Speaking
in Manila Wednesday, U.S. President Barack Obama praised Russian President
Vladimir Putin as a “constructive partner” in the international attempts to end
Syria’s civil war — a war that has allowed ISIS to thrive. In the
post-Paris war on terror, villains have been miraculously transformed into
friends and vice versa.
By: Thomas Walkom
The
Toronto Star,
Thurs
Nov 19 2015
War has a funny habit of
changing things. Just a month ago, Russian President Vladimir Putin was
routinely lambasted in the West as a thug and bully.
Now, in
light of the Paris attacks, the Russian President has miraculously been
transmogrified into a man of stature — an important ally in the battle against
Islamic State (ISIS) militants.
Speaking
in Manila Wednesday, U.S. President Barack Obama praised Putin as a
“constructive partner” in the international attempts to end Syria’s civil war —
a war that has allowed ISIS to thrive.
Obama
also said he’d “welcome” any Russian military efforts
in Syria aimed at ISIS.
Meanwhile
French President François Hollande is planning a pilgrimage to Moscow next week
where he is to meet Putin and forge a common front against ISIS.
Since the
ISIS-linked attacks in Paris Friday, France and Russia have been co-ordinating
their military efforts in Syria.
According
to news reports, so have Russia and the U.S.
In
effect, Hollande and Obama are signalling they need Russia, which since
September has been conducting its own massive military intervention in the
Syrian civil war.
At one
point, the New York Times calculated that Russia was conducting as many air
strikes in one day as the entire U.S-led coalition did in a month.
Almost no
one on the international stage talks any more of Russia’s illegal intervention
in Ukraine.
Except of
course Canada. Perhaps Prime Minister Justin Trudeau didn’t get the latest
memo. Or perhaps he’s putting principle over practicality. Or perhaps he’s
trying to stay politically onside with Canada’s vocal Ukrainian community.
But when
he met Putin briefly at the G20 economic summit in Turkey last weekend, Trudeau
didn’t remark on either the Paris outrage or Syria.
As he
later told reporters, he instead chastised Putin, telling him that “Russia’s
interference in Ukraine must cease.”
This was
the position that Trudeau took during the election campaign, when he dismissed
Putin as a “bully.”
And it
echoed the language of former prime minister Stephen Harper, who made headlines
last year after he told Putin at an international meeting: “I guess I’ll shake
your hand but I have only one thing to say to you: You need to get out of
Ukraine.”
At that
meeting of world leaders, Putin was so isolated he had to eat lunch by himself.
Now world
leaders are lining up to break bread with the autocratic Russian president.
But Putin
isn’t the only one undergoing the process of re-definition. Russia’s client,
Syrian dictator Basher Assad, is no longer routinely dismissed by the West as a
monster
Few
praise Assad. But there seems to be a general recognition that nothing useful
can be accomplished in Syria without his involvement.
Other
former villains on the road to redemption include Iran, which commands much of
the ground war in Iraq against ISIS and backs Assad.
Hezbollah,
the Lebanese anti-Israeli militia, is also a de facto ally in the struggle
against the Islamic State. But I doubt that any Western leader will ever admit
it.
Conversely,
the war with ISIS is subtly redefining the West’s friends. Turkey is a
long-time NATO member and — on paper at least — a staunch ally.
But it
spends much of its time bombing or shelling Kurdish fighters in Iraq and Syria
— including those fighting ISIS.
Canada is
training Kurdish fighters. Trudeau has promised to send more military advisers
to help in this task.
Yet the
Kurdish factions fighting ISIS include one linked to a group that Canada
officially regards as terrorist.
Finally,
the Saudis. On paper they, too, are staunch allies of the West. But Saudi
Arabia is more interested in bombing rebels in Yemen that it views as Iranian
proxies than it is in combating ISIS.
Money
from wealthy Saudis is said to have helped finance ISIS. A 2009 U.S. State
Department memo later released by Wikileaks said that donors in Saudi Arabia
constituted “the most significant source of funding to Sunni terrorist groups
worldwide.”
We claim
to know who the enemies are in this latest iteration of the war on terror.
But who exactly are our
friends?
_________________________________________________________
Thomas Walkom, Toronto Star national affairs columnist, writes on political economy. The winner of two national newspaper awards (foreign reporting and column writing), he was the Star’s Queen’s Park columnist for eight years. Before that, he wrote for the Globe and Mail - first as an Ottawa parliamentary reporter, then as Tokyo bureau chief. He has a PhD in economics from the University of Toronto and is author of Rae Days: the rise and follies of the NDP, a book on Ontario’s first New Democratic Party government, that managed to make the best sellers’ list for about five minutes. His column appears in the Toronto Star Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday. Reach him at 416-869-4570.
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