The regime, supported by its Russian and Iranian allies, is now preparing to retake the province, an area crammed with as many as 70,000 rebel fighters and nearly 3 million civilians, double its pre-war population.
Unless some deal is done to forestall such an assault, Idlib will be the “perfect storm,” as the United Nations envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura put it on Thursday.
Russia talking tough…
“So from all points of view, this hotbed must be eliminated,” he said Wednesday — also describing Idlib as a “festering abscess.”
Russian officials have also claimed there’s a plan by rebels, with western connivance, to stage a chemical weapons attack in Idlib and then blame it on the regime. The Syrian Foreign Minister went further, saying that civil defense volunteers known as the White Helmets had kidnapped 44 children to stage such an attack. (An opposition activist in Idlib told CNN Thursday that the rebels had neither storage facilities nor the expertise to use chemical weapons.)
Lavrov claimed that “the Americans are trying to ratchet up the tensions around Idlib” and that Russia had “clearly and firmly warned our Western partners: don’t play with fire.” Not coincidentally the Russian defense ministry has announced a large naval exercise off the Syrian coast to begin Saturday. Anatoly Antonov, Russia’s ambassador to the United States, said Moscow was concerned by signs that the United States was preparing new strikes on Syria.
…but also talking Turkey
There’s no doubt that Idlib is dominated by radical Islamist factions such as the former al Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al Nusra (reinvented as Hayat Tahrir al Sham.) They are well organized and ideologically committed, defending territory they know well. De Mistura said Thursday there are about 10,000 fighters loyal to al Qaeda or al Nusra in Idlib (perhaps inadvertently providing the regime and Russia with the pretext to attack.)
The Moscow/Ankara relationship is critical for the future of Idlib and indeed all of northern Syria. There have been almost daily contacts between the two governments this month. Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said after an August 14 meeting with Lavrov that Turkey would not permit “a massacre” of civilians at the price of efforts to eradicate terrorist groups, according to the state-run news agency Anadolu.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan says Turkey is working with Russia and Iran “to prevent an Aleppo-like disaster” in Idlib. As the Turkish military reinforces its dozen or so outposts in Idlib, Erdogan noted pointedly: “We are a nation that wins on the field not at the table.”
Alexey Khlebnikov, a Middle East expert at the Russian International Affairs Council, told CNN it was “highly unlikely that there’s going to be direct confrontation between the Syrian and Turkish military. If that happens it will push Ankara back into US hands, which goes contrary to Moscow’s interests.”
‘Beyond Conflict’
Somehow Russia has to keep both Iran and Turkey on board if it wants to get “beyond conflict” in Syria.
An assault on Idlib would likely drive hundreds of thousands more civilians towards and over the Turkish border. UN officials envisage as many as 800,000 people trying to escape Idlib.
“Russia recently announced its main priority is return of the refugees — not the opposite,” says Khlebnikov. “Moscow is looking for a delicate solution which will take into account the interests and concerns of all parties.”
So Russia may consider the establishment of humanitarian “corridors” as suggested by UN envoy de Mistura, in an effort to separate fighters from civilians. Whether many people from Idlib would want to enter regime-held territory is another matter. And ultimately where would these people go? 1.4 million of them have already been displaced once. “There is no other Idlib. Where can they go? Where can anyone go?” asks de Mistura.
War of attrition
For all these reasons, Moscow may prefer a more limited operation to eat away at the fringes of Idlib, starting in the south where the situation is not complicated by the presence of Turkish troops.
An opposition activist in Idlib told CNN that the regime was massing troops to the south of Idlib (in northern Hama province), to reinforce its existing military positions rather than initiate an imminent offensive.
US declines to engage
Where is the West now, as the denouement of the Syrian conflict beckons? With few cards to play, somewhere close to resignation.
Spokeswoman Heather Nauert said this week: “We have shared the concerns that we have about any potential offensive taking place, we have shared those concerns with the Russian government at many levels,” including conversations between Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.
There is no real US engagement with Russia on Syrian reconstruction while Assad is in power; nor is there much engagement with the remnants of the moderate Syrian opposition. The US has sent mixed messages about its military support of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces in the last enclave beyond regime control.
CNN’s Kareen Khadder contributed to this report.
Source : Nbcnewyork