Submitted by: Donald Hank
Russian Diplomat Drops a Bombshell: US Expected ISIS to
Seize Damascus by October
In an article in a British newspaper Russia's ambassador to the UK reveals the Russians were told by the Western powers that after the US proclaimed a no-fly zone ISIS would capture Damascus
By Alexander Mercouris
February 16, 2016 "Information Clearing House" - "RI" - Alexander Yakovenko, Russia’s ambassador to Britain, dropped something of a bombshell on Monday, though one that has gone completely unnoticed.
In an article in a British newspaper Russia's ambassador to the UK reveals the Russians were told by the Western powers that after the US proclaimed a no-fly zone ISIS would capture Damascus
By Alexander Mercouris
February 16, 2016 "Information Clearing House" - "RI" - Alexander Yakovenko, Russia’s ambassador to Britain, dropped something of a bombshell on Monday, though one that has gone completely unnoticed.
In a piece in the print edition of the London
Evening Standard defending Russian policy in Syria he made the following
extraordinary disclosure:
“Last summer we were told by our Western partners that
in October Damascus would fall to IS (ie. the Islamic State - AM).
What they were planning to do next we don’t know.
Probably, they would have ended up painting the extremists white and accepting
them as a Sunni state straddling Iraq and Syria”.
The summer - when these conversations between the
Western powers and the Russians allegedly took place - was the time when the US
was in discussions with Turkey and Jordan about setting up a no-fly zone and
safe havens in Syria.
I discussed in this article how “no-fly zone” is today
simply a euphemism for a US bombing
campaign.
What Yakovenko is therefore in effect saying is that
the US was planning in the summer to start a bombing campaign to overthrow the
government of Syria in the knowledge that this would result by October in the
victory of the Islamic State and its capture of Damascus.
Russia Insider has previously explained that it was to stop the US
proclaiming a no-fly zone - i.e. commencing a bombing campaign aimed
at overthrowing the Syrian government - that Russia intervened in Syria.
The fact Yakovenko says the US told the Russians this
would result in the Islamic State capturing Damascus by October explains why the
Russians felt they had to act as they did.
Is Yakovenko however telling the truth?
The first thing to say is that the British and US
governments have not denied what he is saying.
That however is not conclusive. It is not
difficult to see why the British and US governments might think that in light of
the incendiary nature of what Yakovenko is saying denying it would simply give
his comments more publicity if they denied them and that the better approach is
silence.
If so, then the fact Yakovenko’s comments have been
almost entirely ignored shows this approach has worked.
Is Yakovenko however senior enough to know the details
of the discussions that took place in the summer between the Russians and the
Western powers as he says?
The answer to that question is almost certainly
yes.
Though London is no longer the most important
diplomatic posting for a Russian ambassador in Western Europe, it remains an
important posting, and any official appointed to be Russia’s ambassador to
Britain is by definition a senior official whom Moscow will ensure is kept
well-informed.
If there were discussions of the sort Yakovenko says,
he would almost certainly have been fully briefed about them.
What Yakovenko says is also consistent with things we
know.
In the summer - having just captured Palmyra - the
Islamic State was on a roll, making it not implausible that it might reach
Damascus by the autumn.
The Syrian army in the meantime had suffered a
succession of heavy defeats, and had been forced to withdraw from Idlib
province.
In light of all this, in the context of a US bombing
campaign, it is not implausible the US was telling the Russians in the summer
that the Islamic State would seize Damascus by October.
As for the US’s discussions about setting up a no-fly
zone and safe havens, there was nothing secret about those, and they were openly
acknowledged.
Why however would the US tell the Russians that they
expected the Islamic State to seize Damascus by October?
That is not a difficult question to answer.
No-one in the early summer thought there was any
likelihood the Russians would intervene militarily in Syria. The US
probably thought it was not risking anything by telling Moscow its military
plans and what their likely consequences would be.
Probably what the US expected was that the threat of a
bombing campaign leading to the seizure of Damascus by the Islamic State would
terrify Moscow and persuade the Russians to force Assad to stand down,
which has been the US objective all along.
In that case the US seriously underestimated the
Russians' resolve and their willingness to act to prevent what the US was
threatening from coming to pass.
Overall Yakovenko’s disclosure makes sense, and is
therefore probably true.
What it shows is how reckless the US’s Syrian policy
had become.
At the very time the US was pretending to fight the
Islamic State it was in fact preparing steps that it knew would facilitate its
victory.
Even if this was intended as a diplomatic play it was
an extraordinary thing to do.
The families of US victims of jihadi terror would
surely feel betrayed if they were ever find out about it, whilst it is not
difficult to imagine the consternation and recriminations in Washington when the
Russians unexpectedly pre-empted the US strategy by intervening in the way they
did.
As for the people of Damascus - spared not just US
bombing but rule by the Islamic State - and the people of Europe - who would
have faced a far bigger refugee flood if what Washington was telling the
Russians had come to pass - they both have reason to be grateful to the Russians
for making sure that things turned out otherwise.
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