"Before Our Eyes"
The consequences of Resolution 2118
Although
the French Foreign Minister, Laurent Fabius, loudly praised himself for
the vote on Resolution 2118 concerning chemical weapons in Syria, this
text marks both the victory of Russia and that of President Bashar al
-Assad. The vote carries within itself two consequences that permanently
ruin the Franco-British claims on the country.
Voltaire Network
| Damascus (Syria)
- CSTO troops stand ready to deploy in Syria if the Security Council so requests.
Once past the amazement of the U.S. spinout in
Syria, a new political situation is emerging corresponding point by
point to plans developed jointly by Russia and Syria in June 2012, that
is to say, before the Geneva 1 Conference. At the time, the Kremlin
looked forward to negotiating an agreement with Washington to both solve
the Syrian crisis and allow Obama to get out of his stifling huddle
with Israel. But the plan, which would have become a project of shared
governance in the Middle East, assumed the presence of Russian troops in
Syria.
General Hassan Tourekmani had proposed at the time that troops
interpositioned and mandated by the United Nations be deployed by the
Collective Security Treaty Organization ("Russian NATO"), since there
already was a United Nations Force on Syrian soil charged with observing
disengagement in the Golan.
Given U.S. hesitation, the project was stalled, but not abandoned. However, the solution to the chemical weapons crisis opens new possibilities.
First, Resolution 2118 does not just support the Russian plan to destroy the remains of the Syrian chemical program of the 80’s, it implicitly requires the maintenance of President Bashar al -Assad in power for at least one year so that he can supervise this destruction. So, not only do the major Western powers no longer demand his departure, but they now favour an extension of his mandate and a postponement of the upcoming presidential election.
- The meeting of heads of state of the CSTO was preceded by a meeting of foreign ministers. Russian Sergey Lavrov explained the international situation regarding Syria. He stressed that if the jihadists present there were not neutralized on site, they would soon be transferred to other countries, notably in Central Asia.
In this perspective, the 2500 men of the CSTO who must participate in maneuvers in Kazakhstan from October 7 to 11, will perform a simulation.
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