The Empire Strikes Back
Week Nine of the Russian Intervention in Syria
By The Saker
Considering the remarkable success of the Russian
intervention in Syria, at least so far, it should not have come as a
surprise that the AngloZionist Empire would strike back. The only
question was how and when. We now know the answer to that question.
Simple: the Empire correctly identified the weakness of the
Russian force in Syria, and it decided to use Turkey to provide
itself an element of plausible deniability. This attack is probably
only the first step of a much larger campaign to “push back” Russia
from the Turkish border. The next step, apparently, includes the
dispatching of western forces into Syria, initially only as
‘advisors’, but eventually as special forces and forward air
controllers. The US and Turkish Air Forces will play the primary
role here, with assorted Germans and UK aircraft providing enough
diversity to speak of an “international coalition”. As for the
French, stuck between their Russian counterparts and their NATO
“allies”, they will remain as irrelevant as ever: Hollande caved in,
again (what else?). Eventually, NATO will create a de-facto
safe heaven for its “moderate terrorists” in northern Syria and use
it as a base to direct an attack on Raqqa. Since any such
intervention will be completely illegal, the argument of the need to
defend the Turkmen minority will be used, R2P and all. The creation
of a NATO-protected safe heaven for “moderate terrorists” could
provide the first step from breaking up Syria into several smaller
statelets.
If that is really the plan, then the shooting down of the SU-24
sends a powerful message to Russia: we are ready to risk a war to
push you back – are you ready to go to war? The painful answer will
be that no, Russia is not prepared to wage a war against the entire
Empire over Syria, simply because she does not have the capabilities
to do so.
As I have already mentioned many times now, Syria is beyond the
Russian power projection capability (roughly 1000km), especially if
that power projection has to be executed through hostile territory
(which Turkey most definitely is). So far, the Russians have
succeeded, brilliantly, to organize and support their small force in
Syria, but that in no way indicates a Russian capability to support
a major air operation over Syria or, even less so, a ground
operation. The fact is that the Russian intervention in Syria was
always a risky and difficult one, and it did not take the Empire
much time to capitalize on this. Though I get a lot of flak from
flag-wavers and “hurray patriots” for saying this, but the fact is
that Russia cannot ‘protect’ Syria from the US, NATO or even
CENTCOM. At least not in purely military terms. This does not mean
that Russia does not have retaliatory options. Russia has already
engaged in the following:
Economic sanctions: Russia has declared a number
of sanctions against Turkey, including
the freezing of the Turkish Stream project. Furthermore, Russian
tourism in Turkey – a huge source of revenue – is most likely to
dwindle down to a tiny what it used to be: Russians will not be
banned from going to Turkey, but no tours or packages will be
offered by Russian travel agencies. Some Turkish goods will be
banned in Russia, and Turks will not be invited to bid for various
types of contracts. All in all, these sanctions will hurt Turkey,
but not in a major way.
Political sanctions: here Russia will use one of
her most terrifying weapons: the truth. The Russian military
presented a devastating series of photos and videos shot by
Russian air and space assets proving that Turkey does, indeed,
purchase oil from Daesh. What was especially shocking about this
evidence is that it showed the truly immense scale of the smuggling:
one photo showed 1’722 oil trucks in in Deir Ez-Zor region while
another one showed 8’500 oil tankers are used by Daesh to transport
up 200’000 barrels of oil. What these figures mean is that not only
is this smuggling organized at the level of the Turkish state, but
it is also absolutely obvious that the USA knows everything about
it.
Predictably, the western media made no mention of the actual
evidence, it only spoke of “images the Russians claim to show”, but
the damage is still done, especially in the long term. Now everybody
with a modicum of intelligence knows that Erdogan is a lying crook.
More importantly, it has now become undeniable that Turkey is not
only an ally, but a patron and sponsor of Daesh. Finally, in the
light of this evidence, it also becomes rather obvious why Turkey
decided to shoot down the Russian SU-24: because the Russians were
bombing the Daesh to Turkey smuggling routes.
The final blow to the prestige and credibility of Erdogan and
Turkey came from Vladimir Putin himself who, in his annual address
to the Parliament said:
We know who are stuffing pockets in Turkey and letting
terrorists prosper from the sale of oil they stole in Syria. The
terrorists are using these receipts to recruit mercenaries, buy
weapons and plan inhuman terrorist attacks against Russian
citizens and against people in France, Lebanon, Mali and other
states. We remember that the militants who operated in the North
Caucasus in the 1990s and 2000s found refuge and received moral
and material assistance in Turkey. We still find them there.
Meanwhile, the Turkish people are kind, hardworking and
talented. We have many good and reliable friends in Turkey.
Allow me to emphasize that they should know that we do not
equate them with the certain part of the current ruling
establishment that is directly responsible for the deaths of our
servicemen in Syria.
We will never forget their collusion with terrorists. We
have always deemed betrayal the worst and most shameful thing to
do, and that will never change. I would like them to remember
this – those in Turkey who shot our pilots in the back, those
hypocrites who tried to justify their actions and cover up for
terrorists.
I don’t even understand why they did it. Any issues they
might have had, any problems, any disagreements we knew nothing
about could have been settled in a different way. Plus, we were
ready to cooperate with Turkey on all the most sensitive issues
it had; we were willing to go further, where its allies refused
to go. Allah only knows, I suppose, why they did it. And
probably, Allah has decided to punish the ruling clique in
Turkey by taking their mind and reason.
But, if they expected a nervous or hysterical reaction
from us, if they wanted to see us become a danger to ourselves
as much as to the world, they won’t get it. They won’t get any
response meant for show or even for immediate political gain.
They won’t get it.
Our actions will always be guided primarily by
responsibility – to ourselves, to our country, to our people. We
are not going to rattle the sabre. But, if someone thinks they
can commit a heinous war crime, kill our people and get away
with it, suffering nothing but a ban on tomato imports, or a few
restrictions in construction or other industries, they’re
delusional. We’ll remind them of what they did, more than once.
They’ll regret it. We know what to do.
Of course, in a society thoroughly habituated to lying,
dishonesty and hypocrisy, these are “only” words, and they shall be
ignored. But in the Middle-East and the rest of the world, these are
powerful words which the Turks will have a very hard time “washing
off” from their reputation.
Military measures: these are limited, of course,
but not irrelevant. First, Russia has now admitted that S-400 are
now in Syria (I suspect they were there all along). Second,
Russia has began building a 2nd air base, this time
in Shaayrat, in central Syria. If this base is indeed built, then
bringing in a few Russian AWACS and/or MiG-31s would make sense.
Third, Russia will now used more modern SU-34 equipped with advanced
air-to-air missiles in northern Syria and Russian strike aircraft
will now be escorted by dedicated SU-30SM fighters. This combination
of measures will make it much harder for the Turks to repeat such an
attack, but I personally doubt that they have any such intentions,
at least not in the immediate future.
Evaluation:
In order to fully understand what is happening now we need to
look at the bigger picture. The first major consequence of the
shooting down of the Russian SU-24 is that NATO has now
become an impunity alliance. Now that the precedent
has been set by Turkey’s act of war on Russia, because that is what
this shooting down undeniably was, any NATO member can now do the
same thing while feeling protected by the alliance. If tomorrow,
say, the Latvians decide to strafe a Russian Navy ship in the Baltic
Sea or if the Poles shoot down a Russian aircraft over Kaliningrad,
they will immediately get the ‘protection’ of NATO just like Turkey
now did: the USA will fully endorse the Latvian/Polish version of
the events, the Secretary General of NATO will offer to dispatch
more forces to Latvia/Poland to “protect” these countries from any
“threat” from “the east” and the world’s corporate media will turn a
blind eye to any evidence of Latvian/Polish aggression. This is an
extremely dangerous development as it gives a strong incentive to
any small country to deal with its inferiority complex by should its
“courage” and “determination” to challenge Russia even if, of
course, this is done by hiding behind NATO’s back.
NATO is also deliberately escalating its war on Russia by
admitting Montenegro into the Alliance and by re-starting talks
about admitting Georgia. In a purely military sense, the
incorporation of Montenegro into NATO makes no difference
whatsoever, but in political terms this is yet another way for the
West to thumb its nose at Russia and say “see, we will even
incorporate your historical allies into our Empire and there is
nothing you can do about it”. As for Georgia, the main purpose
behind the discussion of its incorporation into NATO is to vindicate
the “Saakashvili line”, i.e. to reward aggression towards Russia.
Here again, there is nothing Russia can do.
We thus are facing an
extremely dangerous situation:
The Russian forces in Syria are comparatively weak and
isolated
Turkey can, and will, continue its provocations under the
cover of NATO
The West is now preparing an (illegal) intervention inside
Syria
The western intervention will be made against Syria and
Russia
NATO politicians now have an easy way to score “patriotic”
points by provoking Russia
If we strip all the NATO verbiage about “defending our members”
what is happening now is that the Empire has now apparently decided
that going down the road to war is safe because Russia will not dare
to “start” a war. In other words, this is a game of chicken in which
one side dares the other to do something about it. This is exactly
what Putin was referring to when he said:
If they expected a nervous or hysterical reaction from
us, if they wanted to see us become a danger to ourselves as
much as to the world, they won’t get it. They won’t get any
response meant for show or even for immediate political gain.
They won’t get it. Our actions will always be guided primarily
by responsibility – to ourselves, to our country, to our people
What the imperial deep state is missing is the fact that
Russia might not have a choice but to confront the Empire. Yes,
the Russians do not want war, but the problem here is that,
considering the absolutely reckless arrogance and imperial hubris of
the western elites, every Russian effort to avoid war is
interpreted by the western deep state as a sign of weakness.
In other words, by acting responsibly the Russians are
now providing an incentive for the West to act even more
irresponsibly. This is a very, very, dangerous dynamic
which the Kremlin will have to deal with. Putin, apparently, does
have something in mind, at least this is how I understand his
warning:
But, if someone thinks they can commit a heinous war
crime, kill our people and get away with it, suffering nothing
but a ban on tomato imports, or a few restrictions in
construction or other industries, they’re delusional. We’ll
remind them of what they did, more than once. They’ll regret it.
We know what to do.
I have no idea as to what he might be referring to, but I am
confident that this is not some empty bluster: this was not a threat
to Russia’s enemies, but a promise to the Russian people. I sure
hope that there is a plan because right now we are on a collision
course leading to war. In conclusion, here is a short quote by
Putin western leaders might want to ponder:
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