In the past two weeks, the U.S. and its allies have done just about
everything short of getting down on their collective knees and begging
Russia to stop delivering weapons to the Syrian government. President Vladimir Putin
has received visits this month from three of the most powerful
statesmen in the western world — U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on
May 7, British Prime Minister David Cameron three days later and Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu three days after that. Along with
U.S. President Barack Obama, who spoke to Putin by phone on April 29,
they have all implored the Russian leader to stop arming President Bashar Assad‘s regime.
However, last week it became clear that Russia was going ahead with
S-300 sales immediately despite Kerry’s overtures. This week, the New
York Times reported that Russia is delivering not only the
sophisticated S-300 anti-aircraft systems to Syria but the dreaded
Yakhont “ship killer” missiles, which would make it a lot more painful
for any foreign navies trying to intervene in Syria or provide supplies
to the rebels by sea.
Why has Russia apparently decided to ramp up its arms supplies to
Damascus, despite the West’s pleas? TIME spoke last week with top
Russian diplomat Andrei Klimov, the deputy chairman of the foreign
affairs committee in the Russian parliament, who explained it as Moscow
hedging its bets.
Weapons systems like the S-300, he said, “would simply set the right
conditions” for negotiating Assad’s departure. On May 7, Kerry and Putin
agreed to begin those negotiations at an international summit in the
coming weeks. “To put it simply, the S-300 will put a damper on any
desire to attack Syria from the air if that is the real intention of our
partners” heading into these negotiations. Russia’s intention in all of
this is to avoid making the same mistake it made with Libya, says
Klimov, who has travelled to Syria during the civil war there to assess
Russia’s options. In 2011, the Kremlin — then led by Putin’s more
liberal protege Dmitri Medvedev — was a lot more sympathetic to the
international outrage against Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi,
who was then trying to crush his own violent rebellion. The U.S. and
its allies convinced Medvedev not to block a U.N. resolution against
Gaddafi, allowing it to pass a vote in the U.N. Security Council.
As Putin sees it, that resolution was taken way beyond its stated
purpose of imposing a no-fly zone over Libya — it also opened the door
for a full-scale military intervention. Under the U.N. mandate, the U.S.
and NATO began flying bombing raids against Gaddafi’s military convoys,
which were then moving toward the rebel-held city of Benghazi with the
express aim of “cleansing” its revolutionary populace. After fending off
that assault, NATO air power continued to provide the rebels with a
clear military advantage.
Within weeks, Gaddafi’s army was routed, his convoy was bombed from
the air while fleeing the Libyan capital, and the dictator himself was
captured hiding in a drain pipe in his hometown. A video of rebels
beating, insulting and finally killing Gaddafi soon appeared on YouTube.
Putin was furious over this turn of events — seeing it as a blatant
violation of Libyan sovereignty and a betrayal of Russia’s willingness
to trust the west’s intentions. He has not gotten over the slight. “What
we really do not want is to allow the same mistake as with Libya,”
Klimov says, “when we believed we were getting one thing and got
something totally different.”
Russian weapons will give Assad a good chance of defending himself if
any Western powers decide to continue the aerial assaults that took
place early this month. The strikes on Syrian targets on May 3 and May
5, apparently carried out by Israeli war planes, also spurred Russia to
step up its arms shipments to Assad, Klimov says. “When we see these
bombings taking place in Syria, which seem by all accounts to be coming
from Israel, we realize that a sovereign government has the right to
self-defense,” he says. “In our understanding, these deliveries do not
violate any international agreements. Rather, they forbid any aerial
attacks against Syria from taking place with impunity.”
Russia points out that its weapons sales to Assad do not violate any
international agreements. Unlike with Libya, Russia and China have
vetoed every attempt in the past two years to impose a weapons embargo
against Assad in the U.N. Security Council. And the Kremlin has no
intention of backing away from that position, says Fyodor Lukyanov,
editor of the journal Russia in Global Affairs and a top
foreign policy expert in Moscow. “If the position on providing arms to
the rebel side does not change, then Russia will not back away from any
[arms] contracts with Assad,” he says. “And at this point we only see
movement in the direction of providing more arms to the rebels, not
less.”
On Wednesday, U.S. Senators Robert Menendez and Bob Corker introduced
a bipartisan bill to pressure the Obama Administration to provide
weapons to “vetted” rebel forces in Syria. “To change the tipping point
in Syria against the Assad regime, we must support the opposition by
providing lethal arms,” Menendez said in a statement accompanying the
legislation, which the Senate Foreign Relations Committee will take up
on May 21. “This effort coupled with Russia’s willingness to participate
in talks for political transition will give us the best opportunity for
a better outcome.”
Talks over a political transition are expected to start early next
month. As Putin and Kerry agreed, representatives from Assad’s
government and from the rebel forces will be able to attend the
conference. The aim is to map out a political transition to end the
civil war, which has already claimed some 80,000 lives. “What gives me
serious pause,” says Lukyanov, “is that the US and Russia can agree on
whatever they want, and maybe they will. But its pompous to think that
the people fighting in Syria will obey that decision, put down their
arms and go home.”
Still, Lukyanov says it is a sign of progress that Russia and the
West have even agreed to a framework for such a conference. They were
previously at a deadlock over the issue of whether Assad or his
representatives could take part in the transition to a new Syrian
government. Putin has always insisted that the ruling regime must be at
the table, as well as Assad’s other major ally, Iran.
“Now in Moscow
there has appeared a tender hope that the West is finally starting to
hear what we’ve been telling them all along,” says Klimov. “This
conference will be where we can make real progress, if not a compromise,
then at least the conditions for a compromise.” And just in case it
falls apart, Russia is providing its ally with a radar-guided insurance
policy.
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