass execution of 47 prisoners, including a prominent Shiite cleric Nemer al-Nemer. The executions prompted condemnations from around the world, but in Iran protestors threw Molotov cocktails at Saudi Arabia’s embassy, setting fire to the building. Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said that Saudi Arabia would face “divine retribution” for executing the Shiite cleric.

In response, Saudi Arabia cut off diplomatic ties with Iran, and kicked out its diplomats. Saudi allies in the Persian Gulf also downgraded diplomatic relations with Iran.

The conflict between Iran and Saudi Arabia has simmered for months, with the wars in Yemen and Syria playing out as proxy fights between the two rivals. Now the conflict has erupted into a more direct standoff. The execution of al-Nemer “risks to be really explosive in the broader region” a senior Western diplomat told The Wall Street Journal.

The U.S. government, which has sought to lower the temperature between the two countries in 2015 and bring Saudi Arabia on board with the nuclear agreement it brokered with Iran, called on both sides to take “affirmative steps to calm tensions” following this weekend’s events.

Oil prices briefly jumped on Monday, with WTI up more than 3 percent and Brent up more than 4 percent in early trading hours. Both benchmarks spiked above $38 per barrel. That is a long way from the $100 per barrel routinely seen in years past when Middle East tension spooked oil markets, but prices were up from the 11-year lows seen in December.

The significant price increase came even as global financial markets saw turmoil on the first trading day of the New Year. U.S. stock indices plunged 2 percent on January 4, following negative economic news coming out of China. New data showed that China’s factory activity slowed in December, sending the Shanghai Composite down by 7 percent. Trading came to a halt to prevent a further selloff.

The episode conjured up bad memories of the summer of 2015, when China suffered several weeks of a stock market meltdown. The economic fissures have not healed in the meantime, and the factory data from December points to ongoing sluggishness in China. The slowing economy could force a further depreciation of the yuan, which in turn will depress China’s oil demand. This stands out as a bearish black swan for crude markets in the coming months.

In fact, global economic forces, along with oil supply and demand fundamentals, are much more important than the tension between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Unless the conflict escalates in a significant way, the supply overhang will continue to be much more influential on the price of oil than the war of words between Tehran and Riyadh. After spiking early on January 4, crude fell back by the afternoon as the markets digested the bearish news from China.

Moreover, the Saudi-Iran conflict could merely play out in the oil markets. OPEC was already unlikely to agree to a common strategy that would see production cuts, but now everyone can essentially rule out any cooperation between Saudi Arabia and Iran. Both countries may try to ramp up production (Iran plans on doing that anyway when sanctions are lifted) and discount their oil in an effort to claw away market share from each other.

Meanwhile, the first shipment of U.S. oil left American shores this week. ConocoPhillips and NuStar Energy were the first to export oil from the Eagle Ford. The large oil-trader Vitol Group purchased the shipment. Oil exports from the U.S. won’t come in large volumes since WTI and Brent are trading at parity. But the capacity to export will put some downward pressure on the internationally-oriented Brent benchmark.

In other words, global economic weakness and the glut in oil supplies will continue to weigh on crude. At this point, only tension in the Middle East is providing a bit of a lift to oil markets, but even that won’t be enough to push up prices in any lasting way.

Article Source: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Oil-Prices/Saudi-Iran-Dispute-Wont-Cause-Lasting-Oil-Price-Rally.html

Muslim In The West: Developing Socially-Integrated, Terror-Free Communities – Analysis

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By Riad Kahwaji*

Terrorist attacks by violent extremists pledging allegiance to the so-called Islamic State in Syria and Iraq (ISIS) against various targets in Europe has raised concerns about the status of the Muslim communities in Europe, especially at a time when almost a million refugees are arriving all over Europe from countries like Syria and Iraq. Far-right parties have performed well in recent elections, such as in France where public sentiment in the aftermath of the Paris attacks indicates how events in the Middle East increasingly impact security and local politics in Europe.

For many analysts, the French elections were just the start and many expect to see far-right and nationalist parties performing well in upcoming elections around Europe, with a potential to redefine the approach of the European Union (EU) on immigration in general and on Muslim communities in particular. Right-wing activism and politicking in European countries affected by terrorism or the flow of immigrants may well have long-term ramifications and could even trigger social unrest if Muslim communities are targeted with violence – signs of which have been recorded – and set the stage for civil unrest and the breakup of inter-communal disharmony.

The emerging social-political situation in Europe will probably highlight the problem of immigration and challenge of Muslim communities at once. Western leaders have been debating for some time the best approach to address the rising number of domestic cases of violent extremism by Muslims who were born and raised in the West. It was always believed that Muslim extremists usually came from Muslim countries with troubled societies, often suffering oppression, illiteracy and poverty.

However, Muslims communities in the West do not have clear, well-defined religious leaderships and have become prone to influence by foreign elements sending false promises or misleading ideas to serve their own narrow agendas. There is a growing sense that multiculturalism has failed, and one consequence to that is a growing national security issue where Muslim communities are concerned. The challenge of socially integrating Muslim communities into the broader culture and developing an effective bulwark against fanaticism and violent extremism is becoming more pressing.

If one observes the Muslim communities in the West as a whole, it will become clear that the way in which young Muslims are raised and educated – at home and school – has contributed to systematic failures that have in turn created opportunities for groups like ISIS and Al Qaeda to resonate their message and narratives. Muslims communities in the West are mainly comprised of individuals and their offspring who arrived as immigrants and settled in mainly poor and lower middle class neighborhoods, often feeling safer in communities with ‘their own’ which effectively became closed communities that offered little opportunity for outside interaction.

For first generation immigrants, cultural integration and education primarily came the hard way with daily life interactions, especially at work in offices, factories, shops, and during commuting – few were able to adapt quickly, and many spent decades feeling socially alienated. For second and subsequent generation Muslims, cultural integration occurred primarily through schooling and education, and they grew up understanding social norms, habits and traditions differently.

However, as Western schooling syllabi taught no Islamic education, this created a role for parents and elders typically from the first generation immigrant community to fill. As it is, Muslim communities residing in the West have typically relied on community elders to provide religious requirements, such as Islamic education, sourcing and managing places of worship, and provisioning activities for religious rituals such as funerals, marriage, and pilgrimage to holy Islamic places.

In most cases, community elders prefer to source clerics from their own respective countries, often tied with some kinship or social connection, to relocate and assume positions as Imams in mosques built and managed by local communities, or Islamic organizations normally backed by foreign governments or patrons. No higher authority in the host country checked the credentials of individuals brought over by local communities before or after they become Imams. Unsurprisingly, many Imams took up their positions despite low to non-existent cultural awareness, and often even the inability to fluently speak, read and write the language of their new home country.

Imams are prescribed great religious respect and credibility by practicing Muslims, but they can arrive with deep misperceptions about the West and possess hostile views towards Western culture and history, often blamed for troubles of the Islamic world. Yet, these same Imams are expected to provide lessons in religion and a way of life to practicing Muslims which is built on mutual respect and coexistence with non-Muslims and broader society to which they have little or no familiarity with. The result is unacceptably large numbers of the Muslim community living in a cocoon with feelings of disdain towards non-Muslim culture, and suspicion towards social change.

Muslims visiting friends and relatives that were born and raised in the West are sometimes surprised to see them harboring more conservative and sometimes even fanatical views than those living in Muslim-majority countries. A major reason for the type of religious conservatism that has been seen to provide ample opportunities for creeping extremism among Muslim communities in the West is the role of Imams lacking cultural awareness and appropriate levels of education for providing religious guidance. Too often Imams equate Western culture as anti-Islamic and counter-Islamic, develop imagined social fault-lines, and engineer a social isolation of Muslim communities from broader society in which radicalism is able to gain hold more easily.

The solution for the social and cultural integration of Muslim communities in the West is to establish an official Islamic institution that is able to look after the religious affairs of Muslim communities – with an authority at the top akin to a Grand Mufti. Such an institution would be able to educate and develop Imams to act as Muslim community leaders locally – indeed from within local communities themselves, ensure attractive salaries and job security, appoint Imams and religious leaders to mosques and religious schools, monitor and regulate performance, provide continuous education and professional development programs, instruct the subject and content of sermons delivered during religious service on Fridays and other days of religious importance such as during Ramadan, and train religious institutions to serve local communities in a way to support social and cultural integration.

Such an Islamic institution must be headed by a Muslim who was born and raised in-country, and meets the authentic religious credentials to be given the title of Grand Mufti – but also possesses the social awareness and political outlook that makes him suitable to take on such an important and influential tasking. Moreover, such an Islamic institution should be given authority to license the building of mosques, ensure that teachers of Islamic education meet a certain criteria, and have a role in helping decide which international Islamic organizations are moderate, suitable to the local community interests, and should be allowed to conduct charitable or religiously-oriented activities in the country.

In short, the proposed Islamic institution would faciliate the integration of new Muslim immigrants into society as well as act as a bulwark against religious fanaticism and social isolation among members of existing Muslim communities. Jurists in the West may find such a proposal to contravene existing laws or approaches, such as the right of freedom to practice religion, and politicians – especially conservatives – could misinterpret this by itself as creeping Islamization. However, it is important to acknowledge the importance Muslim communities attach to religious authorities and understanding how, and why, they have been underserved. Muslims in France or Germany should not be getting advice from an Imam who just arrived from Pakistan, Turkey or Syria. They should hear it from an Imam who was raised and educated in the West.

The emerging international environment requires extraordinary measures to be taken by governments to address a plethora of issues. Defeating violent extremism and the likes of ISIS and Al Qaeda which are able to indoctrinate both young and mature minds thousands of miles away requires policies that are sensible and sustainable – which do not target ordinary Muslims, such as banning entry at borders altogether, but which seek to collaborate with them to address the systematic failures leading Muslim communities in the West to being underserved with capable and equipped leaderships. Failure here may well be a final chance before the impending death of multiculturalism combines with a dangerous mix of impending social challenges to drive Europe and the wider West into socio-political abyss. Moreover, Western leaders must always remember that the war on terrorism has to be won ideologically in order for military gains to count.

*Riad Kahwaji, CEO, INEGMA

NATO Secretary General Condemns North Korea H-Bomb Test

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NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg on Wednesday condemned the nuclear weapons test announced by North Korea, saying that it undermines regional and international security, and is in clear breach of UN Security Council resolutions.

“I condemn the continued development by North Korea of nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs and its inflammatory and threatening rhetoric,” Stoltenberg said.

Stoltenberg called on North Korea to fully respect its international obligations and commitments.

“North Korea should abandon nuclear weapons and existing nuclear and ballistic missile programs in a complete, verifiable and irreversible manner, and engage in credible and authentic talks on denuclearization,” Stoltenberg said.

According to the official KCNA News Agency, “The successful H-bomb test was a measure for self-defense the DPRK took to protect its sovereignty and the vital rights of the Korean nation from the escalating nuclear threat and blackmail by the hostile forces, as part of its efforts to reliably defend the peace on the Korean Peninsula and regional security.”

Samuel L. Jackson’s America-Bashing Is A Huge Disservice – OpEd

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Okay, I will say it out loud. Far too many Hollywood celebs are self-aggrandizing idiots when it comes to politics and culture. Their worldview makes them feel superior to the rest us. Neither facts nor common sense will change their minds. Ronald Reagan nailed it when he said, “It isn’t so much that liberals are ignorant. It’s just that they know so many things that aren’t so.&rdq uo;

Here’s a prime example of a liberal making void-of-reality statements while thinking himself superior. Black superstar actor Samuel L. Jackson said he wished the San Bernardino shooters “was another crazy white dude” rather than Muslims. Jackson said such attacks gives people “legitimate reason” to look at their Muslim neighbors and friends the way they look at young black men.

Mr Jackson, I am black. I resent your assumption that Americans are racists looking for reasons to look cross-eyed at Muslims and young black men. Frankly, members of both groups (Muslims and blacks) have declared war on Americans.

So tell me Mr Jackson. How are we suppose to deal with the fact that practically every terrorist attack resulting in the maiming and murder of Americans has been by Muslims? Also, though under reported, black youth flash mo b attacks, the knock-out game and polar bear hunting attacks on innocent whites are frequent.

The Black Lives Matter hate group which Mr Jackson and his Hollywood homeys hold in high regard have declared it open season on killing cops and “crackas” (white people). How are Americans suppose to process that?

A white friend was mugged on a Baltimore street. My friend admitted he was preoccupied. Had he been paying attention, upon seeing the group of thuggish young black males approaching, his street-smarts would have kicked in causing him to cross over to the opposite side of the street. Mr Jackson would deem my friend a racist guilty of profiling. In the minds of liberals, politically correctness trumps everything; even self-preservation instincts and life-experiences.

What I find so scary about the Muslim thing is we have no way of knowing who is for us or “a-gin” us. All the successful terrorist attacks maiming and murdering Americans were by Muslims who presented themselves as harmless neighbors, friends and co-workers.

The Boston Marathon was bombed by the seemingly Americanized Tsarnaev brothers. They killed 3 and wounded over 260, many maimed for life.

For crying out loud, the Muslim terrorist at Ft Hood was a major in the U.S. Army. Major Nidal Hasan, shot and killed 13 and injured over 30 while yelling, “Allahu akbar! (God is great)”

The San Bernardino shooters were undercover Muslim terrorists. They left their company’s Christmas party, returned later wearing combat gear and killed 14 co-workers.

Again I ask Mr Jackson, how should we as responsible reasonable Americans respond?

And another thing. What is up with Jackson and other mega-rich black celebs constantly trashing white Americans whose patronage made them ga-zillionaires.

While promoting her movie, “Selma”, Oprah made the absurd claim that the 1950s persecution of blacks featured in her film still happens daily in America. With all due respect Oprah, your accusation is irresponsible, divisive and insulting.

Oprah Winfrey and I were co-workers at WJZ-TV in Baltimore before she became nationally renowned “Oprah.” Oprah co-hosted our local morning talk show. Blacks were a bit suspicious of her for being comfortable with whites. Black viewers did not make Oprah a mega star. White viewers made Oprah.

Sameul L. Jackson, Oprah and other black celebs relentlessly bashing America is a huge disservice to all Americans, particularly black youths. Rather than saying their success is “because” of America, most black celebs promote the liberal spin; saying their success is “in spite of” America. The truth is America is the greatest land of opportunity on the planet for all who choose to go for it. The Left is relentless in its efforts to insidiously hide the blessing of America from minorities.

Proverbs says, “As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he.” In other words, belief is a powerful thing. So when black superstars tell black youths that America is forever racist and white cops shoot them on sight, they believe it. The lies become truth in their minds. Angry young blacks respond accordingly. (video has explicit language)

Mr Jackson and other black celebs, your insistence on portraying America as a hellhole of racism towards minorities is irresponsible, divisive and hate-generating. Your supportive public deserves much, much better.

Despite Japan-South Korea Deal On ‘Comfort Women’, Scars Remain – Analysis

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After the landmark bilateral agreement on “comfort women” issue reached between Japan and South Korea on December 28, 2015 which categorically said that all claims between the two countries are “settled completely and finally” and was followed by apologies offered by Japan’s Prime Minister Abe Shinzo, it looked that a new era of understanding between the two Asian neighbours has dawned. It was hoped that this “historic” agreement shall help facilitate cooperation between the two that aims for greater peace and stability in the Asian region. The truism is that no sooner that this “historic” agreement, the emotive overtones have again been raised that are all but welcome.

Legally and diplomatically, the agreement may have been reached but public sentiment that remains hurt because of what transpired in the past, the wrongs done by the Japanese military to the Korean women before and during the War, remains difficult to be assuaged. Unlike in the Indian subcontinent and other parts of the world that were decolonized where colonial rules have been pardoned and no negative experiences are allowed to cloud the present relations, the situation in the Northeast Asia is quite different. Public sentiment is difficult to be ignored by the political establishment, which is why leaders find difficult to find a durable solution to the vexing historical issues. More worrying for Japan is that other countries in the region whose women were also violated by the Japanese army during the War have started raising the issue. How does Japan address the issue to resolve once and for all? There are no easy answers, however. Nevertheless, diplomatic channels have to be kept open.

Even when Japan felt that the vexing “comfort women” issue was resolved once for all, news that filtered into Tokyo indicating that South Korean government is going to press ahead with a white paper on the issue was disturbing. In August 2014, the South Korean government had mentioned about the planned white paper but Tokyo thought that plan would be shelved following the 28 December agreement. Now Seoul argues that the Comfort Women White paper, drafted by the Gender Equality and Family Industry, will be published on schedule as it is “unrelated” to the 28 December agreement. The document is planned to be published in a range of languages, including English, Japanese and Chinese.

For Japan, it would mean that the spirit of the deal would be violated as it interprets the deal included a pledge to “refrain from accusing or criticizing each other regarding this issue in the international community”. Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga said Japan expects Seoul to “deal with the matter appropriately”. Though it has not transpired as yet what issues the report would touch upon, Japan for now waits paying close attention to the document when released. Legally, Tokyo can do little to stop Seoul from publishing the document but can only convey its opinion if it finds the contents problematic.

Even it remains unclear if Seoul shall facilitate removal of the statue outside the Japanese embassy in Seoul set up by civic groups, as its removal is not determined by the text of the agreement. For Japan, it is an insult to have the statue installed permanently as the venue has been used for annual protests and therefore demands its removal. The best that Japan can do is to withhold funds the government has agreed to pay to surviving victims if the statue is not removed and it has indicated towards this. It remains unclear why the removal of the statue as conditional to release of the funds was not incorporated into the agreement, if Japan is likely to threaten that way in the event of the statue remaining still in front of the Japanese embassy.

Other unresolved issues such as the demand of several civic groups in South Korea and other nations to get documents related to the “comfort women” listed on UNESCO’s Memory of the World Registrar also continue to haunt Japan-South Korea relations. It is argued in Seoul that the issue of listing is unaffected by the bilateral agreement and the advocates of such a view argue on the merit of the records’ historical value and therefore see the need to preserve them. As with the statue removal issue, the government position is that it cannot interfere with the matter as it is a private sector groups that is behind the campaign and the demand.

The implications of the Japan-South Korea agreement for the region was far-reaching than expected. Soon, Taiwan started drafting a four-point list of demands for Tokyo on the “comfort women” issue, much to the discomfiture to Japan. Since Taiwan and Japan do not have diplomatic relations, the issue has to be conducted under the framework of Taiwan’s Association of East Asian relations and Japan’s Interchange Association. After South Korea, now Taiwan demands an official apology, compensation, the restoration of victims’ reputation and dignity, and caring for victims’ livelihoods. Like South Korea under Japanese rule from 1910 to 1945, Taiwan too was under Japanese rule from 1894 to 1945 and about 2,000 women were drafted as “comfort women”. According to Taipei Women’s Rescue Foundation established in 1992 to handle the issue of Taiwanese “comfort women”, about 85 were confirmed victims, of which only four are alive now with average age of 90.

The Taiwanese government is seeking the views of the Taiwanese victims, if they are prepared to accept a similar agreement and compensation package reached between Japan and South Korea. As per the 28 December, a fund amounting to some 1 billion yen ($8.3 million yen) for the women is to be set up, with the money coming from the Japanese government’s budget. In the absence of concrete consensus within Taiwan itself, it remains unclear how Taiwan will approach Japan to negotiate a deal that is acceptable to the victims and restore their dignity and honour.

Though Japanese army is believed to have drafted up to 200,000 women as sex slaves for Japanese soldiers during the War, the bulk of them came from South Korea, with the rest drafted from China, the Philippines, Indonesia and Taiwan. Following the Japan-South Korea deal, President Ma Ying-jeou demands returning justice and dignity to the Taiwanese victims and wants immediate negotiations on the issue.

Like Taiwan, China that has other issues with Japan, now wants to raise the “comfort women” issue as well to further embarrass Japan. Now China demands that Japan must “accurately face up to its history of aggression”. A commentary in the State-run Global Times observed that families of Chinese “comfort women” wanted a similar apology from Japan after the deal with South Korea. The paper quoted Zhao Guiying from Shanxi Province , whose late mother Guo Xicui was used as a sex slave, as saying: “I am very angry and upset, so are many other relatives. If Japan apologies to the victims in South Korea, why don’t they apologise to Chinese victims?” According to Zhao, 60, Japan must not adopt different criteria and attitudes towards victims of different countries. There are very few “comfort women” still surviving in China. As of August 2014, only 23 were still alive in China. The last surviving “comfort woman” to sue the Japanese government over its wartime atrocities died in December 2015 at the age of 89. The emotive nature does not die easily, however.

Backing the demands of the victims in China, China’s foreign ministry spokesperson Lu Kang said “the Japanese side should face up to and reflect upon its history of aggression and properly deal with the relevant issue with a sense of responsibility”. He termed the forced recruitment of the “comfort women” of the Japanese military and their use as sex slaves as a crime against humanity, against the people of Asia and other civilized countries. Though South Korean historians estimate that over 200,000 women, mostly Koreans, were recruited as sex slaves, Su Zhiliang, director of the China “Comfort Women” Issue Research Center at Shanghai Normal University, estimates that around 400,000 women, including 200,000 from China, were forced into sex enslavement.

China is embroiled in other historical issues such as territorial and text book. Following the Japan-South Korea deal, the “comfort women” issue is now likely to figure prominently between Japan and China. When in 1995, a total of 16 “comfort women” in Shanxi Province sued the Japanese government for forced sex slavery and asked Japan to apologise for the atrocity and pay compensation, in the final judgment in 2007 the Japanese Supreme Court did acknowledge the historical fact but ruled out compensation. This encouraged the Japanese government to remain stubborn on its stance and did not feel the need to apologise. With the government’s backing, the children of the victims now in their 60s and 70s are unlikely to give up and carry on their struggle to seek justice and restore honors of their mothers. Even in South Korea, despite the deal, the surviving “comfort women” feel disappointed that Japan did not make clear its legal responsibility and therefore have rejected the creation of the fund as they see the financial assistance as not official restitution.

Like South Korea, Taiwan and China who raise the issue with Japan, the Philippine government remains unconcerned about the issue, though the group of Filipino victims of sexual abuse in the Philippines feel justice remains elusive as they are aging. No wonder, they welcome the deal with South Korea and demand that they be compensated too.

Notwithstanding similar demands being raised by other countries, Japan is unlikely to bend further and be browbeaten. Suga reacted to the demand from Taiwan saying that the Japanese government does not intend to launch new negotiations on the issue with other countries and said that the issue with South Korea was different and that has now been resolved with the 28 December deal. He further clarified that Japan had already dealt with other countries over the issue “in a sincere manner considering each circumstance”. In 1995, the Japanese government set up the private Asian Women’s Fund to provide “atonement money” to former “comfort women” from of all nationalities. That time, Japan offered victims about $2 million yen in donations made by private Japanese citizens and up to 3 million yen in “medical and welfare support” from the government, together with a formal letter of apology signed by four successive prime ministers. That time, 211 Filipinos, 79 Dutch, 61 South Koreans and 13 Taiwanese accepted and received the offer.

In view of the circumstance and Japan’s strained relations with South Korea, Japan entered into the deal with South Korea and Abe offered apology to bring the issue to an end. Even if Japan reaches with similar deals with Taiwan, China and the Philippines, can the physical and psychological scars be healed and the pains and sufferings of the “comfort women” victims removed? That is unlikely to be the case. Moreover, should the present generation of Japanese people and leadership in Japan now or even in the future be responsible for the mistakes committed by their forefathers several decades ago? Must not the victims accept the repentance repeatedly expressed by the political leadership and look to the future? To get an answer in the positive to the above questions, emotions need to be kept aside and political realism need to get precedence. The political leaderships in these affected countries need to rise above sectarian considerations and build partnerships among themselves that are mutually rewarding and beneficial.

Why Malaysian Universities Are Performing Poorly – Analysis

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Malaysian public universities have dropped in the Times Higher Education University Rankings over the last few years. Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) made 87th position in 2013, but as at 2015, no Malaysian university made the top 100 Asian rankings. Malaysian public universities have also shown mixed results in other rankings like the QS rankings, where three Malaysian universities had slight rises in their rankings, while Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM), Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM), International Islamic Universiti Malaysia (IIUM), and Universiti Teknologi MARA (UiTM), all slipped in rankings from previous years. No Malaysian university made the top 100, According to the QS ranking profiles, Malaysian universities have lost significant ground in academic reputation and tend to be weak in research, where no Malaysian university reached the top 400.

Public Universities Vice-Chancellor/Rector Committee chairman Dr. Kamarudin Hussin, who is also vice chancellor of Universiti Malaysia Perlis (Unimap) claims that the ranking methodologies favor older, more established universities. Yet many universities within the THES top 100 Asian universities were established relatively recently. Hong Kong University of Science and technology, ranked 7th was established in 1980, Nanyang Technological University, ranked 10th was set up in 1981, and Pohang University of Science and Technology, ranked 11th, was established in 1986.

When comparing performance to Malaysia’s neighbour, Thailand, King Mongkut’s University of Technology, established in 1960 made 55th place, and Mahidol University came in with 91st placing.

In addition, a number of universities from countries which are not democratically governed like Sharif University of Technology 43, Iran), Isfahan University of Technology (61, Iran), Iran University of Science and Technology (69), King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (71, Saudi Arabia), and King Saud University (72, Saudi Arabia), all made the THES top 100 Asian university rankings last year.

Dr Kamarudin accepts that Malaysian universities have “many issues that must be resolved….(and) there are plenty of oversights that must be fixed”. However, unfortunately, he didn’t mention what they are, or offer any solutions.

World Bank economist Dr Frederico Gil Sander agrees with Kamarudin’s comment that the “stakes are high”, when he says that the poor state of Malaysia’s education system is more alarming that the country’s public debt. The talent needed to develop the Malaysian economy is not being produced.

Probably the tone used by Dr Kamarudin used in his article hints at the first problem with Malaysian public universities. That is, the view of authority over the rest. Kamarudin asserts that ‘academic freedom’ exists, yet this should be subject to the views of the ‘so called’ majority’, which could be read as authority. In August last year, he was one of the strongest opponents of students attending the Bersih 4 rally, threatening disciplinary action, such as suspension or even expulsion of students who attended from university.

Suppressing independent thought, is counterproductive to creativity, critical thinking, and problem solving, the very mindset that Malaysian universities espouse to develop. Among the characteristics of society required for progression are people who are knowledgeable and have the right to choose.

This attitude by university leaders doesn’t appear to be isolated. Hazman Baharom called their attitude ‘aristocratic’, in reference to the partisan political leanings of Professor Sahol Hamid Abu Bakar, former vice Chancellor of Universiti Teknologi MARA (UiTM). This institutional arrogance can be seen in the proposal to educate students about the ills of ISIS. The underlying assumption being that Malaysian students are easily led and cannot think for themselves.

Malaysian universities begin to lose the plot where their leaders are glorified with unnecessary ceremonies that make a mockery of academia, and tend to dominate the persona of universities, rather than act as facilitators for people to excel.

This leads to a lot of unnecessary expenses such as lavish dinners with highly paid entertainers to celebrate this event and that event, this award and that award. Some of these dinners are very extravagant at some universities costing up to hundreds of thousands of Ringgit. Vice Chancellors make lavish trips both domestically and internationally, where the benefits of these trips to the university have not been scrutinized, except for MOUs that are never acted upon.

This is in a time when university budgets are being slashed, the minister has directed university management to be frugal with spending and seek funds outside government allocations, and the public are suffering economic hardships through the economic downturn, GST, and depreciated Ringgit.

The waste goes much further. Within the few parts of the Malaysian Auditor General’s report that is released to the public, the 2012 report cited Universiti Malaysia Sabah’s (UMS) mishandling of its computerized maintenance management system. After spending RM400,000 on the system between 2008 and 2012, the auditor general found that data was not keyed into the system and the person responsible for managing the system had no IT knowledge.

The cost of three building projects ballooned 8.9% at Universiti Tun Hussein Onn Malaysia (UTHM) due to delays and inexperience of the contractor.

The auditor general further found at Universiti Malaysia Perlis (Unimap) that funding allocations didn’t take into account the basic needs of students in the planning and construction of its main campus. Despite RM438.64 Million allocated for setting up Unimap under the 8th Malaysian Plan, only 25% of these campus plans have been completed, which university management blamed on budget constraints.

What is even more startling according to the AGs report is that Unimap made the first payment to the contractor working on the permanent campus before the contract was fully negotiated and signed. The report further states that workmanship is extremely poor, where cement in many places is cracking and crumbling, roads and parking areas where inappropriate, and much of the equipment supplied is not functioning.

According to the AGs report from 2002 to 2012 the university has no hostels of its own, and has been renting them and ferrying students to campus instead, which cost RM138.4 Million. As of 2015, Unimap entered into an arrangement with the Proven Group of Companies to supply additional privately owned accommodation at Titi Tinggi, some 35kms from Kangar and 40kms from the main campus at Ulu Pauh. Details of this agreement have never been made public, but Unimap will pay rent for 15 years for the use of this accommodation, but ownership will remain private after this period.

The Unimap-Proven venture is contrary to the Education Ministry’s vision of universities earning income through hostel rental to students. Thus in the medium to long term the university will be restricted in the ways it can earn revenue to fund future budget cuts.

Similar issues exist at Universiti Malaysia Kelantan (UMK) where the lack of student accommodation has led to severe overcrowding at hostels.

Mismanagement and waste is one issue, but outright corruption is another.

If one has spent any significant time within Malaysian academia, stories about corruption within the institution will no doubt arise. However, most, if not all of these remain hearsay, as there are few reports of corruption to higher authorities and very few charges are ever made, with no convictions made in this area.

Just some examples that have come to the writer’s attention are consultancy companies run and operated by a faculty, where directors and shareholders are the dean and deputy deans. Students have come forth and told the writer in confidence that examiners at master and PhD level ask outright for payments to pass. A particular dean of a new faculty, used a company owned by proxies to supply equipment. University cars have been sent to workshops for repairs that don’t exist. Academics are paying for articles to be published in academic journals without peer review, and the heavy use of research grants for travel that is questionably related to the research topic it was granted for.

University staff tend to be fearful of their superiors, most are extremely hesitant to speak out and whistle-blow on their peers and superiors. In an interview with a state director of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission, the writer was told that the MACC would provide a neutral and discrete place for those who wanted to remain anonymous and report corruption. However those few that came forward faced hurdles with the MACC that were almost insurmountable, such as being requested to file a police report which would jeopardize anonymity.

A major problem is the leadership of Malaysia’s public universities today. Vice chancellors tend to be domineering, not allowing too much room for dissent from their own faculty and university members. Often, staff are selected upon loyalty rather than merit, breeding a culture of gratitude within their institutions. Strong vice chancellors can browbeat the university board, and senate, getting their own way on operational issues, due to the transitory nature of university boards.

Universities within Malaysia have become dominated by vice chancellors who are intent on micromanaging their universities. The strong power-distance relationships that develop between the leader and subordinates in Malaysia is powerful enough to destroy many of the management checks and balances that exist to prevent mis-management and even abuse of power.

It’s time to re-organize Malaysian public universities from the top down. Not only is new leadership needed, but heavy reform of the university organization so that these institutions should function how they are really meant to. All importantly, vision beyond self-glorification is desperately needed by public university leadership.

Make this change and Malaysian universities will very quickly feature in the top 100 Asian university rankings.

Turkish-Israeli Strategic Alliance For NATO’s Air Supremacy – Analysis

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By Mehmet Bildik*

Terrorism is a threat of use of extra normal violence by subnational groups to obtain a political, religious, or ideological objective through intimidation of a huge audience. Terrorists are incapable of justifying their actions within nation-centric “Westphalian” system of rules and unable to lean on tradition and custom in their attempt to engage in political violence. Therefore, the apparent “chaotic” nature of terrorist violence may simply be endogenous to the illegitimate status of the activity in the international system. At this point, terrorism is a strategy that is used by separatist groups for different purposes, acting in guerrilla warfare in order to establish their own so-called authority. Since the 1980s, civilians have also been the targets of terrorist activities, as in the example of PKK terrorism.

The PKK – the outlawed terrorist organization – led by terrorist Abdullah Ocalan, who is currently in a life imprisonment, is an insurgent movement seeking to establish an independent Kurdish state in south-eastern Turkey. This terrorist organization claims to pursue the rights of Turkey’s Kurds. After the PKK was vanquished by the Turkish Army Force in the 1990s, the PKK suddenly changed its rhetoric from pursuit of independence to recognition of the Kurdish identity and limited autonomy. They made this decision despite the fact that there are no legal or other forms of discrimination against Turkish citizens of Kurdish origin, and these citizens have enjoyed full political rights under the Turkish constitution. Moreover, Kurds in Turkey have risen to high levels of government in both elected and appointed positions. After the PKK’s manipulations and provocations, the countermeasures of the Turkish Army were perceived as discrimination tools against them. The propaganda of the PKK was so effective that Turkey is misunderstood by many around the world. Furthermore, PKK terrorism mainly damages Turkish citizens of Kurdish origin this particularly describes those who live in south-eastern Turkey. To understand Turkey, one must keep in mind that it lives in a very problematic neighborhood. No other NATO ally faces as many threats, problems and challenges right across its doorstep. Turkey is a powerful nation located in the region where problematic neighbors namely Syria, Iraq and Iran, have created artificial problems to make Turkey unstable.

The PKK is listed as a terrorist group internationally by several states and organizations, including the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Turkey’s strategic role in the Middle East grew in prominence in the post-Cold War period. For NATO, Turkey was a “functional ally” that had a crucial geostrategic location and a powerfully large army. After the Cold War, NATO shifted its emphasis from “collective defense” to “collective security” . Turkey’s regional prominence grew, as Turkey transformed into a strategic importance for the west, The nation went from being a flank country to a frontline country for the Middle East, for which Turkey was a “functional” ally despite the fact that it was one of the most significant contributors to the alliance’s out-of-area operations through the 1990s. At this point, Turkey looked for partners in the Middle East that could help to meet the growing security challenges from Iran, Iraq and Syria. Israel was the perfect choice, as it shared Turkey’s threat assessment and Israel was a strong pro-western democratic country with considerable relations with U.S. Moreover, Jerusalem could provide military technology that the west was reluctant to sell to Turkey an important NATO ally to fight against PKK terrorism. As a result of the new perceptions in Ankara of the beneficial role of Israel, Turkey upgraded its diplomatic relations with State of Israel to the ambassadorial level in 1992. Turkey signed many bilateral agreements, among them many with strategic significance.

Defense trade during that time was worth several million dollars between Turkey and Israel. Major programs included a 700 million dollar deal to modernize Turkey’s aging fleet of F-4 Phantoms and a 688 million dollar deal to upgrade M-60 tanks and an array of other sophisticated weapon systems. The Israeli Air Force was allowed to use Turkish air space to practice complex air operations and there were synergies in the area of counter-terrorism and intelligence. A strategic partnership between Ankara and Jerusalem emerged, which was buttressed by a common strategic agenda and a similar outlook on global affairs. The turning point in Turkey’s fight against PKK terrorism came after launching the Mediterranean dialogue in January 1994 when the North Atlantic Council stated the alliance would “consider ways to promote dialogue, understanding and confidence building between the countries in the region”. The final communiqué of the North Atlantic Council in Brussels was the announcement of its decisions on the “ measures to promote dialogue” and “establish contacts on a case- by-case basis, between the alliance and Mediterranean non-member countries with a view to contributing to the strengthening of regional stability”. Finally, Israel and Turkey have found common ground to fight against terrorism in NATO’s Mediterranean Dialogue. In this context, Israel and Turkey signed a Military Training and Cooperation agreement and a Defense Industrial Cooperation agreement in which joint exercises and training between the two countries paved the way for Turkey to overcome PKK terrorism.

Turkish-Israeli cooperation against terrorism has created maneuver room in favor of the U.S. in the Middle East. NATO’s Adana Incirlik Air Base was used for “The Operation Northern Watch” in January 1997 with the task to enforce the United Nations-sanctioned “no-fly zone” north of the 36th parallel in Iraq. On the other hand, close ties with the State of Israel have benefited Turkey in terms of PKK’- leader Ocalan’s 1998 expulsion from Syria and Damascus. During this time, a protocol was signed with Ankara in the southern Turkish city of Adana promising to cease its support for the PKK. In the protocol, pax-Adana was representing a regional balance characterized by the Syrian and Iranian promise not to support the PKK. Another success was Turkey’s convincing Cyprus not to deploy S-300 anti-aircraft missiles.

Currently, the PKK’s Syrian sister organization, PYD, has gained a measure of control over some swaths of Kurdish-populated territory near Syria’s border of Turkey. This development raised questions for Turkey about the possibility of another base of support for PKK training and operations. Terrorist group PYD has become the most dangerous entity in Syria and has consolidated its territorial control further in 2014 and 2015. Although the Turkish government called the PKK to lay down arms several times, the PKK has continued in violence by killing civilians and heinously attacking Turkish security forces. On this point, the Turkish government has agreed to open the Incirlik Air Base for the US-led coalition’s warplanes to hit DAESH locations. NATO’s supreme allied commander in Europe, Gen. Philip Breedlove, has said that “NATO supports Turkey in its fight against the terrorist Kurdistan Workers’ Party and Turkey has a right to defend itself.”

In this context, Turkey should strengthen its army presence in Northern Iraq to provide security for Mosul and should increase the curfew on villages near the military operation zones while its army is fighting against PKK. On that point, Important news broke out about talks between Turkish and Israeli officials in a bid to accomplish the normalization process by sealing a long-negotiated deal. Another important aspect of these talks was whether the two parties have tried to secure a deal on the transportation of Israeli reserves to European markets via Turkey through a pipeline. Turkey has actually increased its trade with Israel in recent years and Turkey is still a major tourist destination for Israelis.Turkish-Israeli economic relations remained intact even after the flotilla episode.Trade between the two countries doubled in the past five years , and is now at $5.6 billion.

Turkey’s current desire to reconcile with Israel is essentially a strategic advancement to improve ties with the U.S. and NATO allies-Turkey and Israel should hammer out details to restore diplomatic ties on military cooperation and Turkey should immediately purchase an advanced intelligence system from Israel such as “Super Herons”, which has a heavy fuel 200 horse power engine that increases its rate of climb and performance. The sensitivity of the safety of civilians prevents Turkish special forces from conducting operations in the areas where PKK’s management headquarters are located inside the cities.

As long as the PKK’s headquarters remain operational, their terrorism will continue to be resilient. Purchasing “Super Herons” its range is 250 km and 1000 km by satellite control, will break down PKK’s resilient . A day after the Russian navy fired cruise missiles at targets in Syria and two days after Russian warplanes entered Turkey’s airspace, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said the alliance “ is able and ready to defend all allies, including Turkey, against any threat.” Russia is drawing the lines of its geopolitical sphere of influence in these regions against NATO and the west, and Russia is seeking an opportunity to take revenge for its jet that was downed by Turkey and is looking for opportunities for a tit-for-tat reprisal. Russia firing cruise missiles at targets in neighboring Syria rang alarm bells in Ankara, which has for some time been feeling uneasy over neighbor Iran acquisition of long-range missiles. Russia needs ground troops to achieve its military goals in Syria, and the Kurds are readily available for this task. Given the Russian promise to help YPG groups in Syria, which is strongly associated with the PKK, Turkey has to take measure to protect its air space by purchasing items like “Arrow 3” and “David’s Sling”. “David Sling’s” missiles systems is an advanced multi-mission interceptor designed for insertion into integrated air and missile defense systems. “David Sling’s” lethal hit- to- kill effects ensure a wide margin of tactical overmatch against a broad spectrum of air and missile defense threats.

Turkey will protect NATO’s air superiority against the Russian containment policy in the Middle East while frustrating Iran’s policy on Syria if launching an advanced “David Sling” and “Arrow-3” air defense system, which will pave the way for Israel to make more operations against Iranian backed militants in Syria. On September, 2015 meeting between Prime Minister Benjamin Netenyahu and President Viladimir Putin for preventing inadvertent clash on Syria, accordingly Israel have raised this issue during his meeting with Putin was the perception that “Russia’s increased involvement in Syria makes it more difficult for Israel to operation against Iranian backed Hezbollah.” This point has proven after the Russian jet downed by Turkey, strategic calculation changed in Middle East that on 20 December, 2015 Israeli Air strike made operations against Hezbollah field commander Samir Kuntar in Damascus. Finally, Turkey fighting against PKK terrorism while protecting NATO’s air superiority, will detract the trust between Iran and Russia therefore Israel will take care to maintain its freedom of action in countering Iran and Hezbollah.

*Mehmet Bildik is a Research Fellow on Military and Strategic Affairs by Ministry of Foreign Affairs Turkey. He received his MA degree from the Bucharest National School of Political Science and Public Administrative Studies, Security and Diplomacy as a scholarship holder of Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Turkey.


Croatia’s Serbs Nervously Await New Government’s Plans – Analysis

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The incoming Zagreb government is promising to improve relations with Serbia, but questions remain about whether the situation will improve Croatia’s Serb minority.

By Sven Milekic and Ivana Nikolic

The incoming Croatian government has vowed to address the country’s troubled relations with neighbour Serbia, which deteriorated last year when Zagreb enthusiastically celebrated the 20th anniversary of its Operation Storm victory over rebel Serbs, to Belgrade’s disgust.

Tomislav Karamarko, president of the Croatian Democratic Union, HDZ, the leading party in the Patriotic Coalition which is expected to form the new government, said on Monday that “Croatia must have good relations with Serbia”.

The issue of the celebration of Operation Storm – which caused some 200,000 Serbs to flee Croatia – “must be resolved”, Karamarko insisted.

Karamarko said that better relations between the two countries were likely because outgoing Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic was too confrontational.

“The policy of confrontation with everyone, being in a quarrel with everyone… isn’t good within the EU and between neighbouring countries. What was done before was not good and cooperation will now be much better,” Karamarko insisted.

Operation Storm, however, is not the only troubling issue between Croats and Serbs.

The outgoing government’s initiative – based on Croatian minorities legislation – to install bilingual Cyrillic-Latin signs on official buildings in the wartime flashpoint town of Vukovar, which was razed by the Yugoslav People’s Army and Serbian paramilitaries in the war in 1991, sparked a series of protests within the country.

Karamarko said that the Vukovar issue was “an open wound” which demands sensitivity.

His partner from the potential future government, the president of the MOST party, Bozo Petrov, also said on Monday that good relations with neighbouring countries are necessary and will result in the security and economic development of Croatia.

But prime minister designate Tihomir Oreskovic, in an interview for Croatian daily newspaper Jutarnji List, published last Thursday, said that “it’s still not time for Cyrillic in Vukovar”.

He blamed the “fresh wounds” from 1991 but added that with time, the Serb Cyrillic script will come to Vukovar, just as the Italian language is used in Croatia’s Istrian peninsula despite the WWII conflict.

Questions remains about how the incoming right-wing government will deal with minorities issues – specifically those of Croatia’s Serbs – once they are in power.

Veljko Dzakula, president of the Serbian Democratic Forum, told BIRN that the new government “will have more sincere and clear” relations towards the Serb minority than the outgoing government led by Milanovic.

“I think that the HDZ’s moves will be more responsible compared to when they were in opposition,” Dzakula said.

“There won’t be so much talking about national minority rights as work being done to improve them,” he added.

He also suggested that relations between Zagreb and Belgrade will be better, since both governments come from the same side of the political spectrum and because “Milanovic didn’t want to have any relations with the Serbian government”.

Dejan Jovic, a professor at the Zagreb Faculty of Political Sciences, told BIRN that the issue of the Serbian minority was ignored during the election campaign last year.

“Nevertheless, MOST did advocate a smaller number of MPs, which could affect national minorities’ representatives, while from the Patriotic Coalition, the HSLS [centre-right Croatian Social Liberal Party] in particular, there were comments that national minorities’ representatives should not make declarations about the majority in parliament,” he said.

The Serb minority in Croatia has three representatives in parliament; one of them supported the HDZ and MOST.

Jovic said however that any change to election legislation to cut the number of minority MPs would cause a major political row, but this was highly unlikely since it would need the support of two-thirds of MPs.

“We have prior experience that when the HDZ is in power, it doesn’t raise issues of this sort; it somehow pushes them into the background. When it is in the opposition, the HDZ insists on the issues of the Cyrillic script, Serbs’ rights, the position of Vukovar,” he said.

Jovic said he expected that under a HDZ-led government, there would be no public protests like the anti-Cyrillic demonstrations led by the Headquarters for the Protection of Croatian Vukovar and that Serb minorities were expecting “a less aggressive HDZ when in government”.

However, he warned, with conservative nationalist parties in power in both Croatia and Serbia, a “new war with words” could be expected in June, when the new government, if confirmed, could organise a military parade to mark the 25th anniversary of Croatia’s statehood.

Serbian Foreign Minister Ivica Dacic has also said that relations between Zagreb and Belgrade could now improve with the election of a new Croatian government.

“Maybe the HDZ will be braver in making some moves than the [outgoing government led by Milanovic’s] SDP, because they thought someone could accuse them of not supporting national interests enough,” Dacic said.

Miodrag Linta, head of the Belgrade-based Association of Serbs from the Region, said that all the previous issues will remain despite the promises coming from the new Croatian government.

“Serbia-Croatia relations cannot be relations of mutual respect and trust until there are issues such as the question about the celebration of Operation Storm. For us it was a criminal act, while for the Croats it was an act of liberation,” Linta told BIRN.

He also cited the issues of the remaining missing persons from the 1990s war and the prosecution of war crimes.

“Bearing all this in mind, I don’t expect the substantial improvement of relations,” he said.

Aleksandar Popov, director of the Novi Sad-based Centre for Regionalism think tank, told BIRN that it remains to be seen in the coming months how relations between Serbia and Croatia will develop now under the new administration in Zagreb.

“If this was a bit more moderate version of the HDZ, I would say relations with Serbia could improve,” Popov said.

However he raised concerns that HDZ party leader Karamarko could be a hostage of his own right-wing affiliations in terms of relations with Serbia and with Serbs within Croatia.

Syrians Dying From Starvation: Over 23 Died In Madaya Last Month

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Twenty-three people died of starvation last month in the blockaded town of Madaya northwest of Damascus, a new report revealed.

Madaya residents lack many basic needs after being victims of an ongoing blockade by the Assad regime and the Hezbollah Shia militia, which planted landmines around the town.

According to the Madaya health committee report, six children were among the victims in December.

Eight other people were killed by landmines as they tried to escape the town, which has been under siege for 190 days so far, the report added.

Living conditions in the town further deteriorated as winter set in. Electricity is non-existent and many people use what is left of their destroyed homes for heating purposes, the report said.

Local sources said food prices were up dramatically since the regime’s blockade began. A kilogram of rice reportedly costs around $115 now.

Samir Tateen, a local member of the Syrian coordination committee, said around 70 people have died of starvation and another 50 have passed away of various diseases in the past six months.

Some 4.5 million people live in hard-to-reach areas across Syria, with nearly 400,000 of them in besieged zones with little or no access to basic supplies or assistance, according to UN figures.

Original article

Iran’s Diplomacy And Saudi Arabia – OpEd

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By Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh*

Recent developments in the Middle East have led to isolation of Saudi Arabia in the region and made it look like the odd one out. There are three major problems facing the Middle East today and Saudi Arabia is the main factor behind all three problems. The first problem is widespread violation of human rights and fighting against democracy seeking moves. The second problem is extensive support for terrorism, either in the form of financial and arms support, or in the political form. And the third problem is violation of other countries’ borders and foreign intervention in the region. Saudi Arabia is the number one party accused of being behind these three crisis fomenting factors in the Middle East and this country is now under mounting pressure from international community with regard to its crisis brewing measures and policies.

Therefore, the Saudi leaders are trying to make a new enemy, so as to reduce the pressure of accusations on their own country. Subsequently, as a country that has been pursuing Iranophobia during the past 12 years and has been promoting it incessantly, Riyadh has once more resorted to the same hackneyed project under the pretext of recent developments. Saudi Arabia’s goal is to instigate Iran to take a position against this country and in the next step, use its financial and political might to get some member states of the (Persian) Gulf Cooperation Council [(P)GCC] in line for countering Iran. Since Saudi Arabia enjoys necessary tools to influence other Arab countries, it may relatively succeed in this regard in the short term and form a coalition against Iran. However, in reality, Iran must also take countermeasures against Saudi Arabia in order to prevent Al Saud family from going on with its crisis fomenting projection technique.

Iran must take advantage of public diplomacy, because this will evoke reactions against Saudi Arabia with regard to the aforesaid three factors even from European countries. The insecurity created by Saudi Arabia has already found its way into Europe and leaders of Saudi Arabia are to blame for this insecure situation. Killing of the opposition figures in this country, especially the recent execution of top Shia cleric, Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr proved total lack of foresight among Saudi officials. When it comes to such measures by Saudi Arabia, Iran must follow a policy of patience and waiting, because in the long term, Saudi Arabia cannot keep alive the self-proclaimed coalition among countries every one of which is already grappling with its own problems. Therefore, Iran should take advantage of the positive international atmosphere that has been surrounding Tehran following the agreement with the P5+1 group of countries over the Islamic Republic’s nuclear case in order to counter the negative regional policy of Saudi Arabia.

This must be the main strategy of the Islamic Republic of Iran because everything that Saudi Arabia does in this regard is just a passive and suicidal measure. The overall course of regional developments is against Saudi Arabia and leaders of this country are under tremendous pressure. Foreign powers, including the United States, are first and foremost worried about their regional allies and, in the next step, they have found out that Iran is a reality in the region. Therefore, they cannot pursue the same Iranophobic policy that was once followed by reactionary Arab regime as well as Israel and the United States. Two years ago, in a meeting with the then Saudi King Abdullah, US President Barack Obama said Iran is a new reality in the Middle East developments, advising Saudi Arabia to get along with this reality.

This issue was evident in the latest developments related to the region. The fact that US Secretary of State John Kerry has reacted to unilateral severance of Saudi Arabia’s diplomatic relations with Iran and talked to Iranian foreign minister over phone, and also the attention shown to this issue by diplomatic officials of Western countries, including the European Union and even the Russian Foreign Ministry, which have even indicated their readiness to mediate between the two countries, prove that Saudi Arabia’s coalition with a number of small and insignificant countries to counter Iran cannot be viable. Any coalition that is formed for this purpose cannot be stronger than the past one which was formed on the basis of Iranophobia. That was a coalition, which was formed by Saudi Arabia and Western countries against the Islamic Republic of Iran and had totally turned the international and regional atmosphere against the Islamic Republic of Iran. However, now, the West and the United States, as major trade partners of Saudi Arabia, are well aware that Iran is a regional power that must be reckoned with and they cannot indefinitely get aligned with reactionary regimes against Iran.

*Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh
Middle East Analyst & Former Representative of Iran’s Parliament

Source: Arman Daily
http://armandaily.ir/
Translated By: Iran Review.Org

North Korea’s Nuclear Test Escalates Military Tensions – Analysis

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By Rodney Reynolds

As military tensions continue to rise between two of the world’s major nuclear powers – the United States and Russia – the United Nations remains strongly committed towards one of its longstanding goals: a world without nuclear weapons.

But North Korea’s announcement of its first hydrogen bomb – tested January 4 – is threatening to escalate the nuclear challenge even further.

The 193-member General Assembly wrapped up its 2015 sessions in December adopting 57 draft resolutions on arms control and disarmament – 23 of which were on nuclear weapons.

In one of the resolutions, urging all member states not to carry out nuclear weapon test explosions, there were 181 countries voting in favour, with only one vote (North Korea) against it.

In a statement released January 6, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the underground nuclear test announced by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) on January 6 is deeply troubling.

“This test once again violates numerous Security Council resolutions despite the united call by the international community to cease such activities.  It is also a grave contravention of the international norm against nuclear testing. ”

He said this act is profoundly destabilising for regional security and seriously undermines international non-proliferation efforts. “I condemn it unequivocally. And I demand the DPRK cease any further nuclear activities and meet its obligations for verifiable denuclearization.”

“We are monitoring and assessing developments in close coordination with the concerned international organisations – including the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization – and interested parties,” Ban added.

Asked if these resolutions carry any political clout, Ray Acheson, Director of Reaching Critical Will, told IDN many General Assembly (GA) resolutions are repetitive and are more oriented towards reiterating common positions than advancing concrete progress.

However the GA adopted several new, important texts, she added.

Acheson pointed out that 138 states voted in favour of an open-ended working group on nuclear disarmament that will be open to all but blockable by none.

The states participating in this working group next year should use it to discuss elements for a new legal instrument to prohibit nuclear weapons. The support for this resolution clearly shows that states are ready to make tangible progress in this regard, Acheson said.

She said the resolutions on the humanitarian consequences of nuclear weaponshumanitarian pledge for the prohibition and elimination of nuclear weapons, and ethical imperatives for a nuclear weapon free world were also adopted, not only by a majority, but by two-thirds of UN member states.

It would appear that a great number of states are ready to finally stand up to the nuclear-armed countries and their nuclear allies and take concerted action for nuclear disarmament, said Acheson who monitors and analyses international processes related to disarmament and arms control.

But even as anti-nuclear activists were warning of a rising nuclear threat, North Korea justified its detonation of the hydrogen bomb as “a self defensive measure to defend our right to live in the face of nuclear threats and blackmail by the United States and to guarantee the security of the Korean peninsula.”

Responding to the North Korean test, Beatrice Fihn, Executive Director of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), said escalating tensions between nuclear armed states is raising concerns about a new arms race.

But unlike the Cold War, she said, this time it would involve a larger number of actors and unstable and volatile regions.

“The risk of use or accident involving nuclear weapons is on the rise,” she warned.

In a statement released January 6, ICAN said nuclear weapons are irresponsible means of warfare and their use and possession is a ruthless act that must be condemned by the international community as a whole.

Condemnation must be followed by the development of an international prohibition on nuclear weapons similar to the bans on chemical and biological weapons.

In February 2016 member states will meet in Geneva to conduct talks to develop new law on nuclear weapons.

“All responsible states should negotiate new law on nuclear weapons, take a clear stand against the possession and reliance on this weapon of mass destruction and develop an unambiguous prohibition of nuclear weapons” Fihn added.

Referring to the General Assembly resolutions adopted last month, Acheson told IDN that in voting for the resolution on the ethical imperatives for a nuclear weapon free world, 132 states agreed that nuclear weapons “undermine collective security, heighten the risk of nuclear catastrophe, aggravate international tension and make conflict more dangerous.”

In voting for another resolution reflecting the humanitarian pledge for the prohibition and elimination of nuclear weapons, 139 states called on all relevant stakeholders to “stigmatize, prohibit and eliminate nuclear weapons in the light of their unacceptable humanitarian consequences and associated risks.”

“These are important positions for states to take at the GA,” she added.

Pathankot Attack: Airfield Ground Defense In Perspective – Analysis

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By PI Muralidharan

The terrorist attack on IAF’s Pathankot airbase makes one recapitulate on the important – but at times ignored – aspects of Passive Air Defence/Ground Defence (PAD/GD) as it used to be called back in the day. The non-flying staff of an air base generally orchestrated the task, which was inevitable as the aviators would be preoccupied otherwise during conditions of war. An elaborate SOP existed as to how the PAD sectors would be manned, and how air raid warnings, bomb disposal, water/electricity management, casualty evacuation, etc. would be handled, and this was periodically exercised by the Station authorities and checked by the Directorate of Air Staff Inspections (DASI). The IAF surely has come some distance since, what with its own “Garud Commandos,” essentially raised to undertake Air Force-specific tasks including airfield security, commando operations within and outside the perimeter as also typical air warrior missions such as Suppression of Enemy Air Defence (SEAD), Combat Search and Rescue (CSAR) and the like. What has however changed dramatically too is the threat spectrum. Though the IAF has had aerially inserted paratrooper threats during the ’65 and ‘71 wars (some of them being neutralised by valiant locals in Punjab and Haryana!), the nature of the terrorist threat as it unfolded in Pathankot this new years’ is a different kettle of fish indeed.

The nature of high value assets assembled at a fighter airbase especially, as indeed Pathankot is, needs no gainsaying. Besides the war machines themselves, there are other key installations including the runway, air traffic control, command and control centres, fuel storages, bomb dumps, missile sheds, high tech laboratories, specialist vehicles and the like which truly constitute national assets. The manpower (pilots, technicians, air traffic and other controllers and administrative and medical staff as also their families) of course is perhaps the most important strategic asset. All these are ensconced in a vast forested campus (which comes in handy from the camouflage point of view but is a nightmare for Ground Defence); a virtual military township comparable perhaps only to a large aircraft carrier militarily in terms of Vital Areas/Vital Points (Vas/VPs). The importance of Ground Defence understandably increases in a war situation as opposed to peace or no war-no peace scenario. During war situations normally the Territorial Army augments airfield security though this is invariably delayed and not effective. The luxury of getting regular army troops leave alone the National Security Guard (NSG) is a far cry in an operational scenario. An airbase has to learn to manage by itself to handle perimeter and airfield defence. Proactive military leadership on the ground as well as new assets such as the Garuds need to be optimised to deal with the evolving threat spectrum, especially from terrorists and other anti-national elements.

Command and Control

Much has been articulated in the media about the need for optimal command and control for undertaking such anti-terror operations in a military or urban environment. In this particular case, the media has reported that the AOC-in-C (Air Officer Commanding-in-Chief) of the Western Air Command was dispatched to oversee the operations at Pathankot. And of course as is clear now, the NSG was flown in from Manesar, Delhi. Doctrinally, this is the worst way to conduct a tactical-level military operation. The operational control and accountability HAS to be with the local Air Force Commander – this is precisely why he has been assigned as the AOC or Station Commander. Oversight from higher formations such as the Air Command or Air HQ is okay but there should definitely be no ‘back-seat driving’. Diffused or conflicting command and control can be highly detrimental to operational success. There have been cases in the past where local Commanders have been replaced midstream during war, even in the IAF. That is an option always available to a C-in-C or the Chief. But good higher-level leadership also means exhibiting faith in one’s subordinates. Spoon-feeding or micromanaging is NOT part of recommended military leadership ethos.

Need for Technology and Augmented Intelligence

The minute details of the anti-terror operation are not known yet and may not be known for some years. Media coverage has indicated the employment of attack helicopters and UAVs. This is good news indeed. All assets available locally, aerial and otherwise, need to be employed to neutralise the terrorist threat to installations and assets in quick time. Collateral damage aspects and other operational constraints need to be factored in. Depending on the behaviour of the terrorists and their weaponry, the local commander would have to employ the assets to achieve surveillance or hard kill objectives. Precautions such as control of media access, curbs on cell phone usage and evacuation or bunching of families and key personnel need to be planned for. The Air Force has SOPs for these for war situations, but perhaps it is prudent to work out new ones for this kind of anti-terrorist operations. Use of helicopters and UAVs for perimeter surveillance night and day, especially during high threat occasions, should be sine qua non.

For night operations, use of searchlights and flooding of underground structures may need consideration. The sky is the limit for what all could be done at an air base to bottle up and neutralise terrorist elements. As established earlier, good proactive local leadership and delegated operational effort would be key to ensuring that a handful of well-armed anti-national elements cannot hold a whole air base, and by extension, the whole nation, to ransom. Use of Direction Finding gear to zero in on local enemy agents and upgrade of local intelligence units such a Liaison Units and Special Bureaus of the Research and Analysis Wing (RAW) are other vital supportive anti-terror measures.

Evacuation Drills

Another important aspect in a terror attack scenario is evacuation of assets. The most important assets of course are the flying machines. Situation permitting, they could be flown out to nearby bases. Defence of other high value assets such as ammo dumps and fuel storage would need buttressing. Incoming fuel and key stores would need to be temporarily diverted perhaps. Station authorities can locally augment medical assistance or heavy-duty earth moving gear from local Army/Navy or civilian authorities. But all this needs careful factoring, as across the board evacuations may not be advisable. Calculated marshalling of assets and replenishments would be called for.

Exchange Ratios

The Pathankot event appears to have caused a comparatively higher degree of casualties to Indian personnel. But it must be understood that despite the best preparation, a terrorist strike extracts a heavy toll in the target area, be it on civilians or other soft targets. Recall the high attrition of American personnel and CIA operatives, especially where terrorists have employed suicide tactics. Only very highly trained defensive/offensive assets such as the SEALs or our own Para Commandos/MARCOs could neutralise such threats with minimal casualties. Another aspect that emerges in an airfield anti-terror operation is the uniqueness of an air base, especially a fighter base. Not only is it a “target-rich” territory, but also there would be several buildings, hangars and underground shelters to clear and protect – a combination of urban and military anti-terror operations, so to say. Of course the need to keep the media at bay and prevent undue pressure on local forces and increasing their vulnerabilities through real time coverage need not be over-emphasised. Timely media briefings at suitable locations need to be organised to cater to the requirements of public knowledge.

Political Over-Reaction?

One can understand how authorities at various levels choose to react in a complex democratic entity such as India. Recall the Kandahar fiasco and the much-touted delays whilst reacting to the Mumbai attack. So whilst the luxury of sending across NSG or the WAC C-in-C may be condoned in this case, the lack of coordination or tactical oversight if evident post the entire operation would provide learning value. The IAF of course would need its own soul-searching to address terror as a new threat paradigm. A while ago, in an article about the need to reprioritise the IAF’s role, this author had advocated the need to tailor India’s force structure to address terrorist threats to IAF installations. Perhaps Pathankot reinforces this belief in the urgency of this requirement. The need to enlist the help of local villagers and police in intelligence gathering and physical security cannot be over-emphasised. Having served two assignments at this key air base during the seventies and eighties (and having visited the base on private trips recently), the vulnerabilities of such a base to a coordinated terror strike are only too vivid in one’s ‘retired’ operational mind.

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