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  • Syria's Pandoran Box

    http://www.counterpunch.org/hagopian06102011.html

    Weekend Edition June 10 - 12, 2011

    Syria's Pandoran Box
    Bashar Assad's Missed Opportunity


    By ELAINE HAGOPIAN

    In 1971, I was a Fulbright Hays Faculty Grant recipient based in
    Beirut doing research on the impact of the Palestinian/Israeli
    conflict on Arab Nationalist States. I was returning with a
    Palestinian friend from Damascus to Beirut after one of my interview
    excursions in Syria. We were joined by a group of three Syrian
    freelance workers in the Damascus to Beirut Service (transportation by
    ancient used Mercedes-Benz cars and the cheapest way to travel). As we
    approached Chtuara in the Beka'a Valley of Lebanon, the car broke
    down. It was clear that we would be in for a long wait. The three men
    stared at each other in deep frustration and mental anguish. We
    entered a local café to get something to eat and to wait out the
    repairs. My friend and I sat at a table and ordered some food and
    water. I noticed that the men ordered nothing. I understood
    immediately that they did not have funds to purchase food. They were
    going to Beirut to pick up some goods to take back to Syria to sell.
    They were expecting to get to Beirut, pick up the goods, and return by
    Service to Damascus the same day, a trip of some 60 miles taking about
    two hours each way including border customs checks. It was clear that
    they would have to spend the night in Beirut since repairs would delay
    us for hours. My heart sank for them as I looked at their tired eyes,
    unshaven faces, and frayed clothes.

    I did something I knew would offend their dignity - a cultural trait
    deeply embedded in Arab psyches, but especially among the poor. The
    thought that they would go without food for more than 24 hours and
    would have to sleep outdoors in Beirut overcame my understanding of
    how important dignity is to hardworking but poor Arabs. I asked the
    waitress to serve them some simple dishes and bottled water.
    Immediately, they rejected the food and glanced over at me. I asked if
    I could join them for a minute. They were polite and said "yes". I
    explained to them my own Syrian Arab origins and my understanding of
    dignity. I told them that I and my siblings were all born during the
    depression, and we had been poor. When relatives came to visit, my
    mother told us not to sit at the table or try to eat anything. We were
    to say we already ate and were full if the relatives asked. My parents
    did not want to be pitied. They put out the best they could ill
    afford. I and my siblings watched relatives we did not like consume
    the food with gusto - my mother was a terrific cook - while each of us
    prayed they wouldn't eat up everything. The men instantly identified
    with this story. I also reminded them of the religious duty of caring
    for all members of the community. They again nodded with recognition
    of this duty. Still they were hesitant to accept the food offered. I
    realized how hard it was for them not only to accept my gesture, but
    also to accept it from a woman. After all, men were supposed to
    provide for women and children!! In the end, the men accepted some
    food, but left more than half of it, insisting they were not hungry
    but ate what they could as a courtesy to me. This left their dignity
    intact. I thanked them.

    The more important part of this story is that the forced idle time
    encouraged conversation. I asked them about their lives in Syria. They
    looked down and in quiet, resigned but frustrated tones, they said
    Syria could be rich and prosperous, but with fifteen coups in twenty
    years and corrupt leaders, the majority of Syrians were struggling to
    make a living. They went on pointing out how prosperous Lebanon was,
    how free and how lively its people were. I empathized with them and
    said perhaps one day Syria would recover from the present conditions.
    One of them looked at me philosophically and offered a saying with
    which I was quite familiar: "water that is spilled cannot be
    retrieved." Little did they know then that their newly "elected"
    president, Hafez al-Assad, would change Syria significantly over his
    thirty year reign. Nor did they know that Lebanon would slip into a
    15-year civil war in 1975.

    Historical Context

    Syria has been governed for the past 48 years by the Ba'ath Party,
    and since 1970-71, has been officially headed by the al-Assad (meaning
    in Arabic "the lion") family: Hafez al-Assad (1971-2000) and now his
    son Bashar (2000-present). They originate from the Alawite sect of
    Syria, now recognized as an offshoot of Shi'a Islam. However, Alawite
    religious practices were earlier considered to be almost a nondescript
    Islamic anomaly with conceptual features, such as a trinity, likened
    to Christianity. They are one of the largest minorities, as are the
    Kurds, in what is today recognized as Syria. They number approximately
    two million or more in a total population of 22 million. Historically,
    the Alawites have met with adverse discrimination, despised by Sunnis
    (Orthodox Muslims) and earlier as well by mainstream Shi'a (followers
    of Ali, cousin and son-in-law of the prophet Mohammed) alike. Alawites
    are found throughout the region though not all share the same
    religious and cultural customs. For example, the Alevis of Turkey
    share some aspects of their faith with the Alawites, but they are
    really distinct from each other. The Syrian Alawites are located
    primarily along the Mediterranean coast of Syria with Latakia
    generally recognized as their "capital" city.

    After WW I and the fall of the Ottoman Empire, the Bilad al-Sham
    (Greater Syria which included Syria, Lebanon, Palestine and Jordan)
    was split up by Britain and France. France got the League of Nations
    Mandate over Syria and Lebanon while Britain gained control of
    Palestine (and Iraq) and the area that became Jordan. France split
    Syria into six "states" or provinces (see map below) which included
    Lebanon until France expanded and separated Lebanon from Syria.
    Eventually, France also gave Alexandretta to Turkey, known as Hatay
    today. When Syria gained independence in 1946, the Alawites wanted to
    remain a separate state, but they were nonetheless politically a part
    of Syria. Independent Syria suffered from the divisions created by
    France, not the least of which was the competition between Aleppo
    (which included the Syrian Kurdish area primarily in the northeast)
    and Damascus.



    The decades after independence, Syria witnessed some fifteen coups
    from 1949 to 1970. The first in 1949 was supported by the U.S. and
    ousted Syria's democratically elected Government under Shukri
    al-Quwatli. It ushered in General Husni al-Zaim who was willing to
    come to terms with Israel. He didn't last long, nor did other coup
    leaders. The 1970 Revolution, commonly known as the "Corrective
    Movement" brought Air Force General Hafez al-Assad into power. The
    Revolution (coup) was directed against the radical left-wing faction
    of the ruling Ba'ath Party (Renaissance). Assad became Prime Minister
    and was then elected President in 1971. Earlier, he had served as
    Defense Minister during the 1967 war which left a deep impression on
    him. As President, he immediately stacked the Ba'ath Party, the
    Security Forces and the Military leadership with Alawite officials
    faithful to him. He also developed a public works program, improved
    infrastructure worked on developing and improving universal health
    care and education for the Syrian population. He promoted
    opportunities for Sunni merchants as a way of co-opting them, given
    that Sunnis were the majority of the Syrian population, and affirmed
    equal citizenship for minorities - among them Christians and Druzes. A
    segment of the Kurdish population did not have citizenship rights in
    Syria, however. To rise in the system, individuals had to belong to
    the Ba'ath Party. But the main power positions were in Alawite hands.
    And Hafez al-Assad held the ultimate power in Syria. According to
    Henry Kissinger, Hafez al-Assad was the kind of man who went into a
    poker game with a hand of twos and threes, and scooped the pot; the
    cleverest politician in the Middle East.

    Assad sought to build up his military, getting arms, planes and
    technology from the then USSR. When the USSR ceased to exist, he
    "replaced" it with Iran to give him regional leverage. He wanted to
    develop military parity with Israel, although he never did. What he
    did do was to forcibly integrate Syria's diverse provinces by using an
    iron fist. I use to jokingly note after a trip to Syria in the early
    70s that Hafez al-Assad solved Syria's unemployment problem by putting
    them all in the Security/Intelligence Service to spy on Syrians and
    maintain political control over them. For his ability to bring
    stability to Syria after years of dismal coups and chaos as well as
    his brilliance in dealing with the West and regional actors, he was
    loved by his people. For his tight control over political freedom of
    expression and patronage of his faithful Alawite followers, they hated
    him.

    In 1973, Assad joined with Egypt's Sadat to launch a war against
    Israel to regain the territories (Egypt's Sinai, and Syria's Golan
    Heights) they lost to Israel in the 1967 war. Their strength was in a
    surprise attack into the areas of Israeli occupation. Much hailed was
    Egypt's crossing of the Suez Canal into its Sinai. After ten days in
    which the United States sent massive military aid to Israel thereby
    enabling Israel to reassert its military superiority, a cease fire was
    called. From 1973 to 1978, Sadat was able to negotiate the return of
    the Sinai to Egypt and signed a peace treaty with Israel. Syria
    recaptured the city of Qunaitra in the Golan in the war, but Israel
    retook it. However, as part of the cease fire talk agreements, Israeli
    forces withdrew from the city in the summer of 1974, but not before
    leveling it. They retained their occupation of the Golan, an
    agriculturally fertile area as large as Delaware. Assad was infuriated
    by Sadat who went it alone from that point on to regain the Sinai and
    then make peace with Israel, leaving Syria politically stranded and
    without leverage. In post-1990-1991 Gulf war negotiations, Assad
    called for the return of all of the Golan which Israel refused. Israel
    encouraged colonization of the lush Syrian area. Some 20,000 Israeli
    settlers live on the Golan. In 1981, Israel annexed the area, although
    its annexation is not internationally recognized.

    In April 1975, civil war broke out in Lebanon allegedly over an
    incident involving Palestinian workers from Lebanon's refugee camps.
    In July 1976, Assad's army entered Lebanon with the blessings of the
    US and acceptance of Israel to impose a cease fire between the warring
    groups. However, the civil war continued to 1989. Initially Assad
    appeared to favor and protect the Christians from defeat by the
    Lebanese National Movement headed by the Druze leader, Kamal Jumblatt.
    Assad himself was playing off the Lebanese groups against each other.
    According to Syria expert Patrick Seale, Assad was "duped" by Henry
    Kissinger and the Israelis into believing that if he did not enter the
    war to rein in the PLO (then headquartered in Lebanon and in alliance
    with the Lebanese National Movement), then Israel would have to go in
    to neutralize the civil war. The move was aimed at having Arab control
    Arab, and causing more divisions between Arab communities to weaken
    all of them. However, there is another angle to this. Syria at that
    point had never recognized or accepted the French separation of
    Lebanon from Syria. Syria feared the Lebanese Christians
    (predominantly the Maronites who peopled the Phalange Party and
    Militia) would collaborate, as historically they have favored doing,
    with the Zionists to undermine Syria. Riad el-Solh, the first Prime
    Minister of Lebanon after independence, and himself an Arab
    Nationalist, promised that Lebanon would never become a pathway to
    Syria for Western imperialism and Zionist machinations.

    Israel regretted okaying Syria's entrance into Lebanon. It spent
    decades looking for ways to remove Syria from Lebanon and pave its own
    way into controlling the strategically located country. Assad
    recognized he was no match for Israel's military, but his army
    remained in Lebanon and outlived Israel's invasion of Lebanon in 1982
    - the same year in which Assad was massacring thousands of politically
    threatening Muslim Brothers in the Syrian city of Hama - and its
    subsequent occupation of Southern Lebanon. Israel was forced to
    withdraw from Southern Lebanon by the growth and fighting

    acuity of Hezbollah in May 2000. Syria had received guarantees from
    the US in 1990 when it joined the US Coalition in the first Gulf War
    (1990-1991) that the US would "allow" the continuation of the Syrian
    occupation of Lebanon. However later, given the strong ties between
    Hezbollah and Syria, and their relationship with Iran, Israel and the
    US began to pressure Syria to withdraw from Lebanon.

    The vastly underpaid Syrian Army was given unofficial license by the
    Syrian Regime early on in its occupation of Lebanon to loot Lebanon,
    and loot they did. One cannot help but think back on those hapless
    Syrians of 1971, powerless and penniless wanting real jobs and compare
    them to the ugly power of Syria as an occupier of Lebanon "paying" its
    army on the backs of Lebanese. Anything from toilets to refrigerators
    to window fixtures made their way to Syrian homes and bazaars. An
    illegal drug trade developed as well. To all intents and purposes,
    Syria controlled Lebanon politically and gained economically from it.
    Local Lebanese were fed up with their occupiers and their local
    Lebanese collaborators. Israel and the U.S. were concerned about
    Syria's pivotal role in the region, especially given its ties to Iran
    and Hezbollah. Under pressure from the US and Israel (including
    pressure from pro-Israel Lobby and Lebanese expatriates in the US
    favoring ties with Israel), the UNSC passed Resolution 1559 calling
    for the withdrawal of foreign forces from Lebanon and for presidential
    elections. Syria did not budge. President Bush imposed sanctions on
    Syria, but they were not sufficient to convince Syria to leave
    Lebanon. On February 14, 2005, former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq
    Hariri was assassinated. This led to an outpouring of Lebanese (Cedar
    Revolution) calling from the withdrawal of the Syrian Army and its
    Intelligence officers from Lebanon, believing that Syria was
    responsible for the assassination. [A Special Tribunal for Lebanon was
    developed and focus is presently on Hezbollah members as the alleged
    killers.] Indeed within two months, the Syrian Army receded to the
    Syrian borders. The Lebanon withdrawal was among the first major
    crises Syria's Bashar Assad faced since his ascension to the
    Presidency in 2000 after the death of his father.

    Bashar Assad: Ascendancy to the Office of President

    Upon the death of Hafez al-Assad in June 2000, the Syrian Parliament
    met and amended Article 83 of the Constitution which lowered the age
    for presidential candidacy from forty to thirty-four, the then age of
    Bashar. His Republican Guard brother, Maher, was 33 but not considered
    for the presidency. Once the elites from the Ba'ath party, Security
    Forces, and the Military agreed on Bashar to replace his father,
    Bashar was made Secretary General of the Party and was promoted to the
    position of Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces. However, Bashar
    did not have the power over the elites and the institutions they
    headed in the same way as his father. As a consensual leader, he was
    described by exiled Syrian activist, Ammar Abd al-Hamid as being "one
    of the equals while his father was first among them" (quoted in Joshua
    Stacher, "Reinterpreting Authoritarian Power: Syria's Hereditary
    Succession," MEJ, 65, 2, p.212. Spring 2011).

    Bashar's initial year witnessed the "Damascus Spring". Freedom of
    assembly was permitted, the internet introduced, and Bashar expressed
    his wish not to have his image appear everywhere as his father used to
    do. That "Spring" did not last long. The Alawite elites who dominated
    the power institutions and who were the Regime saw to that. Hafez
    al-Assad had stacked the power institutions with his trusted Alawite
    followers. They were given privileges and power that this previously
    despised community never imagined they would ever see. In the
    unofficial capital of the Alawite area, Latakia, a powerful mafia
    developed. As previously noted, the father buttressed his Regime by
    offering privileges to non-Alawite sectors of the Syrian population.
    Minority members also held important roles in Government. In the end,
    a corrupt Regime run by the Assad family and their faithful sectarian
    brothers and sisters became the face of Syria. In spite of the tight
    internal political control, Hafez offered enough to the Syrians to
    maintain stability in the country and also make it a player in the
    region. Bashar walked into this institutionalized system with its
    guaranteed assurance of power and privilege for Alawites, all the
    while making noises that he would reform it but never taking other
    than baby steps economically and none politically.

    The contrast in general atmosphere, if not in actual political and
    economic change, was palpably better under Bashar than it was during
    his father's period. While the mukhabbarat (internal intelligence) was
    still there in excess eyeing all local people and tourists, they were
    not quite as obvious as in earlier days. Upon the death of the
    "Damascus Spring," photos of Bashar and his deceased father and
    brother who had been the heir apparent, appeared everywhere, but they
    somehow seemed less intimidating than his father's. Restaurants,
    boutique hotels, Hip Hop cafes, and a growing tourist industry were
    evident. Once Turkey and Syria developed warmer relationships, Syria
    appeared to be on the cusp of economic development, although a recent
    drought had negatively affected that process. The relationship with
    Turkey also gave Syria heightened importance in the region. With
    Turkey, Iran, and Hezbollah as its main political coterie, and with
    Syria's politically popular stance on Israel, Syria seemed untouchable
    in spite of its setback in Lebanon and economically. Additionally,
    Syria regained influence in Lebanon even though it had finally
    exchanged Ambassadors with it and appeared to recognize its
    sovereignty. But then the "Arab Spring" came to Syria in March.

    Syria's security forces, its military, and its Shahiba unleashed an
    indiscriminate and reckless killing spree on protesters. There is and
    has been in Syria an authentic desire for real democracy, for real
    economic opportunity, for elimination of the vast corruption and
    privilege given to Alawites and particular co-opted segments of the
    population, for a better quality of life, and above all for dignity.
    Interestingly enough, the protesters were not calling initially for
    Bashar's removal, but for vast reforms, for real elections, for
    removal of the emergency laws, for release of human rights prisoners,
    for a multi - party system, etc. etc. Bashar initially ignored these
    demands in his first Parliamentary speech, and then began to offer but
    not fulfill some of them. As the killing continued, numbering now some
    1300 people, with thousands imprisoned, the demands grew for Bashar to
    go. Turkey begged Syria to push through reforms immediately to salvage
    Syria's political stability and block chaos in the region, but there
    was no response.

    Now as Syria begins to disintegrate, and its Army is witnessing
    defections, the question remains, is it Bashar Assad who is giving
    orders to kill his people a la his father's iron fist approach, or is
    it the combined Alawite dominated Security, Military, Ba'ath Party and
    the Shahiba thugs who give the orders? Former Jordanian Ambassador
    Marwan Muashar says Bashar is in charge; Ilnur Cevik of the New
    Anatolia newspaper in Turkey says it's the Security forces, not
    Bashar, who control Syria and give the orders. Is he just one among
    the power elites, or has he gained power over them during his eleven
    years in office. Or has he just embraced their modus operandi as many
    think? In some ways, it doesn't matter who is in charge because as
    head of state, Bashar will be held responsible and accountable. If
    Bashar was inclined toward reforming Syria but was blocked all these
    years by the Alawite elites, he had an opportunity during this crisis
    to confront and challenge them. The Syrian people in large part
    basically liked and trusted Bashar. He could have used his popularity
    to call them out to confront and challenge the Regime, but he did not.
    Did he miss an opportunity or did he simply agree with the guardians
    of Alawite privilege? Indeed given the Alawites past history in Syria,
    and their rigid control of Syria under the Assad family, there is no
    way now that they could expect to have access to power and privilege
    in a democratic society. Who would vote for them? Given their bloodied
    hands, loss of power for them implies revenge against them - but
    hopefully not against innocent Alawites - whether through a judicial
    system (optimistically) or by violent means. They have written their
    own sentence which is bound to come if not now, in the near future.
    The Pandora's Box of protest has been opened, and it will continue to
    stay ajar until real changes are made in Syria. What happens to Bashar
    is still a question. Is there a country to which he could escape, or
    will he meet the fate of Mubarek? Does his political demise also
    guarantee the demise of the Regime or not? There are many unanswered
    questions. The consensus seems to be that Bashar cannot ultimately
    survive this protest after so many killings, but will this Lion
    (Assad) somehow overcome the present crisis?

    Finally, regarding charges of external intervention in Syria as the
    cause of the protests, it must be noted that there are external forces
    that have operated in Syria. The Syrian Muslim Brothers have returned,
    are the best organized and are getting external support, perhaps from
    Qatar and Saudi Arabia - no hard evidence. It is also well known that
    the US has backed Syrian opposition groups. Wiki Leak Cables verify
    this. (See, "U.S. secretly backed Syrian opposition groups, cables
    released by WikiLeaks show" by Craig Whitlock, The Washington Post,
    April 17, 2011). Still today, various Syrian expatriate opposition
    groups are receiving U.S. aid).

    Nonetheless, these facts do not negate the authentic protest movement
    in Syria, and they do not excuse the massive and heartless killings
    and imprisonments of thousands. The real problem after this botched
    approach to Syrian protesters is who will come after Bashar?
    Authentic, secular protesters do not appear to be organized. The
    Muslim Brothers who have a long festering grudge against the Assads
    and the Alawites are better organized. In fact, in his last interview
    with Charlie Rose, Rose asked Bashar what his greatest challenge was.
    He responded, "keeping Syria secular."

    Elaine C. Hagopian is Professor Emerita of Sociology, Simmons College, Boston.




    From: A. Papazian
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