Photo courtesy of Andrew Butters (andrewbutters.com)
By Andrew Tabler
APR 30 2014, 12:36 PM ET
The Atlantic
The United States and the international
community have spent the better part of the last year backing peace talks in
Geneva to bring about a “political transition that meets the legitimate
aspirations of the Syrian people,” and ultimately end the war between the
Alawite-dominated regime of President Bashar al-Assad and the Sunni and
Kurdish-dominated opposition. But Assad has his own transition in mind: running
for a third seven-year term as president. On April 28, the Syrian president
nominated himself as a candidate in Syria’s June 3 presidential poll,
“hoping the parliament would endorse it.”
This was hardly a surprise. Assad has
hinted at his candidacy for months, and “spontaneous rallies” calling for him
to run—many complete with images of Assad beside Hezbollah leader Hassan
Nasrallah—have sprung up across regime-controlled areas of the country, while
shopkeepers have been encouraged to paint their storefronts with Syrian flags
and slogans supporting the leader.
What’s Assad’s concession to his
opponents after attempting to shoot his way out of the country’s largest
uprising, with 150,000-plus killed, 680,000 injured, and up to half of the
country’s 23 million people displaced? The Syrian president has made the
next poll the first contested presidential election in the nation’s modern
history. That pledge, however, is undermined by the state of war in the
country and Assad’s previous referendums, including the last presidential
election I observed personally in 2007, when he won by a Crimea-like 97.62 percent
of the vote. In one polling station in Damascus’s wealthiest and most
Westernized neighborhood, a young woman-turned-poll worker not only urged me to
vote even though I did not have Syrian nationality, but also encouraged me to
follow the lead of Assad’s main election poster and vote with a fingerprint in
my own blood. Such tactics helped Assad improve upon his 97.24-percent showing
in 2000, when his father Hafez died, and the Syrian parliament lowered the
minimum age for seeking the Syrian presidency from 40 to 34 to allow Bashar to
run.
Why, then, should anyone care about
another rigged election in the Middle East? Because Assad’s reelection is
actually part of his larger strategy to destroy the international
community-backed plan for a negotiated solution to the increasingly sectarian
Syrian crisis in favor of a forced solution on his terms. This solution
includes sieges and starvation of opposition-controlled areas, the manipulation
of aid supplies, and the dropping of “barrel bombs,” Scud missiles, and alleged
chlorine gas canisters on his enemies. While this approach has helped him gain
ground in western Syria with help from a legion of Hezbollah, Iraqi, and other
Iranian-backed Shiite fighters, Assad lacks the troops to retake and hold all
of Syria, unless his allies expand their involvement to a much more costly
degree. Short of Syria’s occupation by what is often described as “Iran’s
foreign legion,” the opposition and their regional backers will not agree to a
Potemkin transition with Assad and his Iranian allies calling the shots.
The likely outcome of all this is a
failed state partitioned into regime, Sunni-Arab, and Kurdish areas, all of
which are now havens for U.S.-designated terrorist organizations in the heart
of the Middle East. Combined with regional tensions between Iran and the Arabs,
as well as the deep chill in relations between Russia and the United States,
diplomatic solutions seem distant as well. This presents Barack Obama with a
dilemma that has far-reaching implications. Allowing Assad’s forced solution to
go forward will only contribute to the spread of a Syria-centered Middle
Eastern proxy war between Iran and Arab countries, demonstrate to dictators
that mass slaughter works, and show Moscow and other U.S. adversaries that Washington
is unwilling to follow through on its foreign-policy principles and diplomatic
agreements. But reversing Assad’s course will require the kind of military
action from the West and its regional allies that Obama has been extremely
reluctant to use due to its expense and uncertain result for the United
States.
A campaign poster in Damascus for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad reads in Arabic, "We want Assad." (Reuters/Khaled al-Hariri)
***
In early 2012, as the armed insurgency
in Syria gathered steam, the Assad regime’s changes to the constitution to
establish contested presidential elections attracted little attention in the
West, which at the time was focused on Kofi Annan’s five-point plan to end the
crisis. When that effort failed, the United States and Russia negotiated the
“Geneva Communique of 2012.” At the time, the regime’s contraction, if not its
demise, seemed certain, so Western negotiators watered down the text’s language
over Assad’s fate to overcome a Russian veto at the United Nations. Instead of
demanding Assad “step aside” as part of a transition, the United States agreed
to a “Transitional Governing Body” with “full executive powers” to be formed by
“mutual consent” that “could include members of the current government and the
opposition and other groups.” American negotiators held up the “mutual consent”
clause at the time as giving the opposition a veto over Assad’s participation
in the TGB. But by not ruling Assad out of the scheme, as well as failing to
define which opposition groups had to agree to the TGB, the agreement gave
Russia a veto over the process and allowed Assad to play for time.
And he
did just that. Last year, with the backing of Iran, Hezbollah, and Russia,
Assad launched a counterinsurgency effort that—combined with the use of
chemical weapons, Obama’s unwillingness to enforce his “red line” on their use
in Syria, and the regime’s foot-dragging on its deal with the Organization for
the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons in Security Council Resolution
2118—decimated the opposition. As a seeming concession to the Russians for
getting the Assad regime to give up its chemical weapons, the United States
helped deliver selective representatives from the Syrian National Coalition
(SNC), an opposition umbrella organization backed by the West, to negotiations
in Geneva with the Assad regime in January and February. But the Syrian regime
refused to negotiate a Transitional Governing Body, and went so far as to place
opposition negotiators on a list of terrorists. At the same time, Assad
increased bombardment of opposition areas with barrel bombs—crude explosive
devices dropped from regime helicopters. According to U.S. Ambassador to the
United Nations Samantha Power “the
most concentrated period of killing in the entire duration of the conflict”
occurred during the talks in Geneva. Russia, which in Security Council
Resolution 2118 had effectively pledged to involve the regime in discussions on
the TGB, is now suddenly unwilling to do so.
***
Meanwhile,
in interviews with the Western, Russian, and Arab press, Assad and regime
spokespersons have announced that he will run in the upcoming presidential poll
and that international election observers will not be allowed into the country.
The rules stipulate that each candidate file an application with the Supreme
Constitutional Court, an all-Assad-appointed body that will reach a verdict on
each application within five days. It is unclear what the final arrangements
will be and who will run—six other candidates have announced their candidacy.
But what is certain is that Syria’s election law forbids candidates who have
not resided in Syria for the last 10 years, which eliminates many of the exiled
opposition active in the Syrian National Coalition.
Assad
says he will only deal with parties that have a “national agenda” in upcoming
local and parliamentary elections, which essentially rules out not only the
SNC, but also other armed groups that control large swaths of opposition-held
Syria. The opposition acceptable to Assad encompasses groups in
regime-controlled areas that have been tolerated for years, including the
National Coordination Body for Democratic Change (NCC). The NCC is headed by
the elderly pan-Arab socialist Hassan Abdel Azim, who has little to no
influence on the opposition outside Assad-controlled areas.
A Free Syrian Army fighter in the old city of Aleppo. (Reuters/Muzaffar Salman)
It is
here where Assad’s logic collides with the hard realities of Syrian
demographics. Following the Assad regime’s last attempt to shoot its way out of
an uprising by its Sunni majority, which culminated in the Hama Massacre of 1982,
in which up to 30,000 Syrians died, Assad’s father launched a massive,
decade-long crackdown in Syria that decimated the economy and confined people
to their homes. Predictably, birthrates skyrocketed. In the decade following
the Hama Massacre, Syria was among the 20 fastest-growing populations on the
planet, particularly in Sunni-dominated rural areas (this accounts for the lack
of gray hair among today's opposition fighters). This time around, there are
many more Sunnis than Alawites, who had fewer children. If Assad only offers a
bankrupt plan for reforms based on his “reelection” as a transition, along with
promises of economic largesse that he can ill afford, there is little chance
his regime will be able to shoot the Sunni opposition into submission to a
degree that would stabilize and reunite the country.
***
The bad
news for the fragmented Syrian opposition is that the loose language negotiated
by Russia in the Geneva Communique of 2012 concerning the formation of a
“Transitional Governing Body” by “mutual consent” could in practice mean that
opposition forces who succumb to Assad ultimately form the basis of the TGB.
And given the Obama administration’s aversion to supporting the Syrian
opposition with lethal assistance or direct military intervention, as well as
its current outreach to the Assad regime’s chief supporters in Tehran, the
White House might be tempted to take the bait and agree to such a political
transition. As might European governments concerned about the growth of
jihadists among the Sunni opposition.
That
would be a big mistake. Handing Assad and Iran’s foreign legion even a partial
victory in Syria right now would make it more difficult to contain Tehran’s
regional machinations and secure further concessions over its nuclear program.
But more importantly, it would likely stoke a regional, sectarian proxy war
centered on Syria. Arab Gulf countries, including Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and
Kuwait, are deeply worried about Iran’s spreading influence and nuclear
ambitions, and appear committed to fighting Iran’s legion to the last dead
Syrian. These motivations have spurred some of their citizens to sponsor
effective al-Qaeda affiliates in Syria with global aspirations.
The most
effective and least costly way to contain Assad’s advance, as well as the
influence of jihadists, is through greater lethal support for the moderate
opposition—an option the White House has been debating for years and is
reportedly debating now in light of the bravado that the Syrian and Russian
presidents have been demonstrating recently. As the Assad regime has
accelerated shipments of chemical weapons to the Syrian coast, American-made
TOW anti-tank missiles have increasingly made their way to moderate Syrian
opposition fighters vetted by Western intelligence. But the only way to stop
the Assad regime’s aerial bombardment of opposition areas and bring the
government to the negotiating table is by providing anti-aircraft weapons to
the opposition or launching missile strikes on the regime’s airfields. In
recent days, however, Obama has sharply rebuked critics
of his Syria policy who are now calling for a military response to Assad’s
worsening behavior.
While
Obama’s equation of “Syria is Iraq” has worked with the American public so far,
Assad’s forced solution has global implications that run directly counter to
American values and interests. Permitting the Syrian president to implement his
strategy would demonstrate to ruthless dictators around the world that mass
slaughter and blocked humanitarian access are effective tactics. And, at a time
when Washington and its European allies are contending with a resurgent Russia,
U.S. adversaries eager to challenge international law will conclude that the
West is weak, does not uphold its principles, and can be effectively ignored.
This won’t only prolong the war in Syria. It also makes one much more likely in
Ukraine.
This
article available online at:
Copyright © 2014 by The Atlantic Monthly
Group. All Rights Reserved.
Andrew J. Tabler is
senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and author of
the book In the Lion’s Den: An Eyewitness
Account of Washington’s Battle with Syria.
1 comment:
Great analysis.
Do you ever get frustrated saying the same thing month after month about supporting moderate elements in the Syrian opposition being the most logical and least dangerous path forward?
Keep up the good works....
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