Studi Strategici ed Intelligence… for dummies

La Siria e la guerra per procura in Medio-Oriente

mag
22


Mentre il BND tedesco, secondo fonti di stampa, avrebbe modificato la propria analisi sul conflitto siriano la notizia del sempre maggiore coinvolgimento degli Hezbollah negli scontri mi dà la possibilità di segnalare questo spunto di riflessione di John Alterman, del CSIS di Washington. Egli evidenzia come in Medio-Oriente sia ritornata l’epoca delle “guerre per procura” e non solo con riferimento al caso siriano.

[...] It is more accurate, however, to see the region entering an age of proxy wars, on a scale that is likely to dwarf the Arab Cold War that pitted Saudi Arabia against Egypt in the 1950s and 1960s.
While Iran and Saudi Arabia are major antagonists in the unfolding battles, they are not the only ones. The emerging wars are genuinely multipolar, and U.S. policy and practice will need to adapt to this emerging reality.
The most active proxy war is in Syria, where a range of regional and global powers seeks to shape the future of the country. What is surprising is not so much the scale of that assistance as its diversity. Support flows from governments, institutions, and individuals to a dizzying array of actors. Some are principally armed and others are principally political; some are disciplined and others seem determined to sow terror.
More than two years into the conflict, there is remarkably little strategic coordination among the parties supporting Syrian opposition forces, contributing to sustained disarray and infighting among the forces themselves.
Support does not follow clear sectarian or religious lines. Saudi Arabia and Qatar, two Wahhabi states, appear to support different clients in Syria. The Saudi government fears trained and networked jihadi fighters flowing back into the kingdom as they did after the Afghan war in the 1980s, and it fears inspiring a politicized Islamist opposition. It acts with some caution in Syria, and this avowedly religious government appears to favor secular nationalists.
Qatar appears confident that a jihadi wave will not threaten the emirate and is casting bets widely to hasten Bashar al-Assad’s fall. The United Arab Emirates, deeply distrustful of political Islam of any stripe, is among the most cautious of the Gulf states, seeking to check Iran without supporting Islamist fighters. Iran, of course, is betting heavily on the Assad government, while rumors spread that Russia is looking for a solution that preserves Syria’s integrity even if it does not preserve Assad. Western countries have their own preferences and red lines, and each has its own clients.
The proxy war extends far beyond Syria, however. Egypt’s major political parties reportedly receive extensive outside funding, with Qatar heavily bankrolling the Muslim Brotherhood and Saudi Arabia reportedly supporting salafi parties.
Among a range of Arab forces, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates invested especially heavily in the effort to depose Muammar el-Qaddafi in Libya, supporting different troops on the ground under the protection of NATO airstrikes. They backed different parties in 2011 and continue to do so.
There are many antagonists in tiny Bahrain—with only 600,000 citizens—but Saudi Arabia and Iran are the most active, supporting the Sunni and Shiʽite communities respectively. [...]

Una situazione molto complessa, insomma, che necessita di un’attenta analisi e di una puntuale pianificazione.

22 maggio 2013 - 2:53 pm | by | 1 Comment »
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Attacco aereo israeliano alla Siria

mag
04


Secondo la CNN Israele avrebbe compiuto un raid aereo sul territorio siriano, attaccando un deposito o un trasporto di armi:

[...] Ma ovviamente si tratta di informazioni preliminari. Non c’è infatti neppure certezza di quando sia avvenuto il raid. Si è parlato di giovedì o venerdì. Uno sviluppo comunque importante che dimostra come il conflitto rischi di allargarsi coinvolgendo altri attori. Israele, in passato, ha già sferrato incursioni in territorio siriano. Operazioni tese a distruggere equipaggiamenti importanti, missili e tecnologia che il regime di Assad aveva intenzione di trasferire ai miliziani filo-iraniani dell’Hezbollah. Il movimento libanese è un alleato chiave di Damasco ed ha mandato i suoi guerriglieri a combattere al fianco del regime. Un aiuto interessato perché è attraverso la Siria che l’Iran invia rifornimenti militari all’Hezbollah. Più volte il governo israeliano ha indicato che sarebbe intervenuto per impedire il passaggio di armi ritenute «strategiche». Gerusalemme teme che Bashar Assad voglia consegnare missili terra-terra a lungo raggio e altri apparati ai miliziani libanesi. [...]

Aggiornamento (05.05.2013): “Nuovo raid di Israele in Siria: colpite basi militari a Damasco“.

4 maggio 2013 - 6:12 am | by | 11 Comments »
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Un po’ di rassegna stampa internazionale

set
17

international media


Breve raccolta di qualche articolo interessante pubblicato negli ultimi giorni nella stampa internazionale:

- “Armada of British naval power massing in the Gulf as Israel prepares an Iran strike” (The Telegraph);

- “Israeli Leader Makes Case Against Iran on U.S. TV” (New York Times);

- “Audacious Raid on NATO Base Shows Taliban’s Reach” (New York Times);

- “Making Sense of the U.S. Oil Boom” (WSJ);

- “Iran acknowledges elite troops in Syria” (FT);

- “Foreign policy makes campaign comeback” (FT);

- “Top Chinese bank targets Europe” (FT);

- “China builds its own military-industrial complex” (Reuters);

- “Panetta seeks closer Sino-U.S. ties as China military expands” (Reuters);

17 settembre 2012 - 9:30 am | by | No Comments »
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Scenari: la risposta iraniana ad un attacco israeliano

giu
06


In un “Policy Note” del WINEP Michael Eisenstadt e Michael Knights valutano le probabili reazioni iraniane ad un attacco israeliano: “Beyond Worst-Case Analysis: Iran’s Likely Responses to an Israeli Preventive Strike“.

Per un’analisi più generale sulla questione nucleare iraniana: “Gulf Kaleidoscope: Reflections on the Iranian Challenge“, uno studio del CSIS curato da Jon Alterman (Zbigniew Brzezinski Chair in Global Security and Geostrategy).

6 giugno 2012 - 9:00 am | by | 1 Comment »
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Aspettando il report della AIEA sull’Iran: un punto di vista israeliano

nov
06


L’Institute for National Security Studies di Tel Aviv ha appena pubblicato il suo ultimo Strategic Assessment.
Nel numero di ottobre, tra gli altri saggi, ce n’è uno di Ephraim Asculai sul programma nucleare iraniano.
Scrive il ricercatore:

Since the world is divided on the ways of preventing Iran from becoming a full-fledged nuclear state, and since the current Unites States administration is reluctant to take any overt action other than sanctions, prevention of this situation hinges on the political decisions of the Iranian regime.Most likely in the short range, the Iranian regime will assume a posture of ambiguity, while slowly increasing the visibility of its potential for acquiring a military nuclear capability. Without Iran taking overt military action against other states, it is difficult to foresee that the US or any other state or group of states will take military action against Iran. Thus, it is imperative that Israel’s government prepare for the new developing situation.
Today’s reality indicates that regime change is the only way to materially change the situation in Iran, with persuasion of the new regime to become a rational member of the international community much in the way that Japan, for example, is accepted. Although a legitimate wish, it is too much to hope for a complete dismantlement of the military nuclear project, following the pattern of South Africa in the 1990s. Israel must assume that this will not happen, and must prepare itself to cope with all possible scenarios emanating from the eventuality of a nuclear-capable Iran. The better it is prepared, the better it will be able to cope with the situation.

6 novembre 2011 - 11:30 pm | by | 11 Comments »
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