Via Stratfor
Periodically, Stratfor publishes guidance produced for its
analysis team and shares it with readers. This guidance sets the
parameters used in our own ongoing examination and assessment of events
surrounding Syria's use of chemical weapons as the crisis evolves into a
confrontation between the United States and Russia. Given the
importance we ascribe to this fast-evolving standoff, we believe it
important that readers have access to this additional insight.
In the wake of President Barack Obama's change of tack from a strike on Syria, the threat of war has not dissolved.
The president's minimalist claims are in place, but they are under serious debate. There
is no chance of an attack on chemical weapons stockpiles. Therefore,
the attack, if any, will be on command and control and political
targets. Obama has options on the table and there will be force
in place for any contingency he selects. Nothing is locked in despite
public statements and rhetoric in Washington, London, Paris or Moscow.
Remember that all public statements now are meant to obscure
real plans and intentions. They are intended to shape the environment.
Read them, but do not look at them as anything more than tactics.
The issue has morphed into a U.S.-Russian confrontation. Russia's
goal is to be seen as an equal of the United States. It wins if it can
be seen as a protagonist of the United States. If it can appear that
Washington has refrained from an attack because of Russian maneuvers,
Moscow's weight increases dramatically. This is particularly the case
along Russia's periphery, where doubts of American power abound and
concern over Russian power abides.
This is not merely appearance. After all that has been said, if the
United States buys into some Russian framework, it will not be seen as a
triumph of diplomacy; it will be seen as the United States lacking the
will to act and being pushed away out of concern for the Russians.
The Russian ploy on weapons controls was followed by the brilliant
move of abandoning strike options. Obama's speech the night of Sept. 10
was addressed to the U.S. public and Obama's highly fractured base; some
of his support base opposes and some -- a particular audience --
demands action.
He cannot let Syria become the focus of his presidency, and he must be careful that the Russians do not lay a trap for him.
He is not sure what that trap might look like, and that's what is
unnerving him as it would any president. Consequently, he has bought
time, using the current American distaste for military action in the
Middle East. But he is aware that this week's dislike of war can turn
into next week's contempt on charges of weakness. Obama is an
outstanding politician and he knows he is in quicksand.
The Russians have now launched a diplomatic offensive that
emphasizes to both the Arabs in the Persian Gulf opposing Bashar al
Assad and the Iranians supporting him that a solution is available
through them. It requires only that they ask the Americans to
abandon plans for action.
The message is that Russia will solve the
chemical weapons problem, and implicitly, collaborate with them to
negotiate a settlement.
Obama's speech on Sept. 10, constrained by domestic opinion, came
across as unwilling to confront the Russians or al Assad. The Russians
are hoping this has unnerved al Assad's opponents sufficiently to cause
them to use the Russians as their interlocutors. If this fails the
Russians have lost nothing. They can say they were statesmen. If it
succeeds, they can actually nudge the regional balance of power.
The weakness of the Russian position is that it has no real weight.
The limit on American military action is purely domestic politics. If
the United States chooses to hit Syria, Russia can do nothing about it
and will be made to look weak, the tables thus turned on them.
At this point, all signs indicate that the domestic considerations dominate U.S. decision-making.
If the Russian initiative begins to work, however, Obama will be forced
to consider the consequences and will likely act. The Arabs suspect
this and therefore will encourage the Russians, hoping to force the U.S.
into action.
The idea that this imbroglio will somehow disappear is certainly one that Obama is considering.
But the Russians will not want that to happen. They do not want to let
Obama off the hook and their view is that he will not act. Against this
backdrop, they can appear to be the nemesis of the United States, its
equal in power and its superior in cunning and diplomacy.
This is the game to watch. It is not ending but still very much evolving.
No comments:
Post a Comment