The
tide seems to be turning in Syria. While the civil war is far from
over, the regime is clearly weakening; the rebels are expanding their
operations and effectiveness. There have also been more high-level
defections. What does this mean and why is this happening?
There are three main factors that are making a rebel victory seem more likely.
First, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, with Turkey’s facilitation and U.S.
coordination, are sending arms to the opposition.
Second,
the regime has been rushing the same trusted units around the country
to put down upsurges and these forces are getting tired and stretched
thin.
Third,
President Bashar al-Assad really has nothing to offer the opposition.
He won’t leave and he can’t share power. His strategy of brutal
suppression and large-scale killing can neither make the opposition
surrender nor wipe it out. Even if he kills civilians and demonstrators,
the rebel military forces can pull back to attack another day.
Even though the fighting may go
on for months, then, it is time to start assessing what outcomes might look like. Here are some suggestions:
--Ethnic
massacres? While there have been reports of such actions—the regime
killing Sunni Muslims; the opposition killing Alawites and
Christians—what we’ve seen already might be nothing compared to what is
to come. Such murders might take place during the civil war or after it
ends.
--An
Alawite fortress? Assad has built up his defenses in northwest Syria
where most of the Alawites live to make a last stand or to try to hold
out. How would such a final phase in the war go and could Assad keep the
rebels from taking this stronghold?
--Obama
Administration bragging rights? We’ve already had leaks about U.S.
covert involvement in the anti-Assad effort. If the rebels seem to be
winning or do in fact win the war before November, the White House will
claim Syria as proof of its tough, triumphant foreign policy. (The
elections in Libya, in which reportedly the Islamists were held off by a
U.S.-backed government, will be cited as another example of success.)
--But
at great risk. What if the Obama Administration increasingly claims
credit for regime change in Syria and then has to take blame for
massacres or an Islamist takeover?
--The
Kurdish factor. Syria’s Kurds
have essentially walled off their northeast section of the country.
Their armed militia, helped by their compatriots in Iraq, can hold out
against all but the most concerted force. The Kurds generally view the
regime as repressive Arab nationalists while they see the opposition as
Islamists and Arab nationalists. Would a new regime in Damascus make a
deal with them for autonomy, or would it be tempted to try to conquer
the area? If so, how would the opposition’s Western backers react to
such an assault?
--And
then there’s the biggest question of all: Who among the opposition
forces would take power? Syria is quite different from such relatively
homogeneous countries as Egypt and Tunisia. Let’s just list the
different groupings:
Alawites
now rule and in general support the regime. The treatment of the
Alawites—who pretend to be Shia Muslims but really aren’t Muslims at
all—would be a key indicator for a new regime. Would it seek
conciliation or massacre large numbers of them? Unless Assad can hold
out in the northwest, the Alawites will have little role in a post-Assad
Syria.
Christians also generally support the regime because they fear Islamists taking power. Will they face massacres and
flee the country or will the new regime work to accommodate them.
Alawites and Christians together number more than one-fourth of the country’s population.
The
Kurds have been discussed above. Their goal is autonomy, one that a new
central government could meet but will it want to grant them such
status?
The
Druze, who live in the southwest of the country, have not played a
major role in the rebellion. They tend to accommodate themselves to the
status quo. Will they organize communally and seek some autonomy? The
Druze strategy is of special interest to Israel since they live
closer to the Golan Heights and, indeed, Israel rules a Druze
population there most of whose members identify as Syrians. Would a new
regime’s treatment of the Druze make the Golan Heights’ residents more
rebellious against Israel or more eager to remain under Israeli rule?
And
finally there are the Sunni Muslim Arabs who comprise about 60 percent
of the population. As a group they would be the new rulers. But they are
very much divided among themselves. On one hand there are the
Islamists, both Muslim Brotherhood and Salafists; on the other hand
there are urban moderates who are more proportionately numerous and
politically astute than their Egyptian counterparts. Who will get the
upper hand?
Yet
even that is an incomplete inventory. In addition, there are many rural
Sunni Arabs who could be described as traditionalists, who want a
socially conservative state but could swing in either direction
politically.
Last
and certainly not least are the military officers who deserted Assad’s
army and now run much of the opposition Free Syrian Army (FSA). They can
be described as both technocrats and as Arab nationalists in varying
degrees. Would they impose themselves on a new government?
The
exile groups, including the U.S. backed Syrian National Council (SNC)
seem to have little influence and prestige within the country. Would the
Obama Administration and others try to force this Brotherhood-dominated
group onto those who did the fighting?
As
you can see there are many questions and unknowns about Syria’s future.
These apply regardless of the timing of any rebel victory, and they are
going to be major factors affecting the Middle East over the coming
decades.
Barry
Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs
(GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International
Affairs (MERIA) Journal. His book, Israel: An Introduction, has just been published by Yale University Press. Other recent books
include The Israel-Arab Reader (seventh edition), The Long War for Freedom: The Arab Struggle for Democracy in the Middle East (Wiley), and The Truth About Syria (Palgrave-Macmillan). The website of the GLORIA Center and of his blog, Rubin Reports. His original articles are published at PJMedia.
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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1 comment:
Excellent article on the plight of the Syrian people, Mr Rubin...
I enjoy your communicates...
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