from where I'm standing in the west those are the very qualities that Russia lacks. No defamatory remarks here intended, I'm just laying out what I see to be the West's position at this time.
Those are qualities lacking in all the players; not just Russia. All the players are doing what they do for their own selfish self-interests; certainly not for the ordinary Syrians who will continue to pay the price. None have a monopoly on truth, honesty or justice. We know what Russia and Iran want. Now that it has failed to meet its objectives; what reason is there for U.S. troops on Syrian soil? Does the U.S. even have a realistic long term policy over Syria? With regards to Iran; does the U.S. intend to just parrot the Israeli and Gulf Arab line and hypocritically insist that it's just Iran that is responsible for the mess the region is in? Will the U.S. continue to be selective over which countries get away with war crimes and which don't?
Frankly, my sympathy is neither with the West or Russia but for ordinary Syrians caught up in the mess and who are just trying to survive. Not to mention the hell ordinary Yemenis are going through on a daily basis; pawns in a game played by outsiders.
During Putin's address to the nation he said after mentioning more of his latest WMD's; "perhaps now they will respect us"?
That was rhetoric/chest thumping done for a Russian audience. Rhetoric/chest thumping is also done by others.
I still say the only reason Russia got involved in the first place was to kick sand in the eye of the west. For no other reason. Yes there is a historic connection but Russia did not need Syria as an ally.
Let me ask you this : why is the West really in the Middle East? Why are there Western military bases in the region; for the sole benefit of the West and compliant local rulers? Does it really benefit the region as a whole? If the West pulls out, will the Iranians invade its neighbours [who have spent billions on Western arms]?
Russia is in Syria because it desires to increase its influence in the region; a place long dominated by the West. Like the West, Russia has its interests too. Whilst I don't agree with all that Russia does, I believe in giving credit when due - it was Russia that played a big role in preventing IS from taking over most of Syria. Irrespective of how many many strikes the USAF, USN and RAF conducted; it was Russia [with Iran] that [to use a cliche] put
''boots on the ground'' and played an instrumental role in pushing back IS.
Then one might fairly ask why did the US become involved? Well they were nearby at the time and supporting Iraq.
Look at it from another angle. With the Baathists gone and replaced by a western friendly Sunni government; everyone benefits. Practically the whole of the Arab world becomes Western friendly. Israel and the Gulf Arabs are happy, Russia loses a regional ally in a region already dominated by the West and Iran gets further isolated; as does Hezbollah. Instead of cordoning Saudi involvement in Yemen; why didn't the West insist that Saudi and its chums play a more active role taking on IS? Also, in Iraq it was Iran that got heavily involved first. For a long time the Iraqis were warning that the situation in Syria would spill over but the West hardly listened. Like the Russians in Syria; the Iranians played a key role in stopping IS's advance in Iraq. Together with Iraqi Shia militias; it was Iran and Hezbollah that stopped IS until a time when the regular Iraqi army got its act together.
Again, this support, IMHO, was an oxymoron as per my earlier post.
No it isn't. The problem is when a selective West imposes its kind of democracy on the locals and decides which ruler is a chum and which is not.
The search for truth in the rubble of Douma - and one doctor’s doubts over the chemical attack
''This is the story of a town called Douma, a ravaged, stinking place of smashed apartment blocks – and of an underground clinic whose images of suffering allowed three of the Western world’s most powerful nations to bomb Syria last week. There’s even a friendly doctor in a green coat who, when I track him down in the very same clinic, cheerfully tells me that the “gas” videotape which horrified the world – despite all the doubters – is perfectly genuine.''
''They talked about the Islamists under whom they had lived. They talked about how the armed groups had stolen civilian homes to avoid the Syrian government and Russian bombing. The Jaish el-Islam had burned their offices before they left, but the massive buildings inside the security zones they created had almost all been sandwiched to the ground by air strikes. A Syrian colonel I came across behind one of these buildings asked if I wanted to see how deep the tunnels were. I stopped after well over a mile when he cryptically observed that “this tunnel might reach as far as Britain”. Ah yes, Ms May, I remembered, whose air strikes had been so intimately connected to this place of tunnels and dust. And gas?''