by Gregg Roman and Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi
The Obama administration's obsession with fighting ISIS and slow progress toward that goal ultimately led to its acquiescence in Russian military intervention on behalf of the Iranian-Syrian regime axis.
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Kurdish YPG fighters line up in formation. | 
Nearly half a million people have died, millions have been wounded, and half the population of Syria displaced in five years  of civil war, while the flood of hundreds of thousands of refugees into  Europe has profoundly shaken the security and political climate of the  continent.
  
To  make matters worse, the president-elect is taking over from an  administration whose Syria policy was not merely a resounding failure,  but was so middling and contradictory that the most important takeaway  isn't self-evident.
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Trump  should jettison the assumption that ISIS & like-minded jihadists  constitute the paramount threat to U.S. interests in Syria. | 
Put  simply, the Trump administration should jettison the Obama  administration's assumption that the Islamic State (ISIS), Jabhat Fatah  al-Sham (formerly known as the Al-Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra), and  like-minded Salafi-jihadist groups in Syria constitute the paramount  threat to American interests in the country.
  
While  ISIS has directed a multitude of deadly terror attacks in Western  countries over the past two years, this capability hinged on its direct  access to Syria's long northern border with Turkey — more a result of  U.S. diplomatic failure vis-à- vis Ankara than of the innate strength of  ISIS.
  
Now  that the border has been closed, the ability of ISIS to dispatch  operatives to the West and bring in recruits from abroad has been  seriously hampered. Though some operatives have no doubt already been  planted in Europe and more still can be recruited from refugee  populations there, lack of easy access combined with improved domestic  intelligence and border controls mean that the ISIS assault on Europe  has probably passed its high-water mark.
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Syrian civilians flee from incoming Russian airstrikes. | 
Another  reason for patience in reducing the remaining strongholds of ISIS in  Raqqa and eastern Syria is that there is not yet a credible local force  to take over those areas.
  
While  the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have proven to be a  useful ally in fighting ISIS in Syria, they should not be forced into  operations to retake these predominantly Arab areas, which will be  deeply hostile to a Kurdish military presence.
  
The  Obama administration's obsession with fighting ISIS and slow progress  toward that goal ultimately led to its acquiescence in Russian military  intervention on behalf of the Iranian-Syrian regime axis.
  
This  amounts to a de facto alignment with Iran, which remains deeply hostile  to U.S. interests in the region – a much bigger threat in this regard  than the Islamic State – and is committed to Israel's destruction.
  
The  U.S. response has largely focused on futile diplomatic gestures in the  hope that the regime and its backers would see the wisdom of a broader  political settlement with moderate rebels so as to forge a united front  against ISIS. Even those counseling greater American intervention have  argued that increasing support to the rebels and thus putting military  pressure on the regime will facilitate such a settlement.
  
But  prospects for a negotiated political settlement in Syria have long  since evaporated. Simply put, the regime will not compromise on Assad's  continuation as head of state, while all major political and military  opposition groups representing the country's Sunni majority refuse to  contemplate a settlement that doesn't end the political dominance of his  minority Alawite Sect.
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A coalition aircraft bombs an ISIS-held target in Syria. | 
Recent  regime successes have sharpened this divide, as the rebellion looks set  to become a chronic peripheral rural insurgency – unable to threaten  regime control of the most important urban centers but capable of  defying Assad's bid to fully reconquer Syria for years to come.
  
Rather  than obsessing over driving the last nails in the coffin of ISIS or  modulating its involvement in Syria to advance some chimerical peace  plan, the Trump administration must focus its attention on more  realistic aims. While it is perhaps too late to challenge Russia's  presence in a country Vladimir Putin sees as the cornerstone of his  expanding zone of influence in the region, neither should Washington  accept it.
  
Though  there have been hints from the incoming administration of ending  support for rebel groups. It would make better sense to continue the  support and perhaps increase it, not in the belief that one can bring  about a political settlement, but rather to bog down the regime and its  allies and minimize the future threat they may pose to U.S. interests in  the region. 
Gregg Roman is director of Middle East Forum, a research center headquartered in Philadelphia, PA.
Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi is a Jihad-Intel fellow at the Middle East Forum.
Source: http://www.meforum.org/6461/it-time-for-realism-in-syria-president-elect
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Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
1 comment:
Gregg Roman discussed here the disaster of Obama dabbling in the middle east. I think its important to put Turkey (NATO?) into the spotlight as equally guilty of this mess. Recep Tayip Erdoğan has tried to develop power by returning to Ottoman grandeur. A key element is engaging the extremists, and blaming the Kurds for any attacks. Trump would do well to publicly stand in favor of creating Kurdistan out of a corner of Turkey and the portion of Iraq now identified as a Kurdish entity. Kurdistan would anchor the defense against Islamic terrorism in the Middle East and save thousands of lives.
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