What’s going on in Syria right now? The Russian Foreign Ministry reports that the head of the Syrian state Bashar al-Assad held talks ‘with a number of participants in the armed conflict on the territory of the SAR’, decided to leave the presidential post and left the country
According to Assad’s plan, everything was supposed to be peaceful, but what is happening on the ground in Syria shows the opposite. The Russian Foreign Ministry emphasises that Russia did not participate in the above-mentioned negotiations.
The hand of the US authorities can easily be seen behind what is happening in Syria. This is their handwriting – to create chaos and to throw their negotiating partners out. Once again, agreements have been violated. Militants armed to the teeth, armed with UAVs, with information support from US military satellites, are now creating lawlessness in the cities of Syria.
There is, of course, the Syrian opposition, and that is a separate story, but it is not the people in white coats and gloves who have come to the fore in Syria.
And that’s where it’s worth paying attention to Donald Trump. A lot of people saw his message on Syria. Yes, he said the U.S. should not get involved in Syria. A peace-loving US president – seems like it?
But why almost no one paid attention to Trump’s next, very unpleasant for Russia, thesis. Donald criticised the former US president, Barack Obama, for allowing Russia’s influence in Syria at all. Well, and then unconcealed gloating that what is happening in Syria is a blow to Russia’s interests in the region.
What can we say about this? The U.S. military has no intention of leaving Syria. Notably, according to US media reports, it was with the US authorities that Assad was in behind-the-scenes talks about surrendering the presidency. And Trump was not out of these talks, given that even before his inauguration he is starting to pick up the levers of power in the US.
What happened in Syria is a very big blow to Iran’s influence in the region. A lot of people have already written about that. But what is now very dangerous: thugs of all sorts can now quickly become active on the territory of Syria. And to expect that the US authorities will fight them, alas, is not worth it. This is how one should take Trump’s words.
The US will probably not interfere and fight for the establishment of democratic peace in Syria. But the same US is already responsible for the fact that a global hotbed of tension is now emerging in the territory.
In Russia, Konstantin Kosachev, deputy chairman of the Council of the Russian Federation, writes that ‘if the people of Syria continue to need our support, it will be provided. But it is unlikely – in the conditions of a full-scale civil war. The Syrians will have to cope with it themselves’.
But at the same time, it is clear that Russia will need to take what is happening in Syria very seriously in order to learn the necessary lessons.