Reality Check: ISIS Could Win

 

is-flagForeign policy experts have repeated the same sentence over and over: “There is no military solution in Syria.” Being professionally trained to automatically question and contradict any opinion held by a very large majority, I have trouble buying this.

Consider, for example, that nearly everyone in 1980 thought the Soviet Union was unstoppable and that nearly everyone in late 1999 agreed that technology stocks were a fabulous investment; we all know what happened in both of those cases. Similarly, if nearly everyone agrees that there is no military solution in Syria, I’m inclined to believe one exists. Let us briefly examine each scenario, unattractive as they may be.

The Assad/Hezbollah/Iran/Russia/Shia Axis Wins

It seems unlikely that a regime backed by, at most, 20 percent of the population could reassert its authority over the entire territory of Syria. Yet, much of Syria’s population has either left or is in the process of leaving, making this solution ever more plausible as the country empties out.

It would, however, entail a quasi Iranian takeover of an Arab country, and capitulation by all opposition parties backed by Saudi Arabia, Turkey, the Gulf States, and Egypt. That’s unlikely in the near term and only a hair more likely over the long term. I would give this scenario a low probability, though not zero.

Moderate Sunnis Win

Today, this seems very unlikely. Many moderate Syrian Sunnis are no longer in Syria. They are in Berlin and Stockholm, or busy packing up.

The anyone-but-ISIS opposition force includes the Free Syrian Army, other Sunni groups, and the Kurds. It strikes me as improbable — but not quite impossible — that they could defeat Assad on one side and ISIS on the other. Further handicapping them is the fact that Turkey does not want the Kurds, so far the most capable fighters, to gain more strength and territory.

At any rate, a force of moderate rebels (an oxymoron of sorts) would need strong backing from the West against a coalition that includes Russia. Again, a low probability, but not zero.

ISIS Wins

As far as military solutions go, this one seems the most probable. It would be a very bad solution, which is why most of the aforementioned observers prefer to ignore it and pretend that “there is no military solution in Syria” nonsense. I don’t know how they can say that when 80% of the Syrian population is Sunni, a similar percentage is in opposition with the Assad regime, and thousands of foreign fighters have joined ISIS.

In a revolution — and let us remember that this is a revolution — the most extreme element usually prevails. See Robespierre, the Bolsheviks, and Mao. In a three-way war, the party that everyone dismisses as marginal can sometimes be the ultimate winner. Again, see Mao.

Nobody should be surprised if we find out that ISIS recruiting improves dramatically after Russia’s entry into the war. In war as in physics, every action has an equal counter-action until one side’s overwhelming force destroys the other side (WWII) or one side’s lasting power exceeds the other side’s (Vietnam for the United States, Afghanistan for the Russians).

In order for ISIS to win, it will need the backing of Sunni powers, either tacitly or explicitly. Sure, these powers deplore ISIS’s extreme violence and they fear its spread in their direction, but that’s generally not their top concern. Saudi Arabia’s current priority is to stop Iran’s influence from growing over the Arab world. Turkish priority is to stop Kurdish advances. Assad, meanwhile, is more worried about the other rebels who are closer to Alawite territory and to Damascus.

This survival by default means that ISIS has a window of time to get stronger. Besides, a lot of things could change. ISIS leadership could become more “reasonable.”

The war could go on for years with the Sunnis backing ISIS just enough so it does not completely lose, but not so much that it wins decisively. Yet, things rarely stagnate forever. The ISIS’s strength will either rise or it will fall. Until it becomes a priority target for someone, it can only rise.

A victory by ISIS would mean a takeover of Damascus and of all of Syria. The Alawites, now fighting for their physical survival, may or may not keep their coastal stronghold. ISIS would also dominate large parts of Iraq and would become a threat to Lebanon in the West and to Jordan and Saudi Arabia in the South.

We have seen this movie before: the most extreme party eventually winning because other players have other priorities or less staying power. This isn’t going to happen in the next year, but over a ten year period, it might. If we’re going to ensure it doesn’t happen, we must say the truth clearly: ISIS could win.

Published in Foreign Policy
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  1. ctlaw Coolidge
    ctlaw
    @ctlaw

    I doubt the threat to Lebanon. Ditto’s Iraq.

    For the same reasons you do not believe that the minority Alawites can hold Syria, a minority ISIS could not take Lebanon or Iraq, especially when faced with Iran.

    Let’s assume the short term possibility of ISIS consolidating its position in Western Iraq and Eastern Syria. What next? Does it survive? Does it get exterminated by a scorched earth Iranian attack?

    • #1
  2. iWe Coolidge
    iWe
    @iWe

    ISIS are not the disease. They are merely the symptom.

    If only Obama had not been such an idiot, we would have left a sizable force in Iraq, and actually been able to help the country on the long slow road to maturity. ISIS would not have taken hold.

    • #2
  3. Manfred Arcane Inactive
    Manfred Arcane
    @ManfredArcane

    I may be a little warped, but I think ISIS is great fun.  Trying to establish an Islamic Caliphate over the crushed bones of other Muslims?  Watching the immune systems of the surrounding countries kick into high gear to deal with the rampant infection?  It is just too rich.  Wouldn’t our lives be kind of drab without this most recent Muslim exercise in total derangement?

    (Ok, maybe I am a bit more than just a little warped…)

    PS. Here is where ISIS is headed (courtesy of Institute for the Study of War):

    ISIS goal

    And here is where they are today:

    ISIS territory 1015

    And here is the terrain (explains why ISIS territory is  in filaments – there are highlands in the open areas):

    Syria terrain

    • #3
  4. Marion Evans Inactive
    Marion Evans
    @MarionEvans

    ctlaw:I doubt the threat to Lebanon. Ditto’s Iraq.

    For the same reasons you do not believe that the minority Alawites can hold Syria, a minority ISIS could not take Lebanon or Iraq, especially when faced with Iran.

    Let’s assume the short term possibility of ISIS consolidating its position in Western Iraq and Eastern Syria. What next? Does it survive? Does it get exterminated by a scorched earth Iranian attack?

    I agree that Lebanon would be tough because Sunnis are a minority, the country is mountainous, and the population is armed. Iraq also would be tough because Iran would fight harder there. But neither is impossible, with enough time.

    • #4
  5. Zafar Member
    Zafar
    @Zafar

    This rests on the unproved assumption that all Syrian Sunnis support ISIS.

    • #5
  6. Marion Evans Inactive
    Marion Evans
    @MarionEvans

    Zafar:This rests on the unproved assumption that all Syrian Sunnis support ISIS.

    Not at all. But a large majority of Syrian Sunnis today are not fighting ISIS. In an armed revolution, you don’t need a majority to take over. Through sheer brutality and a gradual takeover of economic assets, a relatively small group can prevail.

    • #6
  7. Man With the Axe Inactive
    Man With the Axe
    @ManWiththeAxe

    There is no military solution to ISIS much in the same way that you can’t drill your way out of an oil shortage.

    The president just has to have the brains and the guts to do what needs to be done.

    • #7
  8. Manfred Arcane Inactive
    Manfred Arcane
    @ManfredArcane

    Man With the Axe: There is no military solution to ISIS much in the same way that you can’t drill your way out of an oil shortage.

    Why “can’t [you] drill your way out of an oil shortage.”?  Do you mean in the short term?  Long term?

    • #8
  9. Man With the Axe Inactive
    Man With the Axe
    @ManWiththeAxe

    Manfred Arcane:

    Man With the Axe: There is no military solution to ISIS much in the same way that you can’t drill your way out of an oil shortage.

    Why “can’t [you] drill your way out of an oil shortage.”? Do you mean in the short term? Long term?

    Of course you can. I meant that ironically because that is what Obama said back in the 2008 campaign and after.

    • #9
  10. Manfred Arcane Inactive
    Manfred Arcane
    @ManfredArcane

    Man With the Axe:

    Manfred Arcane:

    Man With the Axe: There is no military solution to ISIS much in the same way that you can’t drill your way out of an oil shortage.

    Why “can’t [you] drill your way out of an oil shortage.”? Do you mean in the short term? Long term?

    Of course you can. I meant that ironically because that is what Obama said back in the 2008 campaign and after.

    Oh.  Sarcasm.  I must have some Asian blood in me somewhere as I miss sarcasm now and then.  My bad.  Funny.

    • #10
  11. Manny Coolidge
    Manny
    @Manny

    ISIS can win, but I disagree that there is no military solution.  Sure, you have to do more than the military part of it, but a military solution is the only option I see as to eradicating ISIS.  Whether we are part of that military option is up to the commander in chief, and so far the answer has been no.  We need to put a maneuver division on the ground and corner them into a set battle, or if they don’t participate in one, squeeze them out.

    • #11
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