Feb 02 2012 |
more articles from
|
Syria facing specter of civil war
By GWYNNE DYER Since last March, about 5,400 people have been killed by the military and paramilitary troopsYou can't blame them for their reluctance, because Syria isn't Libya. It is a big country with a powerful army, the core of which will remain loyal to the Assad regime right down to the last ditch. A good 30 percent of the civilian population will join them in the ditch: The Alawites (Shiite), the Christians, and some of the Kurds and Druze, all of whom fear that the overthrow of the regime will put the Sunni Arab majority in the driving seat.
That's where they should be, of course -- they are at more than 70 percent of the population -- but when revolutions triumphed recently in Tunisia and Egypt, the subsequent elections brought explicitly Islamic parties to parties. There's no evidence that those parties will actually abuse the civil rights of minorities, but given the increasingly sectarian nature of the struggle in Syria, the minorities there are frightened by the prospect of Sunni power.
But it's getting worse in Syria. Several suburbs of Damascus itself have now fallen into rebel hands, and Assad's forces are shelling neighborhoods only 5 km. (3 mi.) from the center of the city. Since last March, about 5,400 people have been killed by the regime's military and paramilitary troops, and the 200 observers sent by the Arab League in December didn't even slow the rate of killing.
In fact, the Arab League has even drafted a joint resolution with Britain, France and Germany that threatens unspecified further measures against the Syrian regime if Assad does not step aside. Nabil Al-Arabi, the head of the Arab League, is in New York this week to present it to the Security Council in person.
That's the good news. The bad news is that the Syrian regime has already rejected the Arab League's demand, insisting that what's really happening in Syria is attacks by "armed terrorist gangs" (i.e. al-Qaeda) backed by Israel and the United States. Ridiculous, but a lot of Alawites and Christians actually believe it.
The worse news is that Russia will veto the resolution before the Security Council anyway. Assad is Moscow's only real ally in the Middle East, and Russia's only naval base in the Mediterranean is on the Syrian coast. Bad Moscow -- but the truth is that foreign military intervention would probably not stop the killing at this point unless it was truly massive. That wouldn't happen even with a dozen Security Council resolutions.
The worst news of all is that this probably means that Syria is heading down into the same kind of hell that Lebanon went through in its fifteen-year civil war (1975-90).
It has just gone on too long. The Syrian protests began as a brave attempt to emulate the nonviolent revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt.
The Assad regime would kill people, of course, but if the protesters stood fast and refused to kill back, ultimately the regime's support would just drain away. Nonviolence was doubly important in the Syrian case, because if it were a violent revolution various minorities would feel gravely threatened.
Alas, that nonviolent strategy has foundered on the rock of Syria's sectarian and ethnic divisions. Sunni deserters from the army started fighting back, and all the other communities took fright. Now it's a civil war in which the regime has the heavy weapons but the Sunni Arabs have the numbers.
Syria is just as complex a society as Lebanon, although we can still hope that the war does not go on as long. And it's entirely possible that the Assad regime, whose senior ranks are mostly drawn from the Alawite minority (only 10 percent of the population), has deliberately chosen civil war. Better that than surrender power and expose the Alawites to the vengeance they fear from all those whom they have ruled for the past 40 years.
This does not mean that the "Arab Spring" was a mistake, or even that it is over. Few other Arab countries have as divided a population or as ruthless a regime as Syria. But it is still a great tragedy.
© Arab News 2012
Zawya Comment Policy
-
Zawya encourages you to add a comment to this discussion. You agree that when you add content to this discussion your comments will not:
1.1 Contain any material which is libelous or defamatory of any person, is obscene, offensive, hateful or inflammatory or causes damage to the reputation of any person or organisation.
1.2 Promote sexually explicit material, violence, discrimination based on race, sex, religion, nationality, disability, sexual orientation or age or any illegal activity.
1.3 Be made in breach of any legal duty owed to a third party, such as a contractual duty or a duty of confidence.
1.4 Be threatening, abuse or invade another's privacy, or cause annoyance, inconvenience or needless anxiety.
1.5 Be used to impersonate any person, to misrepresent your identity or affiliation with any person, or be likely to deceive any person.
1.6 Give the impression that they represent Zawya.
1.7 Advocate, promote or assist any unlawful act such as (by way of example only) copyright infringement or computer misuse. - The content posted on www.zawya.com is created by members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of Zawya. Zawya reserves the right to review all comments prior to posting and edit or delete any contribution, but Zawya is not responsible for and can not be held liable for any content posted by members of the public on www.zawya.com.
- Zawya is not responsible for the availability or content of any third party sites that are accessible through www.zawya.com. Any links to third party websites from www.zawya.com do not amount to any endorsement of that site by Zawya and any use of that site by you is at your own risk.
- By submitting your comment, you hereby give Zawya the right, but not the obligation, to post, air, edit, exhibit, telecast, webcast, re-use, publish, reproduce, use, license, print, distribute or otherwise use your comments worldwide, in perpetuity.
Copyright © 2012 Zawya Ltd. All rights reserved. |
provided by www.zawya.com |



Post Your Comment