Conflict has returned to Idlib province. At the end of April, the Syrian government launched a series of attacks on targets across the besieged province, assisted by Russian fighter jets. The assault on Idlib is significant and serious; hundreds have been injured and dozens have died.
Yet it is not on the scale imagined last year when Turkey and Russia agreed on a de-escalation deal. That is because this assault on Idlib has a political rather than a purely military purpose. Rather than seeking to reclaim the entirety of the province, the Syrian government is seeking something more limited but more specific – mainly, the return of two important highways.
There is also another goal behind the scenes: to drive a wedge between Turkey and Russia.
The assault on Idlib began as a response to attacks from within the province on the Syrian army. The longer it goes on – it is now into the fifth week – the more Turkey suspects that something else lies behind it. In a conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin two weeks ago, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan reportedly complained that the Syrian regime was seeking to “sabotage Turkish-Russian cooperation in Idlib” and undermine the “spirit” of the Astana peace talks.
On that point, Erdogan is probably right. The scale of the conflict appears carefully calibrated: too small actually to retake the province, but too large and too widespread merely to halt attacks across the Idlib border. The attacks are provocative. Using a combination of shelling and air strikes, the Damascus regime has destroyed schools and hospitals, sending more than 150,000 people fleeing north to safety, according to the United Nations. Most of these are resettling in areas now under Turkish control, adding to the pressure on Ankara. The Syrian regime has also shelled Turkish military observation posts inside Idlib, injuring Turkish soldiers.
Using a combination of shelling and air strikes, the Damascus regime has destroyed schools and hospitals, sending more than 150,000 people fleeing north to safety, according to the United Nations. Most of these are resettling in areas now under Turkish control, adding to the pressure on Ankara
If Damascus does have an end goal in mind, it is most likely this: to force a resolution on Idlib. That will not come by retaking the province but by forcing Ankara to follow through on the de-escalation deal and clear the province of militant fighters. Ankara is resisting because the province remains the last stronghold of jihadist groups, and fighting them will be immensely costly. But it may have no alternative.
Faced with the choice of hundreds of thousands of Syrians fleeing across its border or sending troops and Turkish-backed Syrian fighters into Idlib, the latter alternative is probably easier. At a minimum, inciting conflict in Idlib forces the problem on to government desks in Moscow and Ankara, where it has too often been ignored. But it also drives a wedge between Turkey and Russia by making Moscow face up to how Ankara has resisted fulfilling its part of their bargain.
The de-escalation deal signed between Russia and Turkey last September was meant to halt a complete assault on the province that would have put it back under the control of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. The fear was that such a serious assault would endanger thousands of lives and drive hundreds of thousands to seek refuge across the border in Turkey and onward into Europe. But part of that deal involved Turkey and the Turkish-backed Free Syrian Army clearing the province of heavy weapons, which they have been unable to do because the largest militant group in Idlib, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), refuses to disarm.
By removing the possibility of a full-scale attack, the deal condemned Idlib to a twilight existence, forgotten by many. Inside the province, militant groups vied for control and threatened and extorted the population, but Turkey’s attention was on the border regions and on Kurdish militant groups. Russia’s attention was elsewhere, too, and its burgeoning military relationship with Ankara meant political disagreements over Idlib were put on the back burner.
For Damascus, however, the status quo was not enough. Retaking Idlib would, of course, have high propaganda value, consolidating the message both at home and abroad that the conflict was over. But there is also a practical reason. Damascus wants the return of two critical highways, both of which pass through Idlib. Without them, economic life in Damascus and Aleppo is strangled.
By restarting the conflict – or, more accurately, taking the bait offered by militant attacks – the Assad regime has been able to bounce its Russian allies into joining in. It was only two days before the attacks in Idlib restarted that Putin said a full-scale assault was “inadvisable.” There may also be an element of Russia seizing the opportunity to pressure Turkey.
But these conflicts can easily escalate. HTS has already shelled towns inside Latakia province, killing civilians. It has targeted the Russian air base at Khmeimim, whose security has always been a red line for Moscow.
In such an atmosphere, with civilians battered by air assaults and each side determined to retaliate, every act is an escalation. In the midst of a besieged province, with no way out for 3 million people, there is no such thing as a limited war.
This article was provided to Asia Times by Syndication Bureau, which holds copyright.

I needed to write you that bit of note in order to thank you very much yet again regarding the wonderful opinions you’ve shown in this article. It is really unbelievably open-handed of people like you giving easily what exactly many individuals would’ve offered as an electronic book to help make some profit for their own end, most notably seeing that you could possibly have done it in the event you wanted. The points likewise served to provide a easy way to know that other individuals have the identical zeal just like my own to realize very much more regarding this matter. I believe there are a lot more fun situations in the future for those who examine your blog.
whoah this blog is excellent i love reading your articles. Keep up the great work! You know, many people are looking around for this info, you can help them greatly.
I’d perpetually want to be update on new posts on this site, saved to favorites! .
I went over this internet site and I conceive you have a lot of fantastic info, saved to my bookmarks (:.
Hello my loved one! I wish to say that this post is amazing, nice written and come with approximately all important infos. I?¦d like to peer extra posts like this .
I am extremely impressed with your writing skills as well as with the layout on your blog. Is this a paid theme or did you modify it yourself? Anyway keep up the nice quality writing, it’s rare to see a great blog like this one these days..
Good write-up, I’m normal visitor of one’s blog, maintain up the excellent operate, and It’s going to be a regular visitor for a lengthy time.
I’d always want to be update on new content on this web site, bookmarked! .
My programmer is trying to persuade me to move to .net from PHP. I have always disliked the idea because of the expenses. But he’s tryiong none the less. I’ve been using Movable-type on a number of websites for about a year and am anxious about switching to another platform. I have heard excellent things about blogengine.net. Is there a way I can transfer all my wordpress posts into it? Any kind of help would be greatly appreciated!
I conceive you have observed some very interesting points, thankyou for the post.
You made some decent points there. I did a search on the issue and found most guys will go along with with your site.
I am continuously browsing online for posts that can help me. Thx!
Wonderful work! This is the type of info that should be shared around the internet. Shame on Google for not positioning this post higher! Come on over and visit my website . Thanks =)
In this great scheme of things you actually secure a B- for hard work. Exactly where you lost everybody was first in the particulars. As people say, the devil is in the details… And it could not be more true in this article. Having said that, permit me say to you precisely what did work. The writing is certainly extremely engaging and that is probably the reason why I am taking the effort in order to comment. I do not really make it a regular habit of doing that. 2nd, despite the fact that I can notice a jumps in reason you make, I am not certain of just how you seem to connect your points which help to make the actual final result. For right now I will subscribe to your issue however trust in the foreseeable future you connect the dots better.
I went over this web site and I conceive you have a lot of wonderful info, bookmarked (:.
Very nice article and right to the point. I don’t know if this is truly the best place to ask but do you people have any thoughts on where to hire some professional writers? Thanks in advance 🙂
I was reading some of your content on this site and I conceive this web site is really informative! Keep on putting up.
naturally like your web site but you have to check the spelling on several of your posts. Many of them are rife with spelling issues and I find it very bothersome to tell the truth nevertheless I will definitely come back again.
Hi there! This post could not be written any better! Reading this post reminds me of my good old room mate! He always kept talking about this. I will forward this page to him. Fairly certain he will have a good read. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you for any other magnificent post. Where else could anybody get that kind of information in such a perfect method of writing? I’ve a presentation subsequent week, and I am on the search for such info.