As Syria diplomacy fails, Russia opts for 'total war': analysts

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Convinced that negotiations with Washington are now futile, Russia has decided to throw its military might behind the Syrian regime's drive to recapture Aleppo, analysts say.

After a short-lived truce collapsed, Russian warplanes have joined Syrian aerial and artillery bombardment of the rebel-held east of the city, pounding it with unprecedented ferocity.

"Russia has decided to go all out because it no longer believes in the possibility of collaborating with the United States in Syria," said Fabrice Balanche, a Syria expert at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

"It's total war, because Moscow doesn't believe that this country (US) is capable of doing anything in Syria, whether for lack of will or ability."

After intensive negotiations between US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov, a much-awaited ceasefire agreement went into effect in Syria on September 12.

But it fell apart within a week, with each side blaming the other for the latest failure in a conflict that has cost more than 300,000 lives since March 2011.

The deal called for the entry of humanitarian aid, particularly to besieged areas like opposition-held Aleppo, and for rebels to distance themselves from jihadists such as Fateh al-Sham Front, the former Al-Qaeda affiliate once known as Al-Nusra Front.

Neither commitment was achieved, and the ceasefire has given way to some of the most intense violence in rebel-held Aleppo since it was divided by fighting in mid-2012.

By backing government forces in Aleppo, Moscow seeks "to close that important pocket of rebels' resistance at last", said Igor Sutyagin, a Russia expert at the Royal United Services Institute in London.

 

- Russia seeks 'decisive victory' -

 Outside Aleppo, only Idlib province remains a major opposition stronghold.

Russia intends "to give Assad a decisive victory" and to "eliminate any alternative, while depriving the opposition of what it considers its 'capital'", said Syria expert Thomas Pierret of the University of Edinburgh.

"An uprising chased from Aleppo will be relegated to nothing more than a peripheral insurrection," he added.

Russia has long been a steadfast ally of Damascus, entering the conflict militarily last September to bolster Assad against rebels backed by Gulf nations and much of the West.

It has also provided key diplomatic cover at the United Nations.

But Moscow now seems closer than ever to the regime, having decided after some hesitation to support the Assad government's desire to retake Aleppo by force.

"The Russians are now more in line with the Syrian government's way of thinking," said Bassam Abu Abdullah, director of the Damascus Centre for Strategic Studies.

"Russia was focused on the political solution, so it began dialoguing with the Gulf and the US and other countries, but it became clear that this is not possible," added Abdullah, who is close to the government.

A victory in Aleppo would put Assad's regime in a strong position ahead of any new negotiations, which UN peace envoy Staffan de Mistura has continued to seek despite the worsening conditions.

 

- An alliance of 'necessity' -

 "Without Aleppo, Assad is nothing but a half-president. To really govern, he needs Aleppo," said Balanche.

Assad already controls most of the cities he considers key in Syria -- Damascus, central Hama and Homs -- with only Aleppo remaining.

"The Russians and the Syrians would like to take control of all of Aleppo and only afterwards negotiate with the opposition," said foreign policy analyst Fyodor Lukyanov.

"Aleppo plays a key role" because the future "depends on the state of the front line that separates the fighting parties. And that line must be stable."

The new assault has been devastating, with more than 150 people killed in the city since the army announced its offensive there late Thursday. 

The heavy bombing has raised some comparisons with Moscow's strategy against Chechen separatists in the 1990s, which saw the capital Grozny nearly completely destroyed by air power and artillery.

But analysts said the devastation was not yet on a similar scale.

"Russia's military tactics in Aleppo are nothing like those used in Grozny," said Alexandre Golts, an independent military expert.

"In Aleppo, the civilian deaths are in the dozens, if you believe the Western media, not hundreds like in Chechnya. It isn't comparable."

Russia's ramped-up military involvement in Syria has drawn stinging criticism from the United States and others, but analysts say Moscow's alliance with Damascus is firm and founded on key shared interest.

"Assad can't do anything without Moscow, and Russia in turn knows that without Assad it will be chased from the Middle East," said Alexei Malachenko, a Russian Middle East specialist.

"It's a friendship of necessity.