James M. Dorsey
Middle Eastern battlegrounds are alive and kicking even though rivals seek to balance contentious relations.
Take efforts by the United Arab Emirates, and more recently Saudi Arabia, to bring Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in from the cold in a bid to drive a wedge between Syria and Iran and address numerous repercussions from the more than decade-long brutal war he waged to keep himself in power.
Sanctioned by the United States and Europe, Assad was also a pariah in the Arab world after the 22-member Arab League suspended Damascus’s membership in response to his conduct in the war. A meeting of the League’s foreign ministers decided on Sunday to readmit Syria.
With sanctions and international isolation failing to topple Assad or moderate his policies, the UAE and Saudi Arabia hope engagement will be more productive.
That hasn’t prevented the UAE from continuing to counter the influence of Turkey and Iran in Syria, two countries with which it has formally buried its hatchets.
In the latest round, Mazlum Abdi — the commander-in-chief of the U.S.-backed, predominantly Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), who is also known as Mazloum Kobani — reportedly traveled last month to Abu Dhabi to seek UAE assistance in negotiating an agreement with the Assad government.
The SDF played a crucial role in helping the United States defeat the Islamic State in Syria.
Abdi was accompanied by Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) leader Bafel Talabani. The PUK is one of two major rival factions in Iraqi Kurdistan.
Emirati officials confirmed Abdi’s visit but denied reports that he met with UAE national security adviser Tahnoun bin Zayed al Nahyan.
The UAE is concerned that further engagement with the Kurds could strain relations with Assad.
Abdi’s visit came just days after a Turkish drone targeted him as he was traveling in northern Syria with three U.S. military personnel in a PUK convoy.
Kurdish officials read the drone attack and an almost simultaneous Turkish ban on flights from Sulaimaniyah in Iraqi Kurdistan, a PUK stronghold, as a warning against involving the UAE in Kurdish affairs.
Turkey said its airspace was closed due to increased activity of the outlawed Kurdish Workers Party, or PKK, in Sulaimaniyah. Turkey asserts that Abdi’s SDF is the Syrian wing of the PKK.
The PKK has been waging a decades-long intermittent guerrilla war for greater Kurdish rights in Turkey.
The attack on Abdi was part of a relentless Turkish drone campaign designed to weaken, if not destroy, the Kurdish-led Autonomous Administration in North and East Syria. It was also intended to facilitate the return of some four million Syrian refugees in Turkey, which hosts the world’s largest Syrian refugee community.
Thousands of Turkish troops were dispatched to northern Syria to support the campaign.
The attack likely reinforced Abdi’s fear that the combination of uncertainty about the U.S. commitment to the Kurds, a potential rapprochement between Turkey and Syria that would involve a withdrawal of Turkish troops from northern Syria, and a restoration of Assad’s control of Kurdish areas will put the Kurds at risk.
Even so, the Kurdish administration has been reaching out to the Assad government since 2019, when the Trump administration first announced it was withdrawing U.S. troops from Syria, essentially abandoning the SDF and the Kurds to their fate. Due to bipartisan pressure in Congress, Trump subsequently reversed his decision.
In response, in a deal brokered by Russia, the Kurds allowed Syrian troops to deploy along the border with Turkey to deter a new Turkish military offensive.
Assad has demanded a return to the situation that prevailed in northern Syria before the civil war’s outbreak as a condition for a rapprochement between Ankara and Damascus.
Abdi’s concerns were likely heightened last week when the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, and Iraq joined their Syrian counterpart to demand the restoration of the Assad government’s sovereignty in all of Syria and an end to operations by armed groups, militant organizations, and all foreign forces in Syria.
Assad wants to see an end to foreign influence in Syria, which by his lights includes the presence of some 900 U.S. military personnel in the country, U.S. support for the SDF, and the deployment of thousands of Turkish troops in the north.
A UAE-mediated agreement between the Kurds and Assad would facilitate both a Turkish withdrawal from Syria and Assad’s rehabilitation.
Russia has facilitated talks between senior Turkish, Syrian, and Iranian officials to achieve the same goal. However, the officials have disagreed on the terms for a meeting between Assad and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Assad has made a meeting conditional on Turkey’s willingness to withdraw its military from northern Syria and restore the situation that prevailed before the Syrian war. For now, that seems unlikely.
On the campaign trail in advance of presidential and parliamentary elections on May 14, Erdogan used the Kurds as a foil to prepare the ground for a possible judicial coup should he fail to be reelected.
“My nation will never hand over this country to someone who becomes president with the support of Qandil,” Erdogan said in a reference to PKK bases in Iraq’s Qandil mountains and Kurdish support for his opposition.
Alongside the Russian and Emirati moves, Erdogan’s posturing suggests that improved relations between rival states have yet to do much, if anything, to resolve the region’s powder kegs.
The same applies to Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Egypt, which continue to maneuver in conflict areas such as Sudan, Syria, Yemen, and Iraq. The jockeying also demonstrates the risks inherent in fighting proxy wars by supporting armed non-state or renegade state actors, like the various Kurdish groups, the Houthis in Yemen, and the Rapid Support Forces in Sudan.
The risks run from reducing conflict to a zero-sum game to proxies exercising their agency and weakening state institutions. As evident with Turkey and the Kurds, recent de-escalation in the Middle East highlights those risks.
Assad was likely strengthened in his resolve to get Turkish troops out of Syria and restore his control over the Kurds by last week’s visit to Damascus by Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, the first by an Iranian head of state since the outbreak of the Syrian civil war in 2011. Iran has supported Assad throughout the war.
A Jordanian plan to return Syria to the Arab fold “step by step” notes that “current conditions” enable “Iran to continue imposing its economic and military influence on the Syrian regime and several vital parts of Syria by taking advantage of the people’s suffering to recruit militias.”
The paper warns that “Iran’s proxies are becoming stronger in the main areas, including the southern region, and the drug trade generates significant income for these groups while posing an increasing threat to the region and beyond.”
Raisi opted for Damascus ahead of seeking to deepen Iran’s China-mediated rapprochement with Saudi Arabia by honoring Saudi King Salman’s invitation to visit the kingdom.
Raisi hoped to fortify Tehran’s relations with Damascus by tightening economic cooperation. His foreign, defense, oil, transport, and telecommunications ministers accompanied him.
In the end, the principle of “The king is dead, long live the king” applies to de-escalation in the Middle East. De-escalation may dial tensions down a notch and help manage conflicts to ensure they do not spin out of control. It offers no resolution and allows open wounds like Kurdish aspirations to fester.
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