Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters on Thursday that there was no and would not be a"plan B" on Syria's cease-fire agreement, according to Reuters.
His comments echoed those of Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov, who said at a conference in Moscowthat Russian officials were "perplexed by our Western partners, the US included, mentioning the existence of some kind of 'plan B.'"
"Nothing is known on that one," he continued. "We are considering no alternative plans."
The Russian officials' comments come two days after US Secretary of State John Kerry said the US was considering alternative options should "plan A"— a cessation of hostilities — fail to materialize.
"It may be too late to keep it as a whole Syria if we wait much longer," Kerry told the US Senate's Foreign Relations Committee on Tuesday.
Some analysts saw Kerry's comments as a subtle endorsement of partitioning Syria among Syrian President Bashar Assad, Sunni rebels, and Syrian Kurds (and the terrorist group ISIS, if the international coalition is unable to defeat the militants in the country's east.)
Kerry did not explicitly advocate this solution, and Russian officials said Moscow would not accept anything other than a political settlement.
But some experts said that Russian President Vladimir Putin would be content with a partition — and that Russia's pattern of airstrikes in Syria indicated it was already preparing a "plan B" should the regime fail to restore a central Syrian state and be forced to retreat to a fragment of government-held territory along the Mediterranean.
"A second option [for Russia] is to fall back to the defensible parts of useful Syria after guaranteeing the safety of the Alawi canton," Joseph Bahout, a visiting scholar in the Middle East Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, wrote in December in Carnegie's "Syria in Crisis" blog.
"This is perhaps already a consideration, as the majority of Russian airstrikes concentrate on the contours of this area," he added.
Bahout's observation was true in December. And, though the slopes of some battlefields — most notably in Syria's second-largest city of Aleppo — have shifted over the past two months, it is true now.
Since intervening on behalf of Assad in late September, Russia has used airstrikes to create a buffer zone between rebel-held territory in the southern Idlib province and the traditional homeland of Assad's Alawite sect in the Latakia governorate.
The airstrikes have also targeted rebel-controlled territory just north of Homs that borders this so-called Alawi canton.
An "Assadland" or "Alawistan" has arguably always been the Assad regime's "final card to play."
Tony Badran, a researcher at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies focusing on the military and political affairs of the Levant, predicted as much back in 2012, one year after the war erupted in earnest.
To be sure, Assad's Syrian Arab Army — supported by Iran-backed Shi'ite militias, Hezbollah fighters, and Russian air cover — is still battling to retain control over the two most symbolically and strategically important cities in Syria. Those are Damascus, the capital, which has been long viewed by rebel forces as the key to winning the war, and Aleppo, Syria's second-largest city and main urban center in the north.
But even if the regime were to drive the rebels out of Aleppo and Damascus, holding the cities would require a significant commitment of funding and manpower. It remains unlikely, moreover, that Assad will ever be able to reassert his authority on the predominantly Sunni country. That is at least one reason experts and analysts say the war cannot end as long as Assad is in power.
That said, Russia has yet to signal that it will accept a Syria devoid of Assad's influence — doing so would be akin to accepting defeat by US-backed rebels and Western proxies, whose influence Moscow is eager to supplant in the region.
Solidifying a Russian protectorate in western Syria that is already held by the regime and dominated by a sect of Shia Islam loyal to Assad, then, would give "a tangible reality to Moscow's concept of a new international order."
That's according to Marc Pierini, a visiting scholar at Carnegie Europe and a former European Union ambassador, who wrote in Turkey's English-language newspaper Hurriyetin September.
"To its snap annexation of Crimea and dominance of eastern Ukraine, Russia is now adding 'Assadland,'" Pierini wrote. "In doing so, it is showing the rest of the world that it has the capacity to redefine the international order, or at least the guts to act as spoiler in chief."
Mark Galeotti, a Russia expert and professor of global affairs at New York University, agreed that while an Assadland or Alawistan would not be the Kremlin's first choice, it was "an acceptable lesser of many evils" for Russia.
"It is not that Moscow would be happy with an Alawite statelet, but it is obviously and inevitably thinking of fallback options should it not get its ideal, which is an outright victory for Damascus," Galeotti told Business Insider in December.
"A defensible, economically viable and politically more homogeneous 'Alawistan' would both ensure they retain a client-ally in the region and yet also be a much more manageable unit to have to support and project."
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