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Syria's Bashar al-Assad shows no willingess to compromise

Assad is now pumped up with confidence after Russian air strikes reversed the tide and enabled his army recover lost ground from ISIS.

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Russia's involvement in Syria has given it greater insight into the structure of the Bashar al-Assad rule.
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As the Syria peace talks resume next week, President Bashar al-Assad, backed militarily by Iran and Russia, shows no willingness to compromise, much less step aside to allow a transition Western powers claim is the solution to the conflict.

Threatened by rebel advances in 2015, Assad is now pumped up with confidence after Russian air strikes reversed the tide and enabled his army to recover lost ground from Sunni insurgents as well as the jihadis of Islamic State (ISIS). While Syria experts doubt he can recapture the whole country without an unlikely full-scale ground intervention by Russia and Iran, they also doubt President Vladimir Putin will force him out - unless there is a clear path to stability, which could take years.

Instead, Russia's dramatimilitary intervention in September 2015 -- after five years of inconclusive fighting between Assad and fragmented rebel groups mostly from Syria's Sunni majority -- has tilted the balance of power in his favour and given him the upper hand at the talks in Geneva. The main target of the Russian air force bombardment was mainstream and Islamist forces that launched an offensive last summer. Only recently have Russia and Syrian forces taken the fight to ISIS, notably by recapturing Palmyra, the Graeco-Roman city the jihadis overran in 2015.

The Russian campaign, backed by Iran's Revolutionary Guards and Shi'ite militia such as Lebanon's Hezbollah, has for now outmatched the rebels, including the al Qaeda-linked Nusra Front and units supported by Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey, and the United States (US)



Syrian forces in Palmyra. Credit: Reuters

REBELS LOSE MOMENTUM

Dealing with those groups rather than Islamic State seemed the main aim of Moscow's intervention, analysts say. "The Russian intervention fundamentally reshaped the Syrian conflict," says Kheder Khaddour from the Carnegie Middle East Center. "The momentum of the rebels does not exist any more."

Putin, diplomats say, weakened the opposition to coax it into accepting a settlement on Russian and Syrian terms. That does not mean the "transitional authority" sought by the US and its allies, but a government expanded to include elements of the opposition, with Assad at its head for the immediate future.

Russia still wants Assad to lead the transition to the elections, while the opposition and its regional allies, including the US and Europe, insist he should step down. So far no compromises are in sight. "We need things to advance in the coming weeks. If the political process is just about putting a few opposition people in nominal cabinet posts then this isn't going to go very far," said a European diplomat close to the talks."If there isn't a political transition the civil war will continue and Islamic State will benefit from it," he said.

Fawaz Gerges, author of ISIS: A History, said: "At this point the Russians have the upper hand in dictating a solution. The Americans are playing on Russia's playing field."

 


ASSAD "WILL NOT GO QUIETLY"

Faisal al-Yafai, a leading commentator from the United Arab Emirates, says Russia "played its cards in Syria very cleverly, but miscalculated in one aspect".

"They assumed that once the (Assad) regime felt secure, it would be more willing to negotiate. In fact, the opposite has happened, " says al-Yafai. "There's a limit to the pressure that Russia can exert on Assad. Assad absolutely will not go quietly -- and certainly not when there is no real alternative to him, even within the regime." 

Robert Ford, the former US ambassador to Syria and now a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute in Washington, agrees that Russia may not be able to compel Assad to go. The secret police backbone of Assad's rule remains intact, he says, and "Assad seems confident again, after his much more sober tone last summer. The Russians may have helped him too much, such that Assad can maintain control of key cities and roads for a long time".

Ford also drew attention to the competition over Syria between Russia and Iran, Assad's two main allies. Moscow's emphasis is on its traditional relations with the Syrian military establishment, while Tehran focuses on the militia network it built with Hezbollah to shore up the regime. "Assad is plenty smart to know how to play one country off against the other. I am not even sure Russia would test its heavy pressure capacity against that of Iran in Damascus. The Russians know they might lose", Ford said.

Russia's involvement in Syria has given it greater insight into the structure of the Assad rule, constructed to intermesh the Assad family and allies from its minority Alawite community with the security services and military command.

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