It is important to stress
at the outset that we do not know if the shells that landed on Turkish
border towns, killing at least five people, were ordered by Bashar
al-Assad's government; all we know is the shelling came from the area
where Syrian positions had been firing at rebels.
Syria has admitted its
shelling killed Turkish civilians, has apologized, and has promised that
the incident will not be repeated, Turkey's deputy prime minister says.
Syria's information minister has pledged an investigation into how and
why the shell came to be fired at Turkey.
The big point is that the
Assad regime is desperately trying to prevent outside military
intervention in its war-torn country, and does not want to provide a
pretext for Turkey to do so, knowing that it would be disastrous.
News: Turkey strikes targets in retaliation for shelling deaths
Similarly, I believe the Turkish government has no interest in military
escalation against its neighbor.
According to surveys, public opinion in
Turkey is strongly against all-out war with Syria.
Equally important is the
fact that, although NATO and the United States have expressed solidarity
with Turkey, a NATO member, they are urging restraint. Western powers,
particularly the United States, do not have the desire or political will
to intervene militarily in Syria. Without the full backing of NATO and
the US, Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan would be reluctant to embark on
any large-scale military venture against Syria.
So while we have seen a
lot of escalation in the last 48 hours we need to put it into context:
Neither side has an interest in turning this low-intensity war into
something more serious, a full-blown confrontation.
What the incident tells
us is that Syria has now descended into all-out war. It tells us that
Syria's neighbors are deeply embroiled in its internal armed struggle.
It also tells us that the civil war has become a proxy war between other
regional players such as Iran and Saudi Arabia. The Syrian conflict has
also been internationalized along Cold War lines, with the US and
Russia backing rival camps.
The spillover of the
Syrian war has reached not just Turkey but also Jordan, Lebanon, and
Iraq, with frequent armed clashes and casualties. If these skirmishes
intensify and escalate, the potential of a region-wide war cannot be
overlooked.
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This is why Western
powers, particularly the United States, are reluctant to intervene
militarily in the Syrian civil war, lest they exacerbate an already
dangerous situation: They want the civil war to remain an internal
conflict where it can be contained.
Al-Assad's strategy has
succeeded: He has forced the opposition to militarize the political
uprising. Syria is in the grip of a bloody and costly armed struggle, a
struggle that does not show signs of an early resolution, but of turning
into a long, drawn-out conflict. No one knows how that would end, but
it would ensure he has local and regional support to survive for quite a
long time.
The Syrian authorities
have little control over all military engagements. The fire has spread
across the whole country: Assad's forces are over-extended and thinly
spread. Despite assurances given by the Syrian government that the
shelling that killed the Turkish civilians won't be repeated, it is
doubtful whether that pledge can be honored as Syria descends into
all-out war.
Turkey has been
extremely angry in the last few weeks. For the first time Prime Minister
Recep Tayip Reccip Erdogan has criticized the Western powers for paying
lip service to the opposition cause, implying that his patience is
running thin.
Regardless of how the
Turkish leadership feels though, I don't think it will act independently
without a security umbrella commitment by NATO and a green light from
the Americans. They have made it very clear they will not act on their
own against Syria. NATO has gone out of its way to impress gently on the
Turkish leadership not to escalate the situation beyond what it has
done so far. CNN
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