Barry Rubin
In the Middle East, violence is not the result of poor communication
but a tool for political gain. Nothing proves that point better than
Syria's successful use of violence and terrorism to promote its
interests. No amount of dialogue is going to change that reality.
Now Syria is using a Palestinian front group to start a war inside
Lebanon, just as it employed another Lebanese client organization,
Hezbollah, to battle Israel last year. The Syrian government's message
is simple: Lebanon will know no peace until it again becomes our
satellite.
In two years, 15 major terrorist attacks targeted Lebanon's
independent-minded leaders. Most notorious was the assassination of
popular former prime minister Rafik Hariri in February 2005, which also
killed 21 bystanders.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad sponsors terrorism and his wishes for
Syria's role in the Middle East are fundamentally at odds with the
West, Barry Rubin writes. Give him an inch in negotiations and he'll
take a mile.
Vahid Salemi, The Associated Press
In response, the United Nations set up an international investigation
whose interim reports pointed the finger at Syria and even, in
unpublished drafts, at president Bashar al-Assad's closest relatives
for the killing. Last week, the United States, Britain, and France
introduced a resolution in the UN to set up a tribunal to try the
murderers.
Since the tribunal is in co-operation with Lebanon, Syria must ensure
that country's parliament vetoes the plan. Suddenly, bombs start
exploding in Beirut and a Syrian-backed Islamist group stages an
uprising against the government.
People get the hint. Cross Syria and you get hurt. To hold the tribunal
given events in Lebanon, says South African diplomat Dumisani Kumalo,
"We would need to have our heads examined. We were for going very slow
to start with. Now we are even slower."
What is less understood is how the regime's radical strategy is used at
home and why this makes it impossible to gain anything from engaging
with Syria. Like other Middle Eastern dictatorships, Syria's rulers
face a paradox. How to stay in power after failing so completely? The
economy is a mess, there is little freedom, and the regime is dominated
by a small Alawite minority which is historically secular.
Since taking power in 2000 on his father's death, Bashar has met this
challenge. He sends terrorists against Iraq, Israel, Lebanon and even
the U.S. military, but nobody retaliates in kind against him. At home,
the regime sounds increasingly Islamist; abroad it is the biggest
sponsor of radical Islamist groups in the region.
As a result of their interests and as a matter of survival, Syria's
rulers need anti-Americanism and the Arab-Israeli conflict to mobilize
support and distract from their failings. For example, when Syrians
demanded reforms after Bashar took power, then vice-president Abd Halim
Khaddam told the people that nothing could change as long as Israel
controlled the Golan Heights. But actually getting back this land would
be disastrous for the regime since making peace with Israel would
dissolve that excuse, but also because it would open massive demands by
its own citizens for democracy, prosperity, and reform.
Bashar has even declared a new doctrine he calls "Resistance," which
combines Arab nationalism and Islamism. The West's goal, he claims, is
to enslave the Arabs. The mistake made by other Arabs was to abandon
war. "The world will not be concerned with us and our interests,
feelings, and rights unless we are powerful," and victory requires
"adventure and recklessness." Any who disagree are mere "political
mercenaries" and "parasites."
This mandatory radicalism ensures that Syria interprets western
concessions and confidence-building measures as acts of surrender,
proving its strategy is working. Years of dialogue and numerous visits
by secretaries of state could not even get Syria to close the terrorist
offices in Damascus, much less make any policy changes.
Anwar al-Bunni, a democratic dissident, explained in 2003 that the only
thing that held back the regime was fear of America. It was only due to
"the fright it gave our rulers, that we reformers stand a chance here."
But once U.S. members of Congress flocked to Damascus, offering words
of praise and advocating detente, Bunni was proven right. He was
sentenced on trumped-up charges to five years' imprisonment.
Being nice to Syria will lead nowhere because the regime thrives on
conflict and its demands -- including a recolonized Lebanon -- are too
contrary to western interests to meet. U.S. and Canadian policy should
treat Syria's regime as a determined adversary whose interests are
diametrically opposed to their own because that regime leaves them no
real choice.
Original
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You can't play nice with Syria
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