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Syria war begins sixth year as US, Russia pull the strings

The United States and Russia are pulling the strings in Syria's five-year war, experts say, pressuring opposing sides and leveraging rival regional powers to reach a settlement.
(FILES) This file photo taken on February 11, 2016 shows Syrian President Bashar al-Assad listening to a question during an exclusive interview with AFP in the capital Damascus.  Syrian President Bashar al-Assad pledged on MArch 1, 2016 to do his part to ensure a fragile ceasefire holds and offered "full amnesty" to rebels who hand in their weapons. / AFP / JOSEPH EID

(FILES) This file photo taken on February 11, 2016 shows Syrian President Bashar al-Assad listening to a question during an exclusive interview with AFP in the capital Damascus.<br />Syrian President Bashar al-Assad pledged on MArch 1, 2016 to do his part to ensure a fragile ceasefire holds and offered “full amnesty” to rebels who hand in their weapons. / AFP / JOSEPH EID

00The United States and Russia are pulling the strings in Syria’s five-year war, experts say, pressuring opposing sides and leveraging rival regional powers to reach a settlement.

As the conflict enters its sixth year, the embattled regime and fractured opposition are in Geneva for indirect peace talks hosted by United Nations peace envoy Staffan de Mistura.

But the real solution, experts say, is in Russian and American hands.

“The two great powers talk among themselves by phone or in meetings around the world. Then they inform their Syrian allies and de Mistura what they’ve decided,” says veteran opposition figure Haytham Manaa.

“Then, Russia and the US give the regional powers the red lines they’re not supposed to cross. The US bans the Turks from a ground incursion in Syria and asks the Saudis to stop sending arms. Russia does the same thing with Iran,” Manaa tells AFP.

Syria’s conflict began on March 15, 2011 with a peaceful protest movement calling for President Bashar al-Assad to step down.

But the uprising turned violent after the government launched a brutal crackdown on dissent, and its key players became the various armed forces — regime, opposition, jihadist, Kurdish — and their respective backers.

Russia and the United States have exerted their influence over opposing sides of the complex war to broker a landmark truce that has been holding since February 27.

– ‘Monopoly over Syria’ –
“The US and Russia have taken command of, and have a monopoly over, the Syrian issue,” says Joseph Bahout, a visiting scholar at the Carnegie Endowment in Washington.

Bassel Salloukh, political science professor at the Lebanese American University of Beirut, agrees.

“Indeed, what started as a non-violent movement demanding reforms metamorphosed into an overlapping domestic, regional, and international struggle over Syria,” Salloukh says.

He expects that “the strategic interests of Russia and the US will determine the shape of the settlement in Syria rather than the aspirations of its peoples.”

Both the US and Russia were hesitant to become involved in a conflict as complex and unpredictable as Syria.

“The notion that we could have… changed the equation on the ground there was never true,” US President Barack Obama has told The Atlantic magazine reporter Jeffrey Goldberg.

When the United States did finally get militarily involved in Syria in September 2014, it was as part of a bombing campaign against the Islamic State group.

One year later, Russia launched its own air war backing Assad after a devastating string of losses for the regime in the spring and summer of 2015.

Moscow’s intervention was a major turning point for pro-Assad forces, shoring up their positions in the south, centre, and north.

“Moscow long believed that the regime would pull through on its own. It’s Tehran, the regime’s other ally, that sounded the alarm,” a foreign diplomat in Damascus tells AFP.

“Iranian officials went to Moscow to tell the Russians that if they didn’t intervene immediately, the regime would collapse,” the diplomat says.

– ‘New world order’ –
“Asking the Syrian actors to agree has proven unsuccessful… because their ideological and territorial disagreements are so profound,” says Joshua Landis, director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma.

“But all actors are so entirely dependent on their sponsors that they must comply with the wishes of their armourers.”

But Russian and American leverage over warring parties in Syria has its limits.

About half of Syrian territory is controlled by either IS or Al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra Front, complicating the current truce deal and a future settlement.

And Assad’s regime has occasionally spoken out of turn.

In an interview with AFP in February, Assad said he sought to regain control over all of Syria, spurring the Russian government to slap him down.

“Russia has invested very seriously in this crisis, politically, diplomatically and now also militarily,” Vitaly Churkin, Russia’s envoy to the UN, said at the time.

“Therefore we would like Assad also to respond.”

Fyodor Lukyanov, head of the Russian government-linked Council on Foreign and Defence Policy, says the Russian-US leadership are reminiscent of “the good old times.”

“Thirty years after the end of the Cold War, it turns out that the only actors capable of deciding and taking action are Moscow and Washington,” he says.

“Russia and the United States are indeed the only ones capable of pushing the warring parties towards peace,” Lukyanov tells AFP.

“Other countries will not, or cannot, do it. This is the new world order.”

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