A new “good fence?” Turkey should learn from Israel’s experience in Lebanon
In Feb. 2015, a Hizballah official remarked that its
allies needed to launch a counterattack in Syria to prevent its fall to
“Israel’s agents.” If not, he feared a foreign power aided by rebels would
establish a “security zone.” By this point, the Syrian civil war was four years
old. President Bashar al-Assad’s government forces backed by Iran, Russia, and
Hizballah were in a life and death struggle against rebels supported primarily
by Turkey and the United States. From Beirut, Hizballah — or the “Party of
God,” an armed Lebanese political movement that supports the Syrian government
— watched developments in Syria with alarm.
Hizballah’s organizational knowledge regarding
security zones was hard won. The group was formed in 1982 in response to
Israel’s invasion of southern Lebanon. For 18 years, Hizballah fought to expel
Israel and its local surrogates from the “Good Fence,” a roughly
800-square-mile area along the border. Decades later, the group has grown into
a significant regional player, with a missile force capable of striking Israel.
Now Turkey and its Free Syrian Army partners are
creating a similar security zone. While no country — besides Syria itself — has
felt the impact of the civil war more than Turkey, missteps from Ankara could
backfire. The government, facing intense pressure to address refugee flows and
spillover violence from Syria, has chosen to focus its energy on breaking the
Democratic Union Party. This Syrian Kurdish party consolidated power, with help
from the United States, in northeastern Syria, thereby posing a serious
challenge to Turkey’s longstanding hostility towards regional Kurdish autonomy.
Turkey, and other states relying on local partners
to intervene in Syria, should take a hard look at Israel’s experience in
Lebanon before proceeding further with its plan to establish a security zone.
By ineptly addressing one national security threat, Turkey could be creating an
even bigger one.
The Limits of Force
Military interventions that employ overwhelming
force to achieve limited objectives are more likely to be successful than
long-term occupations. Operations conducted for the purposes of deterrence,
like Operation Desert Storm — in which armed forces get in, hurt the enemy, and
get out — are an example of this in practice. By comparison, expansive
objectives that rely on local partners to help build new institutions in
occupied territory, such as in Operation Iraqi Freedom, are far more likely to
fail. Building stable institutions in war-torn areas requires complex political
arrangements that military forces are ill-equipped to construct.
Israel’s interventions in Lebanon in 1978 and 1982
varied in their objectives and demonstrated these trends. The former, Operation
Litani, was a straightforward clearing operation with a limited scope. It
relied on the South Lebanon Army to act as a holding force but did not seek to
impose drastic political changes beyond the expulsion of the Palestinian
Liberation Organization (PLO) from the border area. The latter, Operation Peace
for Galilee, aimed to link up with the Phalange, a Maronite Christian political
party-cum-militia, to destroy the PLO and install a government in Beirut
willing to sign a formal peace agreement. Israel succeeded in expelling the
PLO, but its plans for a pliable Christian-dominated Lebanon failed. Israel’s
attempt to wade into the domestic politics of its neighbor encountered stiff
resistance. Blowback from the operation threatens Israel to this day.
Like Israel in Lebanon, Turkey risks becoming bogged
down in an open-ended commitment in Syria with unintended consequences. Unlike
its current operations in Syria, previous Turkish operations in northern Iraq
against the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), the Democratic Union Party’s
organizational forebearer, were short in duration and limited in scope. This
was in part due to Turkey’s ability to induce Iraqi Kurds to suppress their
co-ethnic rivals.
Turkey’s current operations against the Democratic
Union Party — Operations Euphrates Shield, Olive Branch, and Peace Spring — go
beyond this formula and seek to create new facts on the ground. Talk of massive
refugee resettlement in the security zone means disruptive demographic changes
that will need to be managed and enforced. Turkey’s pre-2016 regime change
policy in Syria offered indirect support to the Syrian opposition. That
discrete policy has been replaced by a gamble on partnering with Free Syrian
Army units to organize governance structures in the safe zone and conduct
counterinsurgency operations.
Beware of Small Occupations
Foreign occupations produce countervailing forces of
nationalism and resistance that galvanize a community around defeating the
occupier. A supportive population is a key element of guerrilla strategy, which
enables a relatively weak force to adapt and defeat a stronger opponent. Mass
community support can lead to social acceptance of extreme forms of resistance,
including suicide attacks, that demonstrate support for the homeland and
commitment to the cause.
Israel’s 22-year occupation of southern Lebanon was
successful in driving the PLO from its border but also birthed Hizballah, a far
more adaptive and deadly organization. Hizballah conducted a sustained campaign
of suicide attacks — establishing an associated cult of martyrs — and eventually
built a stockpile of missiles able to threaten Israeli population centers.
Israel’s partnership with the South Lebanon Army also created a moral hazard
that undercut Israel’s counterinsurgency policy and played into Hizballah’s
narrative of “national resistance.”
Likewise, the Turkish security zone is likely to
strengthen the military wing of the Democratic Union Party. PKK veterans, who
cut their teeth in guerrilla campaigns featuring suicide operations, make up
the core of this wing. The population of the occupied security zone, skeptical
of Turkey’s intensions, has already been subjected to Free Syrian Army units
engaging in human rights abuses against civilians. Such abuses will provide a
widening base of support for resistance. Ultimately, Turkey’s current policy
will not satisfy its security needs and could very well lead to a more
adaptable and deadlier insurgency both in Syria and at home.
Babysitting Your Allies
Should a sponsor deploy troops alongside its local
ally? On the one hand, doing so is the best way to ensure that a local ally is
advancing the sponsor’s interests. However, it also makes the local ally’s
collaboration painfully obvious in the eyes of the population and puts the
sponsor’s troops in harm’s way. This tension is especially problematic when
more than one state is offering support — as is the case in Syria — which can
incentivize opportunistic behavior by local armed groups. Multiple potential sources
of revenue allow groups to ignore sponsors’ demands, diversify support
networks, and/or change sides when interests diverge. Sponsors can overcome
this challenge by implementing monitoring and screening mechanisms to try and
control groups or by making support conditional on behavior. Whichever strategy
a sponsor pursues requires a degree of institutionalization to be successful.
This increases the temptation to put boots on the ground.
Israel partnered with several Christian militias
during the course of its operations in Lebanon. First, it partnered with the
Phalange when pursuing regime change. However, once ensconced in Beirut, the
Phalange refused to comply with Israeli demands and engaged in behavior that
fragmented the Christian military coalition. Israel then partnered with the
South Lebanon Army to pursue the more limited goal of establishing a border
security zone. Israel deployed thousands of its own troops and kept the South
Lebanon Army on a relatively tight leash. This increased the South Lebanon
Army’s compliance with Israeli policy but helped drive a wedge between the
South Lebanon Army and the population of the occupied security zone, and cost
Israel 265 killed and 891 wounded between 1985-2000.
Absent a shift in strategy, Turkey will need to keep
its own troops deployed to maintain its current dominant status in northeastern
Syria. Its reliance on a loose coalition of Free Syrian Army units to displace
the Democratic Union Party and stabilize the border poses significant risks of
coalition fragmentation. Turkey’s regional rivals could offer individual Free
Syrian Army units a better deal, especially if Turkey abandons the regime
change policy favored by many of the militiamen. Fragmentation could also occur
if some units perceive others as receiving preferential treatment in the
allocation of Turkish resources, causing them to defect. This will likely
result in mounting casualties in Turkey’s conscript army, which could undermine
domestic support for the security zone over the long term.
Back to the Future
Great powers that seek to change the internal
politics of another state face a lengthy track record of failures. In fact,
pursuing regime change is more likely to produce chaos, not calm.
America’s tacit support for Israel’s 1982 bid to
install a friendly government in Beirut and overt support, along with Turkey,
for the Syrian opposition were both attempts to unseat governments considered
hostile. The Reagan, Obama, and Trump administrations engaged in remarkably
similar internal debates on the potential pitfalls of the use of force.
However, all three defaulted to policies of regime change, first in Lebanon,
then in Syria. When attempts at regime change failed, in both cases the United
States was forced to intervene to prevent the collapse of its local partners.
The U.S.-led Multinational Force helped defend a Phalange canton in Lebanon and
30 years later, Operation Inherent Resolve flew close air support for the
Democratic Union Party in northeast Syria.
In contrast, Russia’s policy in Lebanon and Syria
was and remains regime maintenance. Following the Camp David Accords and
Egypt’s pivot, Syria’s strategic position vis-à-vis Israel became increasingly
precarious as Israel no longer faced a potential two-front war. Syria viewed growing
instability in Lebanon as an exploitable opportunity for Israel. Despite
initial misgivings, the Soviets backed Syria’s play to fill the Lebanese vacuum
and counter Israel’s new regional hegemony. U.S. support for regime change in
Iraq and Libya primed Russia to respond with vigor in 2015 to calls for the
overthrow of its client in Damascus.
The United States has been criticized for not
sticking by its Syrian Kurdish partner, especially since Russia appears to be
solidifying its dominant role in Syria. While this statement is arguably true
in the current context, it is confusing tactics for strategy. The real question
is why under this set of conditions has Russia maintained its alliance with
Syria, while the United States has waffled on its commitment to the Democratic
Union Party? In both Lebanon and Syria, Russia backed a state ally based on
mutual long-term strategic interests while the United States, much like Israel
and Turkey, formed “temporary, transactional, and tactical” relations with a
series of ideologically diverse militias. If the United States’ strategic goal
was bleeding Russia in Syria, then this outcome could potentially be considered
a success. However, consistent U.S. calls for regime change and democratization
throughout the Syrian conflict, including prior to Russia’s involvement,
contradict this claim.
Security partnerships with armed groups are
inherently unstable. While militias and states may face shared immediate
threats, unless interests and ideologies align, both should plan for an
eventual parting of ways.
Quit While You’re Ahead
Turkey’s intervention in northeast Syria may produce
a dramatic shift in the local balance of power, but perhaps not in the way
Turkey envisions. So far, Turkey has achieved limited success in pushing the
Democratic Union Party out of the expanding security zone and forcing the
United States to reduce, if not end, its support for the group. But Turkey’s
pursuit of the security zone is based on at least three very questionable
assumptions.
First, that Free Syrian Army units are capable of
displacing and holding cleared territory in a manner that does not aggravate
the local population. Second, that Turkey’s forward leaning policy will not
inadvertently empower the very forces it seeks to defeat, namely the Democratic
Union Party. Finally, that geopolitics will not get in the way, as Turkey’s
actions in the safe zone are influenced and limited by American, Russian, and
Syrian forces.
Turkey should quit while it’s ahead. In the near
term, Ankara should immediately drawdown its forces in the security zone and
cut ties with the Free Syrian Army. Turkey’s recent foray into Syria leaves it
in a strong position to press the Syrian government, and its Russian patron, to
curb Kurdish autonomy — evidenced by the Democratic Union Party’s recent
negotiations with Damascus to incorporate its forces into the Syrian army. In
the long term, Ankara must restart peace negotiations with the PKK or risk yet
another cycle of violence that leaves Turkey in a state of permanent
insecurity.
Israel’s “Good Fence” policy in Lebanon produced
negative security outcomes and failed to achieve strategic policy goals.
Turkey’s security zone policy will likely also fail to achieve its objectives.