Professor Henry Srebrnik

Professor Henry Srebrnik

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Syria Remains a Middle Eastern Muddle

 

By Henry Srebrnik, Saint John Telegraph-Journal

The collapse of the Ba’athist Assad regime in Syria in December 2024 involved more than regime change. It intensified the fight over the country’s future by its two main neighbours, Israel and Turkey, while also confirming Russia’s diminished role as the former ally of its defeated rulers.

For Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, it paved the way for an enhanced role in the entire region. A week after President Bashar al-Assad’s demise, Erdogan declared that “Turkey is bigger than Turkey,” that “as a nation, we cannot limit our vision to 782,000 square kilometers.” Turkey “cannot escape its destiny,” he continued. “Those who say, ‘What does Turkey have to do in Libya or Somalia?’ ” -- countries where Ankara has been active -- “do not comprehend this.”

Over the past decade, the country has signed defence and security partnerships with ten other states, from the Balkans, Caucasus and north Africa to the Middle East itself. Turkey even wants to normalize relations with an old foe, Armenia. The Ottoman Empire, once derided by modern Turkey’s political elite as a relic of decline, has been rehabilitated as a model of order and pluralism.

Turkey’s main ambitions remain in Syria. Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the Sunni group that toppled the old dictatorship, has long enjoyed Turkish support. Since its leader, Ahmed al-Sharaa, took control in Damascus, Turkey has assisted the new regime with security training and equipment, border management, humanitarian aid, agricultural equipment, and urgent repair work on Syria’s energy grid.

Turkish firms are starting to bid for construction, energy, and road projects inside Syria. Ankara also successfully lobbied Saudi Arabia, the United States, and various European capitals to lift Assad-era sanctions. All this is part of Erdogan’s concept of a Turkish-led regional order.

The main nation standing in his way is Israel, which over the past year has emerged as a regional hegemon after its war with Iran and military campaigns inside Lebanon, Qatar, and Syria, as well as in Gaza. But Turkey’s increasing standing in Washington and other Western capitals, together with its harsh rhetoric toward the Jewish state, contributes to Israel’s unease.

Israel is determined to prevent any outside power from consolidating control over Syria and helping the new government build a military and political apparatus capable of threatening Israel’s northern border. Israel has sought military control over a 260-square-kilometre buffer zone inside Syria. (The Gulf monarchies, too, remain wary of Turkish ambitions, and they can also complicate Ankara’s project by withholding financial support to Syria.)

Although Turkey’s military presence in northern Syria began with the military operations launched there in 2016, it was only after Assad’s removal that Ankara’s aspirations regarding other parts of Syria became realistic. If it were solely up to Turkey, military bases would already have been established in Syria, but both the conduct of Syrian President al-Sharaa, who is seeking to diversify his external sources of support, as well as actions by Israel, have thus far blocked Turkey’s intentions. For instance, Turkey had scoped out at least three airbases in Syria where it could deploy forces as part of a planned joint defence pact before Israel hit those sites with airstrikes last April.

Both Turkey and Israel fear an aerial confrontation with each other. The willingness of both sides to operate through a “hotline,” established following talks between Turkish and Israeli officials in Baku, Azerbaijan, is a clear sign that both parties still recoil from direct confrontation.

Nonetheless, Israel views al-Sharaa with profound suspicion because he had led an armed group formally linked, until a decade ago, to al-Qaeda. He continues even now to have extremist fighters in his ranks.

Israeli forces immediately seized 400 square kilometres of territory, including additional positions atop Mount Hermon, a strategic peak straddling the Syria-Lebanon border. The Israeli Air Force launched hundreds of airstrikes on Syrian military installations to deny the new Syrian leader access to weapons.

Israel has also been seeking to shape developments in Syria by supporting allied Druze militiamen as part of an effort to weaken the country’s national cohesion. In this it complicates Washington’s position (not to mention Turkey’s).

The covert Israeli activities are part of a long-running effort to prop up the Druze, a religious minority often at odds with mainstream Muslim Arabs, effectively undermining al-Sharaa’s ability to centralize power. Israeli officials believe Washington is naive when it accepts al-Shaara’s insistence he has given up his extremist views. This has been a source of tension between Israel and the Trump administration, which has made support for the new regime in Damascus a key plank of U.S. regional policy.

Some Israeli and American analysts argue that Israel’s aggressive use of military force in Syria and its clandestine efforts to promote Druze separatism were counterproductive and undercut relations at a time when al-Sharaa appeared eager to reach a diplomatic détente.

Meanwhile, Turkey has been working in recent weeks to deploy radar systems inside Syrian territory. The move is expected to significantly limit Israel’s freedom of movement in Syrian airspace.

Bringing Syria into a pro-Western orbit can also help diminish Russia’s presence. It still maintains a naval facility in Tartus and an air base at Khmeimim. Vladimir Putin hopes to maintain a foothold in the country, but that may not last. Today, the Assads are fugitives living in Moscow.

 

Thursday, January 08, 2026

When It’s About Trump, Sheinbaum Walks Warily

By Henry Srebrnik, Moncton Times & Transcript

Canadians are, understandably, obsessed with U.S. President Donald Trump as the country begins to negotiate a new trade deal to replace the one signed in 2020 that replaced NAFTA. But Mexico is equally anxious. (By the way, note that in Canada the acronym used is CAMUSA, while south of the border its USMCA.)

Meanwhile, Canada and Mexico have formed a new strategic partnership to present a “united front” in their trade discussions with Washington. Following a meeting in Mexico City Sept. 18, Prime Minister Mark Carney and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum agreed to deepen ties, vowing closer co-operation on trade and security, as both countries grapple with rising economic pressure from the United States.

The two leaders find themselves facing the same challenge: a protectionist U.S. president who has redefined global and North American trade by imposing tariffs on many countries. They agreed to develop further trade and security relationships, but re-emphasized the importance of a North American trade deal.

We in this country may not notice it, but due to drug trafficking by cartels and illegal migration from south of the U.S. border, Trump is far more bellicose when it comes to Mexico. In the first days of his second administration, he took aim at bolstering security along the U.S.-Mexico border. In a number of executive orders, he declared a national emergency at the border, allowing him to deploy military personnel there and unlocking federal funding for border enforcement and construction. Trump also ordered the deployment of 1,500 active-duty troops to the southern border.

On Dec. 15, Trump awarded a group of 13 soldiers and Marines with the recently established Mexican Border Defence Medal during a presentation at the White House. The medals were replicas of military medals created in 1918 that were awarded to U.S. troops led by General John J. Pershing, who fought against the paramilitary forces of Francisco “Pancho” Villa in 1916-1917 during the Mexican Revolution. American warships had also shelled the port of Veracruz in 1914. Those were the last times the United States attacked its southern neighbour. The symbolism was not lost on Sheinbaum.

Mexico’s national identity is deeply entwined with this legacy of U.S. conquest and imperial bullying. The United States took half of Mexico’s land in the mid-19th century and periodically intervened in the decades that followed to protect American interests. Maybe Trump is less aware of this history, given his focus on the current issues of drugs and immigration. “People forget now that the border has been secure for actually seven months,” Trump stated at the Washington ceremony.

Trump also designated the synthetic opioid fentanyl as a “weapon of mass destruction.” The illegal fentanyl tablets sold on American streets are made primarily in clandestine laboratories in Mexico and smuggled across the U.S. border by Mexican trafficking organizations. Now the Trump administration has compared the drug to a nuclear or chemical threat.

Trump has touted his administration’s efforts to halt the influx of the drug into the country, saying at the ceremony that the amount coming in has dropped by 50 per cent since his return to the White House. It might also be seen as part of the administration’s campaign to target drug smuggling vessels in the Caribbean Sea from Venezuela and the capture of President Nicolas Maduro.

Sheinbaum is now walking a tightrope. She has to appease Trump enough to avoid air strikes – which after the Christmas attack by the U.S against terrorists in northern Nigeria is no idle possibility -- while firmly standing up for Mexican sovereignty and maintaining her own domestic political support. She was, after all, elected president as the candidate of the left-wing National Regeneration Movement (Morena) party.

Now entering the third year of her six-year term, she has won widespread praise at home for her handling of Trump so far. Sheinbaum has learned to deal with Trump by separating his political statements from what the United States actually wants.

“We have a president on the Mexican side who is more interested in cooperating than her predecessor was,” Roberta Jacobson, former U.S. ambassador to Mexico, told Nick Miroff, a former Washington Post reporter now with the Atlantic magazine, referring to former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. “I think she has done an amazing job navigating that minefield.”

But treating traffickers as terrorists converts what has been mostly a public health and law enforcement issue into a national security one. Sheinbaum has therefore set firm limits on what it considers to be nonnegotiable matters, rejecting the possibility of joint operations that would allow U.S. forces to embed with Mexican troops. But she has been willing to expand cooperation on almost everything else.

Canada is not the only country whose trade has been overwhelmingly with the U.S. More than 80 per cent of Mexico’s exports now go north, leaving Mexico more dependent than ever on its northern neighbor, and subject to Trump’s whims. Mexico was the United States’ top goods trading partner in 2024 with total two-way goods trade at US$840 billion. In comparison, U.S. goods trade with Canada totaled US$760 billion, while American trade with China totaled US$582 billion.

As for Canada-Mexico trade, it saw nearly US $41billion in goods exchanged in 2024, making Mexico Canada’s third largest partner and Canada Mexico’s fifth.