Why
Russia Will Not 'Offer' To Conduct Military Operations In Iraq
(Lessons
Learned From American Failures)
There
is increasing speculation that the Iraqi Premier's recent statement
about Russian assistance may herald Russian forces joining the
campaign against ISIL/ISIS Daesh in Iraq. Such, however, is unlikely
to happen.
Chasing
Straws In the Wind
Why,
in my opinion, it will not happen in the manner envisaged by the
Iraqi Premier, is outlined below.
One
of the lessons learnt from American disasters in Libya, Iraq, Syria
and now even in Afghanistan (as the promised additional military
assistance and resources have not been forthcoming in time to hold
back the Taliban, Al Qaeda and Daesh) is that you cannot conduct a
military operational campaign when it is being micromanaged by
politicians. Yes of course, it is political agendas which set the
framework and it is to such that the military officers are ultimately
accountable.
Political
paralysis in the United States has meant that a unified coherent
foreign policy has been impossible to achieve – especially in the
conduct of military operations in Syria.
As
with Libya and Iraq in the past, such means that the Republican and
Democrat Representatives have different outcome agendas and neither
appear to have the expertise nor vision to provide blueprints beyond
military campaigns and occupation, with very limited strategic
objectives, almost oblivious to the masses (local populace) who are
perceived as available for micromanagement by U.S. trained military, paramilitary
and police units – something similar to what might take place in
the United States to control urban civic unrest.
For
example it took the brutal murder of many U.S. troops - in many
instances by female suicide bombers - in Iraq - for the U.S. forces
to appreciate that men do not 'frisk' Muslim women in alien (i.e.
their own Muslim) lands. Iraq, it was then appreciated, is not the United States.
The
Enemy Within
In
the lead up to a U.S. election year all such divided House members
will pivot for maximum advantage and all demand not just being kept
'in the loop' but in micromanaging operations to such an extent that
if the military commanders are perceived as not reflecting each sides
public policy electorate-winning emotive agenda policies, leakages
(of operational failures, cooperation with Russian forces, betrayal
of U.S.
'patriotic' values) to the mass media in order to discredit
political opponents will be both the order of the day – and turn
any coherent unified strategy into a fiasco.
The
Lone Ranger
It
is for such reasons that any offer along the lines of the Iraqi
Premier is a 'poisoned chalice' – even more since the White House
has rejected (or spurned) any cooperation with Russia's military
campaign in Syria.
The
Empire Strikes Back
The
only time when the Russian Federation will, in my opinion, consider
assisting Iraq would occur should the Iraq government formally
request assistance from the Federation – with no conditions
attached which might hinder of impede Russian Allied operational
issues.
Iraq
is not in the same desperate situation which President Assad is.
The
new regime in power does not want a return of the Ba'athist Officers
who have, by and large, defected to ISIS.
The
Kurdish region is heavily dependant on U.S. support whilst the
Sadarists in the South dependant on Iran.
The
failure, however, of the United States to offer anything other than
words of sympathy for the Kurds in what is developing as an
(internal) outright civil war against the Salafist-controlled
government in Turkey and the paucity of the grade of weapons being
supplied to their forces, notwithstanding air support against ISIL
forces (to protect oilfields rather than Kurdish forces and territory
per se) could well persuade the Kurds that they too have little to
loose and everything to gain with a joint request for assistance to
Moscow.
There
is no doubt that if such a request was made and the mistakes of both
Russia in Afghanistan and the United States more recently in Iraq,
Libya and Syria unlikely to be repeated, under such circumstances
such a joint request would be favorably considered by the Russian
parliament.
The
Framework Shifts
At
such a stage, China, already on good terms with both Iran and the Shia
political and spiritual leadership in Iraq, seeing how the export of
such chaos could be motivated by external elements to destabilize its
own fragile Muslim regions, may well decide, having witnessed the
terrible destructive potential which this movement (ISIL) poses, that
it is in its own longer-term security interest, to join the battle in
Iraq against ISIL rather than having to combat these fanatics with
military campaigns for decades - or even longer - in its own
backyard.
If
the above scenario plays out, it would no doubt be a decisive game
changer.
There
are, again, longer term implications of having both Russia and China
as significant regional players in the region.
Check
(Mate?)
Apart
from Baghdad, the Iraqi State (or what is left of it) is partially
surrounded by patchworks of ISIL-controlled regions – in spite of
American bombing strategies and the presence of limited advisors to
support Iraqi government's military initiatives, there is just not
the confidence that America has the political will to 'get the job
done'. There is no evidence in Washington that such a unified
strategy exists – indeed quite the opposite appears to be the case
in an election lead-up year where its every political party for
itself – power is the name of the game.
Deja
Vu
As
in an earlier war which ended in a fiasco and betrayal – Vietnam –
the Iraqi government, is, I have no doubt, beginning to ponder as to
whether it is now nearing time to contemplate the unthinkable -
jumping ship - before it, also, is too late.
[The symbolism of the launch of Russian Cruise Missiles against ISIL targets in Syria from it's fleet in the Caspian Sea, an area the U.S. and Allies intend as the next area of influence, is lost upon the general media. Please read my earlier blogs for further clarity on this matter.]
©Patrick
Emek, October 2015