For the first time since the start of the uprising in Syria, there are shortages of bread in state bakeries areas that have always remained under regime control. I've confirmed with sources in Damascus city, Hama, Sweidaa.
Confirmed this now with a source in Deir Ezzor city in the section that always remained under regime control. The areas reconquered by the regime have been experiencing shortages for much longer.
The Assad regime knew full-well it would not be able to afford to provide its people with the cheapest source of calories - bread (hence issuing and re-issuing tenders for wheat), but still decided to relaunch the costly Idlib campaign. These are the regime's priorities.
A source just confirmed to me that the shortage of flour is affecting state bakeries providing subsidized bread in the area of Qardaha as well, the ancestral home of the Assad clan. This indicates the shortage is nation-wide & not due to local supply issues/corruption
Syria currently has one bid out for 200,000 tonnes of soft milling wheat. 4 recent bids for wheat failed because:
*Syria tried to get buyers to accept Euros instead of USD to bypass sanctions
*There's uncertainty about its ability to pay
*It likely offered too low of a price
*Syria tried to get buyers to accept Euros instead of USD to bypass sanctions
*There's uncertainty about its ability to pay
*It likely offered too low of a price
The regime urgently needs wheat & urgent purchases are more expensive than wheat futures. Based on past purchases, the 200,000 tones purchased in an urgent manner would cost Syria about $45-55 million. (analysis by @delfoo)
Russia promised to provide Syria with a donation of 100,000 tonnes of wheat but has only delivered 30,000 tonnes (b2b-sy.com and b2b-sy.com). What Russia did rush to deliver? More armor and Russian troops reuters.com
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