What Next?
Here’s today’s Guardian article in its pre-sub-edited form.
Last January Syria seemed, along with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states, to be amongst the least likely candidates for revolution. If President Bashaar al-Asad had run in a real election, he may well have won.
It’s difficult remembering it today: most Syrians did grudgingly credit the regime with ensuring security and prosecuting a vaguely nationalist foreign policy. It’s that keen desire for security, the overwhelming fear of Iraq-style chaos, which keeps a section of Syrians fiercely loyal to the regime even now.
To start with, although they were inspired by revolutions in Tunisa and Egypt, most protestors didn’t aim for regime change. The first demonstration – in the commercial heart of Damascus – was a response to police brutality. That one ended peacefully, but when Dera’a protested over the arrest of schoolchildren the regime spilt blood. Outraged, communities all over the country took to the streets, and met greater violence, which swelled the crowds further. A vicious circle began to spin. All the intelligence, and the nationalist pretensions, peeled away from the government to reveal a dark and thuggish core.
Worse still, the president spoke of reforms, of ending the state of emergency and abolishing the hated State Security Courts. Even as he spoke the slaughter intensified. There was no surer way of destroying his credibility. The torrent of horror stories – children tortured to death, women shot, residential areas shelled – could not be deflected by state propaganda, and they destroyed the regime’s legitimacy.
The state’s extraordinary stupidity suggests either panic or dissension within the inner circle, of which Bashaar may only be the figurehead. Syrians debate which arrangement of Asads and Makhlufs (Bashaar’s mother’s family) composes the actual power structure. In any case, Syria’s leaders can count on continued support from the Republican Guard and the army’s upper echelons. Yet lower and middle ranking defections will increase as the regime seeks to crush the provinces.
So what next? There is a roadmap to a happy ending. The grassroots Local Coordination Committees call for the president’s immediate resignation, then the formation of a joint civilian and military council to oversee a six-month transition to a pluralist democracy. “The new Syria will be a republic and a civil state that belongs to all Syrians,” reads the LCC statement, “and not to an individual, family or party. It will not be inherited from fathers to sons. All Syrians will be equal in rights and duties without discrimination.”
If the LCC’s transition began today it would probably work, but the chances of the regime bowing out gracefully are very close to zero. This means the chaos will expand.
So far, despite Syria’s often difficult history and the regime’s divide-and-rule tactics, sectarian war appears unlikely. When 100,000 marched in Hama last Friday they chanted, “From Qurdaha to Sanamain, the Syrians are One People.” Qurdaha is the home town of the Asads, in Alawi country. Sanamain is a poor Sunni village near Dera’a where many have been killed. And the chant was raised in Hama, the city taken over by the Muslim Brotherhood in 1982, and the site of a massacre when the regime took the city back. Such slogans of national unity show a new level of maturity and intelligence among Syrians, but these qualities will be challenged as the slaughter continues.
Western intervention remains highly improbable – NATO is already overstretched, and a Syrian adventure requires a commitment to potential regional war – and wouldn’t be welcomed by Syrians anyway. In Iraq it was Western intervention which triggered civil war.
Turkish intervention is another matter. Celebrating the third-term re-election of his AK Party on Sunday, Prime Minister Erdogan greeted “those who are focussed on Turkey with great excitement…all capitals of neighbouring countries.” In light of the Arab Awakening, Turkey’s ‘zero problems with neighbours’ policy is about to be overturned. On Tuesday Erdogan again told Asad to stop the repression and implement immediate reforms. The day before he’d expressed willingness to work with Britain towards a UN resolution condemning Syria. But it’s facts on the ground that will count. If many more refugees join the 8500 who have fled to Turkey, Erdogan may order a limited occupation of Syrian territory in order to establish a ‘safe haven’. That – the regime’s inability to hold a section of the homeland – may prove a critical tipping point. It could also offer Syria its Benghazi, a base for organised resistance.
If the first enemy of Syrian democrats is the Syrian regime, and the second the spectre of sectarian violence, the third is represented by those external forces seeking to take advantage of events. The Syrian economy may not be far from collapse. Should it survive, the regime may be particularly easy to bribe in future years, and so may any alternative government.
Saudi Arabia is currently funnelling much-needed cash to Egypt’s ruling military council. It remains to be seen what the catch is. Saudi money could play an important role in the new Syria too, and so could a motley crew of exiles – the president’s uncle Rifa’at al-Asad, organiser of the 1982 Hama massacre, and ex-regime figure Abdul-Halim Khaddam, as well as the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood, which has an unpleasant sectarian history and agenda. There’s also a contingent of US-based liberals, some of whom play into neoconservative hands.
It’s easy to envisage, at a later stage, a Saudi deal with Syrian Sunni officers and the Muslim Brothers, and then rising from the embers of Ba’athist Syria a partially-democratic, ‘moderate Islamist’ regime presiding over tame social programmes, untrammelled economic liberalisation, and passivity over the occupied Golan Heights. Israel and the West may tacitly support such an outcome, because a properly democratic Syria working alongside a properly democratic Egypt would constitute the greatest imaginable challenge to Israel’s subjugation of the Palestinians.
It’s unlikely that Syrians, after sacrificing so much blood, would want to settle for such a deal.
“It’s unlikely that Syrians, after sacrificing so much blood, would want to settle for such a deal.”
I agree, but unfortunately I think the elements you lay out in the two prior paragraphs suggest that this is the most likely first post-regime change equilibrium phase. Given the ongoing survival of the region’s key pro-sectarian ‘activist’ regimes (primarily Saudi with their cash and anti-revolutionary fervor, but also the currently somewhat shell-shocked and more inept Israeli, US, and Iranian regimes/pseudo-empires), I think we have to expect a revolutionary period that is going to last many years if not a generation. Not only does the region have these backwards sectarian forces to deal with, it also still has no core solution for how to remake the economies of the region to provide sustainable employment, opportunity, and hope without reliance on external debt and all the strings that come with it. These things are going to take a long time to sort out. Nonetheless, the process has begun, and the fact that there’s so much hard work to do is all the more reason to push to get through phase 1 as strongly, quickly, and best as possible. Many more phases of work to come, and opening the doors to be allowed to talk about the challenges is the absolutely necessary first stage.
Non-Arab Arab
June 18, 2011 at 9:42 am
absolutely true, Non-Arab Arab. Excellent comment.
Robin Yassin-Kassab
June 18, 2011 at 11:23 am