World War III Starts In The Middle East?
By Michael Snyder - End Of The American Dream Blog February 10, 2016 Share this article:
Are Saudi Arabia and Turkey about to send ground troops into Syria?
If so, how will Russia, Iran and the Syrian government respond?
In 2016, Syria has become ground zero for a conflict that
has been raging for centuries. For more than a thousand years, the
Sunnis and the Shiites have been wrestling with one another for control
of the Middle East. Saudi Arabia, Turkey and other Sunni nations had
hoped to turn Syria into a Sunni nation, and for years they have been
funding and arming ISIS and other Sunni insurgent groups in an attempt
to overthrow the Assad regime.
Initially the
Assad regime was losing quite a bit of ground, but the tide turned once
the Syrians invited the Russians and the Iranians to help them. Of
course the Iranians have their own long-term goals. Once Assad leaves
power, the Iranians hope to turn Syria into a truly Shiite nation that
is run and dominated by Hezbollah.
At this
moment, the Sunnis are losing and the Shiites are winning. Relentless
Russian airstrikes have enabled Syrian, Iranian and Hezbollah ground
forces to advance, and now they have surrounded Aleppo. Before the war
Aleppo was the largest city in Syria, and if it falls, the war will be
very close to over.
Thousands of refugees are
currently flooding out of Aleppo as the Russians bombard the surrounding
area continually. There is little hope that the Sunni forces that once
were so optimistic about overthrowing Assad can hold out much longer
without help.
As the situation becomes
increasingly desperate, Saudi Arabia and Turkey are now considering what
was once unthinkable a full-blown ground invasion of Syria.
Of
course this could very well set off World War III in the Middle East,
but Saudi Arabia and Turkey have already invested so much in this
conflict, and they don t appear to be willing to throw up their hands
and walk away now.
Just consider what Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told reporters this past weekend...
"What's
going on in Syria can only go on for so long. At some point it has to
change," Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told reporters on a
plane back to Turkey from Latin America over the weekend.
As
we've documented extensively over the past several days, Ankara,
Riyadh, and Doha have their backs against the wall when it comes to the
effort to oust Bashar al-Assad and perpetuate Sunni hegemony in the
Arabian Peninsula.
Hezbollah has surrounded
Aleppo and their advance is backed by what s been described as an
unrelenting Russian air campaign. The rebels supply lines to Turkey
have been cut and without a direct intervention by either the US or the
Gulf states, the battle for Syria will have been lost for the opposition
which pulled out of peace talks in Geneva citing the ongoing aerial
bombardment by Moscow.
And according to Bloomberg, he added the following ominous statement...
"You
don't talk about these things. When necessary, you do what's needed.
Right now our security forces are prepared for all possibilities."
The
Saudis are being less vague. They are now publicly saying that they
would definitely be willing to commit ground troops to the conflict in
Syria...
Ahmed Asseri, a spokesman for the
Saudi Arabia-led coalition fighting Yemen, said Saudis would also be
willing to contribute ground troops as part of a wider campaign against
Islamic State in Syria, Al-Arabiya television reported Friday.
And consider what one of their top generals told Al Jazeera...
"Today,
the Saudi kingdom announced its readiness to participate with ground
troops with the US-led coalition against ISIL, because we now have the
experience in Yemen," Brigadier General Ahmed Asseri told Al Jazeera.
We
know that air strikes cannot be enough and that a ground operation is
needed. We need to combine both to achieve better results on the
ground.
In addition to Saudi Arabia, the
government of the United Arab Emirates is also indicating that it is
ready to send ground forces into Syria. The following comes from the
Express&
On Sunday, the UAE, a federation
of seven states and one the Middle East s most important economic
centres, said it stands ready to supply ground troops to support and
train international coalition soldiers in the war-ravaged country.
Minister
of State for Foreign Affairs Anwar Gargash said boots on the ground are
the most effective way to fight ISIS, also known as Daesh.
Mr
Gargash said: "I think that this has been our position throughout, that
a real campaign against Daesh has to include ground elements."
All of that stuff that the UAE and the Saudis are saying about fighting ISIS is complete nonsense.
Thanks
to the Russians, the Iranians and Hezbollah, ISIS and other Sunni
insurgent groups are already on their last legs in Syria.
No,
the truth is that the only reason the UAE, the Saudis and Turkey would
go in would be to help the Sunni insurgency win the war.
And of course they would absolutely love the assistance
of the United States in this venture. Unfortunately for them, the Obama
administration does not seem very eager to commit troops in large
numbers to this fight.
I think that the Obama
administration realizes that a full-blown invasion of Syria at this
point could easily bring us to the brink of war with Russia. The
following is what U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry reportedly said to a
Syrian aid worker on the sidelines of a recent international conference
on Syria...
Two Syrian aid workers said they
approached Kerry at a donor conference drinks reception and told him
that he had not done enough to protect Syrian civilians. He then said
they should blame the opposition.
"He said that
basically, it was the opposition that didn't want to negotiate and
didn't want a ceasefire, and they walked away," the second of the aid
workers told MEE in a separate conversation and also on the basis of
anonymity.
"'What do you want me to do? Go to war with Russia? Is that what you want?'" the aid worker said Kerry told her.
For once, John Kerry has it right.
If
a Sunni coalition spearheaded by the United States were to conduct a
full-blown invasion of Syria, it would force the Russians to respond.
And once Americans and Russians start killing one another, World War III is only a hop, skip and jump away.
But
even if the U.S. is not involved, joint military action by Saudi Arabia
and Turkey in Syria definitely would have the potential to spark a
major regional war in the Middle East. From there, who knows how far it
could spread.
Our world is becoming
increasingly unstable, and Syria has become a crucible for rising global
tensions that could explode at any moment.
Hopefully
Saudi Arabia and Turkey will listen to common sense. If they choose to
go in, there is very little to be gained and so much that could be
lost. They will never be able to defeat the combined forces of the
Russians, the Iranians and Hezbollah, and they could very easily end up
starting a war that nobody wants to see.
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