Syria: the Middle East's tipping point
THURSDAY, 09 FEBRUARY 2012 14:27 NASSAR IBRAHIM FOR THE ALTERNATIVE
INFORMATION CENTER (AIC)
http://www.alternativenews.org/english/index.php/component/content/article/34-opinion/4128-syria-the-middle-easts-tipping-point
The AIC is an internationally oriented, progressive, joint
Palestinian-Israeli activist organization. It is engaged in dissemination of
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conflict.
The struggle for Syria isn't just about Syria--it's the
struggle for a free, democratic Middle East versus one that lives under the
yoke of American and Israeli hegemony.
The conflict in Syria has reached its tipping point. At this level, it is no
longer acceptable or reasonable to continue playing in a gray area in the name
of diplomacy, as the struggle on Syria has a crucial significance from various
strategic points of views.
The importance of the Syrian question has to be found in Syria’s
key-role in the regional geostrategic pattern. Its position is directly
intertwined with the confrontations we will witness in the Arab world for the
next decade, whose results will in turn be strongly affected by the
transformation happening in Syria. To be clear, the moves we are witnessing
nowadays will influence the fate of a number of regional and global balances on
more than one axis.
From the moment that the Arab League made the decision to suspend
Syria's membership, entailing a series of sanctions against the Syrian
people, the clashes happening in Syria have moved to another level. This became
even clearer with the second proposed UN resolution--calling for a democratic
transition and for Bashar Al Assad to step down--which was stopped by Russia
and China’s vetoes last Saturday for the second time in four months.
There have been two attempts to prepare the ground for a military intervention
– that the US, European, and Arab countries would like to see and that 13
out of 15 UN Security Council members voted for. Such fervor reminds of the
international climate before the war against Iraq began in 2003.
With the recent developments, the façade has tumbled down disclosing
the real goals hidden behind different masks, revealing that the slogans
demanding freedom, democracy, and human rights have been used as a
battering-ram by the advocates for an intervention to break Syria. The
objective seems clear: depriving the country of its role and the Syrian people
of their will.
Here it has to be remembered that Syria has always had a relevant position
in Arab history, being an example of a centuries-old civilization, solid state
structures and a reference pole for the whole Arab world, not only because of
its geopolitical position, but also because of its anti-colonial spirit and
historical stand toward the state of Israel – as the longa manus of
Western colonial powers in the Middle East. These elements, which have
determined the nature of the people’s national feelings, are completely
ignored by advocates of "human rights, freedom and democracy" –
specifically the reactionary regimes in the Gulf, Turkey, the Lebanese
Hariri-movement and Syrian Islamist groups - hired by the American - French -
Qatar- connection. Ironically, representatives of countries which have been
re-named after the ruling family (Saudi Arabia) or whose leaders came to power
with a coup d’état while the own father was abroad (Sheikh Hamad bin
Khalifa of Qatar) are begging today for a NATO intervention aiming at the
destruction of Syria under the banner of "human rights and
democracy". At the peak of their frustration – being unable to
provoke a regime change for ten months in spite of all their media, financial
and military efforts – the opposition chef Burhan Ghalioun already
promised his intention to open up Syria to the Western allies, cut off
Syria’s relations with Iran, with the Lebanese and the Palestinian
resistance and furthermore to establish positive relations with Israel - if
their project will succeed. This shift toward a stronger inclusion into the
free market economy and the penetration by colonial forces would deny
Syria’s historical role and certainly not represent the Syrian
people’s interests.
The Western goal for Syria, and the broader Middle East, is to progressively
consolidate its control of the region. The so-called "War on Terror"
that began after 9/11 is an expression of this desire to co-op the Middle East,
as are the occupation of Afghanistan, the fall of Baghdad in 2003, the Israeli
war with Lebanon in 2006, and, finally, the Israeli attack on Gaza at the end
of 2008 and the beginning of 2009. The United States, however, faced resistance
and opposition movements.
Washington has been surprised by the fall of the Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in
Tunisia, the breakdown of Hosni Mubarak's regime in Egypt, and the outbreak
of protest movements in various Arab countries. The game, which was so clear
until then, got distorted, and the equation confused. These overthrows forced
the West to re-formulate strategies and policies in order to contain and
control the social change. This became even more important in light of the
US-defeat in Iraq after nine years of war under the pressure of the Iraqi
resistance, five thousand people dead, and an estimated three trillion dollars
military expenditure.
At this point, the alliance between the US and reactionary regimes alliance
could no longer set the agenda in an overt way. The strategy shifted to
involving the public debate and to direct the Arab reactionary regimes to break
the Syrian conflict. Strong engagement seemed to be the sole chance to
compensate for losses in Afghanistan, Iraq, and to protect the allied regimes
from the “Arab Spring”.
So, the imperialist and reactionary forces – namely NATO and its Gulf
allies - quickly decided to intervene against Syria, aiming at two possible
scenarios. The first option was to ride the wave of the Arab revolts, employing
full force to overthrow Syria using a comprehensive political, psychological,
and media war, including the internationalization of the crisis and the call
for an external intervention (like the one that occurred in Libya) to finally
turn this NATO-hostile country into a satellite state like other Arab
reactionary regimes revolving in the orbit of the colonial West.
If this doesn’t happen, we could see Western forces sink Syria in a
quagmire of destruction, exhausting its resources as state and society and, in
doing so, erasing the gains of its historical role at the regional and
international level. This would be achieved by fueling sectarian violence and
by arming terrorist organizations and extremist groups - trained and directed
to drain the structures and institutions of the state – to disrupt the
social and religious models, condemning Syria to long term internal
conflicts.
In this context, we have to analyze the power positions of the different
parties that have been involved in this struggle for months. We see two fronts
squaring off: the first includes the United States, Israel, Western European
countries, the Arab reactionary regimes represented by the Gulf Cooperation
Council, reactionary segments of Gulf societies, and Turkey, which is looking
for its regional role. On the other side we find the Syrian people demanding a
change, the Syrian state and resistance forces of political and cultural
opposition, especially in Lebanon and Palestine, backed by Algeria and
Iran.
Here a point has to be stressed: the Syrian regime – and the Baath
party# in particular- has to be strongly criticized for its repressive
policies. The people’s will for a change and for reforms must be
respected and supported. But the fact that the regime could not be overthrown
yet shows that the internal balance of powers is different than it is presented
in the international mainstream media. The crucial role of the Baath party in
the creation of state structures (for example, the health care and educational
systems) and in the support of the resistance movements- first and foremost the
Palestinian one – has not been forgotten by the Syrian people. Moreover,
if foreign powers are calling for the destruction of Syria’s state and
structures, the regime should answer the Syrian people’s demands for
reform. While a transition is necessary, it shouldn’t come at the price
of Syria’s dismantlement and the denial of its people’s right to
self-determination, disguised as democratization.
Internal pressure has already proven to be able to force the regime to open
up for reforms, which were announced in recent months and include the withdraw
of the emergency law in power since 1963, constitutional reforms entailing
Presidential and local elections, parties pluralism with four new legalized
parties and five others in the process of legalization, economic reforms
revoking free trade agreements harming the interest of small and medium Syrian
entrepreneurs and taking distance again from the shortly started free market
policies. But the reforms need time and space to work and to prove that
democratization is possible without Western dictates.
What is happening in Syria now is in not a local conflict, but an expression
of the clashes between the American and Israeli vision of a "New Middle
East" on one side and the resistance movements and oppositions fighting
for true democratic social change.
This struggle moves on three interdependent levels:
First level: the confrontation between the resistance and
opposition parties fighting for their political, economic and cultural rights
versus the Zionist project in all its dimensions and goals.
Consequences of the conflict at this level will determine the future of the
Palestinian cause, either beyond the impasse created by the Oslo Accords, or by
the dependency of the Arab countries and the consequent weakening of the
Palestinian resistance. This would mean that the Arab world has to take
initiative, pushing for Palestinian national rights, and countering the Zionist
project as a prelude to his defeat. Or, it would lead to the defeat of the core
of the resistance with the following Zionist victory, implying the annihilation
of Palestinian rights.
Second level: a confrontation between the US- EU colonial
attempt to dominate the region, with the support of the reactionary forces in
Turkey and in the Arab regimes, against the Russian-Chinese axis, backed by
emerging international forces, such as Iran, Brazil, and India.
This confrontation will determine the parameters of the new international
balances, aiming, on the one hand, to overcome American hegemony and restore
Russia's and China’s moderating roles - which would lead to a
reshaping of international relations, including reforming the UN role, which
has been increasingly dominated by US interests in the last two decades. Russia
and China, together with other emerging countries - such as India, South
Africa, Brazil and Venezuela, and much of Latin America - are willing to
reshape international relations on the basis of a more just balance than the
pattern of US dominance that emerged after World War II and that was reinforced
by the fall of the Soviet Union.
The alternative to this would be the fulfillment of the US plan to
break Syria, gaining the chance to rearrange the region according to American
interests and strategies.
Third level: The confrontation at the sociopolitical
– ideological level between the reactionary religious forces and the
Salafists on one side and the secular progressive movements on the other, with
their respective social and political agents.
This will determine the nature of change in the region and in the Arab
communities, either moving the area towards a state of decline, leading to the
establishment of new reactionary systems ruling in the name of religion, which
will put an end to the process of democratic change with its national
progressive expressions. This is what we will see if NATO powers intervene and
manipulate the Arab ownership of the democratization process, thus restoring
the colonial “democracy” once again. Alternatively, we could see
the socio-political democratization process gain new momentum in Arab
societies, becoming a genuine and profound phenomenon, which could be a model
for change in Syria. This would clear the path for the Arab nation to break
away from a state of dependency on the West, allowing it to enter a phase of
progress and to assert itself on the international stage.
In light of this analysis, and stressing the interdependency of these three
levels, the conflict in Syria has to be seen not just as struggle to punish the
previous positions or the repressive policies by the Assad regime. It is, in
essence, a conflict to determine the region's future. In this sense, the
confrontation transcends narrow readings. A success for Syria means more than
the state’s survival resisting foreign colonial interventions and
standing against the attempt of its dismantlement. This is important, but a
real success is dependent on the ability to implement a deep, radical and
comprehensive reform process targeting the Syrian institutions, society and
state apparatus. Aim of such democratization should be tapping the full
potential of the Syrian society, especially in light of the high level of
consciousness it proved in crucial historical moments. The people who - with
their protests and, at the same time, their resistance to external
interventions - did not fall in the trap of dazzling slogans for democracy and
human rights, have been a big surprise for those who wagered on their break
down. They proved to the Assad regime that they are willing and capable of true
democratic change that is more than a translation of external models.
The struggle taking place in Syria reveals that current developments
have been fueled by colonial powers. The goal sought by the colonial
and reactionary actors is to prevent Syria from building its own democratic
model as an alternative to the Western "Democratic colonial" project.
The Western policy implemented towards the Assad regime seeks Syria's
subordination and dependence, as a strategy to contain the Arab revolutions, to
control and keep them under the roof of the American-Western vision, as the
latter have failed to protect their Arab allies from mass revolts. Western
interests in keeping hold of the reins of change in the Arab world explains the
Western repositioning towards political Islam, especially the Muslim
Brotherhood, which came to power in Tunisia, Libya and Egypt. In their turn,
the Islamist movements are proving to be far less dangerous to Western
interests than Western leaders, analysts, and the media claimed they would be.
Looking past the hostile rhetoric we see that the Islamist movements in power
are, in fact, rethinking their attitude in order to build bridges with Western
countries, as a prelude to the establishment of new alliances in the
region.
There is no room to be neutral or ambiguous in the face of this
confrontation, and the duty of the resistance forces and the actors struggling
for a democratic change across the Arab world – the actors that
shouldn’t be forgotten - is, therefore, to evolve and protect Syria and
the broader Middle East.