Wednesday 10 February 2016

The battle for Aleppo: a rebuke to America and the world

John Kerry does not give up easily. On Thursday in Munich the US secretary of state will promote a fresh diplomatic effort on Syrian peace talks. Yet for all his determination, events on the ground are not only working against a breakthrough, but raising increasingly profound doubts about the coherence of US and western strategy. For more than a week, the rebel-held city of Aleppo, once Syria’s largest, has been pounded by Russia’s air force, acting in support of Iranian-backed militias and Syrian government troops. If this annihilation strategy continues, the balance of forces in Syria’s civil war will change fundamentally. Mr Kerry’s proposed negotiated solution will be null and void, for there will be no Syrian opposition force left to be represented at any negotiating table.
The truth is that the humanitarian catastrophe in and around Aleppo ought to be enough to trigger a rethink anyway. Tens of thousands of Syrian civilians are already at the Turkish border in the winter cold. Now, according to the United Nations, an estimated 300,000 more could soon be running for their lives, as barrel bombs are dropped on their city. These inhabitants think they already know the fate that awaits them if Syrian government forces take the city. A recent UN report described the torture methods of the Assad regime as “extermination”. Aleppo, a symbol of the 2011 revolt against the regime, and a stronghold of opposition forces since 2012, is in imminent danger of being surrounded, starved and massacred.
The net result of Russia’s four-month-old military intervention in Syria may now be a major turning point in the war, but one that will bring more, not less, human suffering and one that will ultimately feed the so-called Islamic State. Indeed, the very groups that had successfully pushed Isis out of Aleppo in 2013 and 2014 are now themselves being targeted for destruction.
In one week alone, Syria has gone from bad to horribly worse. Mr Kerry is clearly well aware of this. It lies behind his desperate push for talks. Yet this cannot disguise the grim fact that the Obama administration is now contemplating the complete collapse of its strategy. The rebels whom the US and its allies have claimed to support all along are, in Aleppo, in need of anti-tank and anti-aircraft weaponry, yet there is no indication they will be supplied with it. If nothing changes, their defeat may be just a question of time.

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