rsn | ussian
President Vladimir Putin is on a geopolitical roll these days, despite
US and EU sanctions against some of his closest associates. On Monday he
recognized Crimea in the wake of its referendum on secession from the
Ukraine, despite Western warnings not to do so, and despite severe
questions about the accuracy of the statistics put out by Crimea’s rump
authorities concerning the alleged turnout and supposed overwhelming
vote in favor of seceding.
Less noticed was the advance on Sunday of Hizbullah fighters and Syrian troops into Yabroud,
the last territory that had been held by rebel forces on the Lebanon
border. The rebels in that part of Syria have now been cut off from
supply lines in Lebanon, a major victory for the regime. From Yabroud,
fighters had been able to infiltrate Eastern Ghouta near Damascus, but
that tactic has now been forestalled. Increasingly also in control of
Homs, the Syrian army appears to be gradually extending its control
north toward Hama and then Aleppo. There is no early prospect of victory
by the regime, which is stretched thin, but it has inflicted a series
of heavy blows on rebel forces in the past 8 months. Some of the
comeback of the Bashar al-Assad regime, which seemed doomed only a year
ago, derives from money and weapons supplied by Putin.
In the current Sunni-Shiite struggles in the east of
the Arab world, Putin has in essence made Russia a patron of the Shiites
just as it is a patron of the Eastern Orthodox Christians.
2 comments:
I believe the US has the upper hand for at least the next ten maybe twenty years.
It's all a question of scale brah. I don't get overly excited by an economy around the size of Norway or Holland showing out, no matter how many nuclear weapons they have. At the end of the day, and notwithstanding the perfidy of the 20th century in which Churchill and Roosevelt ROYALLY screwed over Stalin - Russia is more fundamentally a western culture and will NOT take existential sides with the Han. France and Germany have a rough patch just beyond that signpost up ahead, but France is already hand in glove with the U.S. in its Africom operations, and Germany and the U.S. swapped DNA a looooong time ago.
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