Bloomberg Businessweek - USA (2019-10-14)

(Antfer) #1
◼ POLITICS Bloomberg Businessweek October 14, 2019

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IVAN STEPHENS/GDA/AP PHOTO. DATA: INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF WAR

● Mexico’sgroundbreakingrulingpartyis suffering
throughanidentitycrisis

Formostof its fiveshortyears inexistence,
Mexico’sMorenaparty,shortfortheMovimiento
RegeneraciónNacional,hasrevolvedaroundone
politician:AndrésManuelLópezObrador.AMLO,
ashe’sknown,treatedthepartyashispersonal
platform,mademostdecisionsunchallenged,and
neglectedtobuildanyinstitutionalframeworkto
sustainit.InJuly 2018 hewaselectedpresidentina
landslide,receiving53%ofthepopularvote,more
thantwicehisnearestrivalandthemostsincean
oppositioncandidatefirstwonMexico’spresidency
in2000.Evenmoreremarkable,Morenaandits
allieswonmajoritiesinbothhousesofCongress,
surprisingevensomeoftheparty’sownleaders.
Now,almosta yearintoitsdominanceofthe
government,Morenais sufferingthrougha period
offierceinfightingaheadofitsfirstscheduled

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THEBOTTOMLINE A TurkishinvasionofnorthernSyriaisn’t
idealforPutinasheseekstoendtheconflictontermsfavorableto
Russia,butit’sbetterthanhavingU.S.forcesthereinstead.

● Dispositionofforces
in Syria
◼Proposed“safezone”
◼Kurdishforces
◼Syriangovernment
◼Syrianrebels
◼Al-Qaeda-dominated
◼Turkish-dominated

Idlib

TURKEY

IRAQ

Damascus

withdrawalofU.S.forcesfromSyria,onlyto
changecoursemonthslaterandagreetokeep
sometroopsintheregionafterencounteringoppo-
sitionfromthesecurityestablishmentandfellow
Republicans,especiallySenatorLindseyGraham.
WhiletheU.S.hadabandonedselectcommand
postsbythetimeTurkeybeganitsoffensiveinSyria
onOct.9,it wasstillunclearwhetherit wouldfol-
lowthroughwitha completedrawdown.
A completeU.S.pulloutwouldremoveRussia’s
onlymilitaryequalfromthecontesttoshape
Syria’sfuture,McGurksays.Moscowwouldthen
havetodealonlywithTurkey,a weakerandmore
compliantregionalplayer,asit workstoachieveits
primarygoal:a politicalsettlementthatreturnsthe
entirecountrytothecontrolofitsally,President
Basharal-Assad.
Erdogan’splanshavebeenlong-gestating.On
Sept. 24 attheUnitedNationsGeneralAssembly
inNewYork,hedescribeda plantomoveasmany
as 2 millionSyrianrefugees—thereare3.7million
registeredinTurkey—intoa 30-kilometer-deep,
480-kilometer-long“safezone”hewantstocreate
intheswathofthecountryclaimedbyKurds.The
vastmajorityofSyrianswho’vefledsincethecivil
warbeganin 2011 areethnicArabs,meaningthepro-
posedpopulationredistributionwouldtransform
theterritory’sethniccomposition.
TheareaofSyriacontrolledbytheU.S.and
itsKurdishalliesstretchesabout 320 kilometers
(200  miles) south from the proposed Turkish
safe zone and includes Raqqa, the former Islamic
State headquarters, and most of Syria’s oil and gas
resources. Turkish control of the northeast would
represent a setback for Russia’s goal of reunifying
Syria under Assad’s control, says Vladimir Frolov,
a former Russian diplomat and foreign policy ana-
lyst in Moscow. “But on the whole, the Turks are
better for us than the Americans.”
Frolov says it’s likely that in exchange for green-
lighting a new Turkish incursion, Moscow has
extracted a commitment from Erdogan to allow
Russia-backed Syrian government forces to begin
a final assault on Idlib, the last major area of Syria
still controlled by rebel forces, some of which are
affiliated with al-Qaeda. Since September 2018, Idlib
has been subject to what amounts to a cease-fire
agreement brokered between Russia and Turkey.
Addressing the annual Valdai conference in
Sochi in late September, Russian Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov gave a by-now familiar indictment
of alleged U.S. irresponsibility and inconsis-
tency across the Middle East. He also appeared to
approve Turkish military action while suggesting a
more limited scope for it. In a question-and-answer

session,LavrovsaidTurkeyhadtheright,under
a 1998agreementwithSyria,topursueterrorists
upto 5 kilometers across the border. Asked by
Bloomberg News if that might be accompanied by a
Syrian government assault on Idlib, Lavrov replied
that“Idlibshouldbeconsideredseparately.”
KremlinspokesmanDmitryPeskovsaidonan
Oct.7 conference call that Russia understands
Turkey’s need to ensure its security but hopes Syrian
territorial integrity will be the priority. “All foreign
forces that are in Syria on an illegitimate basis should
leave,” he said.
So long as the U.S. gets its troops out of the way,
“Erdogan’s operation against the Kurds could have
a positive effect for Russia,” says Ruslan Mamedov,
a Middle East analyst at the Russian International
Affairs Council, a Moscow-based research group
founded by the Kremlin. It “will make Kurds real-
ize that they need to make a deal with Damascus.”
�Marc Champion and Henry Meyer
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