The
Sunni fighters will be ranged against the Shi’ite forces of Assad which are
receiving support from the Lebanese Hezbollah.
This
development will probably be welcomed with glee by some in the West. Terrorist
groups fighting each other, what could be better? Let’s hope they kill each
other off.
Sober
analysis suggests exactly the opposite. Now the West loses whoever wins this
civil war – and it also loses if no-one wins and if the war drags on.
All
the current combatants are getting access to sophisticated weaponry. On Assad’s
side it comes from Russia desperate to keep its only Middle East ally in power,
while the rebels are being supplied and bankrolled by Sunni Arab states that
see this as a holy war against the hated Shi’ite oppressors.
If
the war ends the victors will keep their weapons and the vanquished will
probably be able to withdraw with theirs. Then all well-armed and battle-hardened
jihadists can get back to their core business of attacking the infidels.
An
indefinite conflict also bodes ill for the West. Tehreek-e-Taliban commanders
in Pakistan say they have already set up camps in rebel-held Syrian territory
where inexperienced volunteers receive their military training before being
sent to the front. They also act as rest and recreation areas and field
hospitals for treating the wounded.
Speaking
to Reuters, a prominent Pakistani author and expert on the Taliban, Ahmed
Rashid, said Tehreek-e-Taliban was now acting like a global jihadist with the
same agenda as al-Qaida.
“This
is a way, I suppose, to cement relationships with the Syrian militant groups
and to enlarge their sphere of influence,” Rashid said.
And
caught in the middle are millions of Syrian civilians, helpless as their
country and their futures descend into dust.
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