Barry Rubin
I feel guilty every day that I don’t write about Syria’s revolution. There are massive numbers of demonstrators taking high risks and often paying with their lives; there is a higher proportion of really democratic-minded people than in other Arab countries; and there is general international indifference to their battle in contrast to the “glamor” surrounding the far-shorter, much less bloody Egyptian uprising. The estimated death toll is over 4000 though, of course, nobody knows for sure.
In contrast to Egypt, and partly due to the inability of journalists to cover the story, the Syrian insurgents aren’t made into celebrities. And, curiously, the regime that is repressing them isn’t stigmatized anywhere near what happened to the far less repressive governments in Egypt and Tunisia or even, for that matter, democratic Israel.
Much of the news is the bare stuff about lists of demonstrations and acts of repression. At the end of this article I have appended the story of one province on one day alone to give some sense of the magnitude of the battle. Meanwhile, the Obama Administration, so eager to overthrow friendly regimes in Bahrain, Egypt, and Tunisia, has a peculiar disinterest about doing more against the hostile regime in Syria. Of course, for almost three years the U.S. government considered that anti-American, terrorist-sponsoring, repressive regime to be friendly or at least potentially so. For the U.S. government to do more, I'm not talking about military intervention but far more basic efforts.
As Tony Badran writes in Lebanon Now: “It became obvious that four months after President Barack Obama called for Bashar al-Assad’s departure, his administration has yet to develop a policy to achieve that objective.” U.S. officials sound as if they are advocating conciliation between the regime and opposition, something they never sought in Egypt or Tunisia.
In addition, rather than have a real independent policy, the Obama Administration seems just to be following the Arab League’s lead. Yet, as Badran explains, by continually minimizing what it is willing to do the Obama Administration even undercuts the Arab League’s leverage.
To make matters worse, the administration subcontracted the issue of choosing the external leadership of the opposition to an Islamist Turkish regime which, naturally, favored the Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamists. These people might be friends of the Turkish regime but they certainly aren’t friends of the United States.
Ammar Abdulhamid, the most reliable source of news from Syria (his reports can be found here), has pointed out that the demonstrators are increasingly angry about the Turkish-picked, U.S.-endorsed Syrian National Council, which is only one of a half-dozen or more opposition groups.
He writes:
“Because the international community is not willing to intervene at this stage, Because the situation on the ground is getting more and more tragic by the day….Because military, security and political defector can be counted on the fingers of one hand, it’s about time we realized that ours is a longer term struggle and we started planning and strategizing accordingly. Any group that wants to truly represent and lead the revolution down the road should arrange its priorities in the right manner:
“Getting international recognition at this stage is not as important as consolidating our base of support and legitimacy on the ground….Armed resistance has become a fact on the ground, even if it is still in its infancy….A political group that has no real control over armed resistance cannot hold the country together in that most critical period of transition that lies ahead. As such, we are not just talking about creating the façade of control, but the reality of it. SNC leaders have excelled in creating façades but not realities. That’s good for them, but it is not good for the country….
“Only when we have established enough credibility and legitimacy among the ranks of the revolutionaries, can we begin to push back on certain issues and advocate stances that may not be popular, but which are, nonetheless, right, for the country and the revolution….
“Moreover, we have helped undermine our own credibility over the last months on account of our well-publicized internecine bickering, which often reflected personal egos and ambitions than any principled stands.
“So, our priority at this stage should be to get internal recognition, not international one. When that is truly “in the bag,” international recognition will follow.”
Here is his account of developments in Homs and Homs province for December 18:
Homs
Scenes of devastation in Bab Al-Sibaa Neighborhood in Homs City http://youtu.be/vv5yS9Mzw6c Karm Al-Zeitunhttp://youtu.be/3zhrynOvxFw Targeting people in cars is a favorite pastime for snipers, as this human brain in the front seat can attest http://youtu.be/DP9qitwLfpk And this wounded man from Bayadah Neighborhoodhttp://youtu.be/B5x5ULqwr6s People stuck at the crossroads due to sniper action http://youtu.be/_Iq8NhujCUM ,http://youtu.be/QvYYwR1wgDM
And martyrs keep falling: Wa’er http://youtu.be/U8qJJ1qnQ-k , http://youtu.be/ZWzG12ZQWbc Khalidyehhttp://youtu.be/MIk_dtfZkFE , http://youtu.be/Y7oeZ-VCEgU , http://youtu.be/5Fw8lN6S6Hc Jib Al-Jandalihttp://youtu.be/BXaC7DdBwzM
And people keep holding funerals: Qoussour http://youtu.be/Zvo14iso3wc Wa’er http://youtu.be/bJ9UTFH0828
Still, and with the involvement of actress Fadwa Sulaiman, who is an Alawite, protest leaders keep sending messages of inclusion http://youtu.be/IE2417ZiNUU stressing that their fight is against the Assad Gang, not the Alawite communityhttp://youtu.be/NQ-eXQL_k-w
In the historic city of Tadmor/Palmyra in the larger Homs Province, loyalists tried to reassert central control todayhttp://youtu.be/qZ4zLr_ywRw And martyrs fell http://youtu.be/UmycLw81rtk
A similar development takes place in Qseir http://youtu.be/YsJ9vl3zUC0 And the town offers more martyrshttp://youtu.be/SWl4hXIp_ls , http://youtu.be/znQ3rCQrpsw and holds more funerals with people shouting “death is better than humiliation” http://youtu.be/Q5ebTfljIrI
Professor Barry Rubin, Director, Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center http://www.gloria-center.org
The Rubin Report blog http://rubinreports.blogspot.com/
He is a featured columnist at PJM http://pajamasmedia.com/barryrubin/.
Editor, Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal http://www.gloria-center.org
Editor Turkish Studies,http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=t713636933%22
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