http://www.indiawrites.org/diplomacy/beyond-regime-change-politics-spare-syria-more-violence/

BEYOND REGIME CHANGE POLITICS: SPARE SYRIA MORE
VIOLENCE<http://www.indiawrites.org/diplomacy/beyond-regime-change-politics-spare-syria-more-violence/>
BY ADITI BHADURI <http://www.indiawrites.org/author/aditi-bhaduri/>


[image: syria-violence1]Some years ago Dr. Khalid El Sheikh, former
Palestinian Ambassador to India, a fine human being and a scholar, gifted
me a book he head authored on the history of the Middle East. By some
Freudian slip, the book was printed ‘History of the Muddle East’.  Dr. El
Sheikh is no more, but the Muddle East continues. Today in a chilling rerun
of history, we are witnessing the same discourse that we had done exactly a
decade ago. Only then it was Iraq, and now it is Syria. But the vocabulary
is similar – surgical strikes, regime change, chemical weapons. Only Syria
seems to be more a rerun of Afghanistan, rather than Iraq.

*Decoding regime change politics*

A recent article in the Wall Street Journal, *A Veteran Saudi Power Player
Works To Build Support to Topple Assad *by Adam Entous, Nour Malas, and
Margaret Coker,* *document how Saudi Arabia and the CIA have teamed up to
train and arm representatives of the Syrian opposition to overthrow the
Bashar al Assad regime in Syria. Only in this case Jordan has replaced
Pakistan as the frontline state. For sure, Syria had been marked for regime
change a long time ago, soon after the regime change in Iraq. It is not
that the Al Assad regime has been a benevolent one. Despotic and
iron-fisted it has been. But, before the so-called Arab Spring and the
uprising against the government began, one wonders how more oppressive had
the regime been than that of the numerous other existing, but monarchical
regimes in the Middle East. The one difference is that Syria had
steadfastly refused to negotiate peace with Israel which was not on its
terms – that is full Israeli withdrawal from the Golan Heights – unlike
Egypt, unlike Jordan and also unlike the Palestinians. And unlike the other
regimes in the Arab world, the Syrian regime is non-Sunni, (though many of
its practices have more in common with Hinduism than with the Shias, like
the belief in reincarnation). And Hezbollah, the protégé of Syria and Iran,
is the only militant group that has delivered in the region – in pushing
the Israelis out of Lebanon in 2000, and in the war with Israel again in
2006. This ability to deliver forged a striking example of Shia-Sunni
cooperation through the Hezbollah-Hamas alliance, in a region rife with
sectarian violence today.

*Holy Smoke?*

[image: SYRIA: Chemical weapons]The Arab Spring only helped accelerate
things. The script has changed since the emergence of the heart-wrenching
videos of the August 21 attacks in Damascus suburbs, alleging the use of
chemical weapons on a sleeping civilian population. Surgical strikes on
Damascus are now said to be a matter of not if but when.

But karma seems to be getting in the way. After the unsuccessful Western
interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya much of the world is no longer
in the mood to buy their indignation over the use of chemical weapons;
neither their assertions that it was the Assad regime that has used them.
Surely, the timing seems to be too in your face – just as UN weapons
inspectors arrived in the country to determine earlier chemical weapons
use. As Sharif Nashashibi, an Arab journalist and political commentator,
points out, the mandate of the UN mission to Syria is not to determine who
has used chemical weapons, but merely to determine if chemical weapons have
been used, not to pin responsibility for it on one or the other side. In
other words, actually useless, since Carla Del Ponte,  member of the U.N.
Independent International Commission of
Inquiry<http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/un-independent-international-commission-of-inquiry/>
 on Syria <http://www.washingtontimes.com/topics/syria/> had earlier
already established the fact that sarin nerve gas had been used – in fact
she went on to allege their use by rebel forces.

It is not that it is impossible that the regime could use them, but it
seems improbable. On the other hand, the US and the UK seem to have
intercepted phone calls between panicking Syrian government officials and
head of a chemical weapons’ factory soon after the 21st August attacks.
This gives grist to their mill that it was the Syrian regime that is
allegedly responsible for those attacks. Therefore, a chorus for ‘surgical
strikes’. Not a regime change this time. Unlike in Afghanistan, where the
modern world’s first *jihad* was fought, *jihad* has been around for some
time now and the region is awash with *jihadists,* many of them
freelancers. And since the uprising in Syria in 2011, many Islamists,
together with *jihadists* affiliated with Al Qaeda, have entered and are
operating in Syria. According to some counts there are 60,000 jihadists
active in Syria right now. The world has watched videos of the harsh laws
already imposed in some areas controlled by them, not to forget video clips
of cannibalism.

*Saving Secular Syria*

[image: syria-secular]Bashar Al Assad will go down in history as a tyrant,
but unlike other repressive regimes in the region, he kept Syria secular,
liberal and pluralistic. Which is why, aside from anticipating a bloodbath
against his Allawite community, if the regime falls, the Christians of
Syria also fear ethnic cleansing as has happened in Iraq after the fall of
Saddam Hussein, and are standing by the Assad regime. The war in Syria has
already spilled over into Lebanon, and has affected Syria’s other
neighbours – Turkey and Iraq. The disintegration of Syria is just one of
the worst-case scenarios. Further, the Western powers are themselves not
sure how much of the weapons that they have been arming the rebels with
have found their way to the Islamists and others affiliated with the Al
Qaeda in Iraq and Levant, and what would be the fate of Syria’s arsenal of
chemical weapons should the regime fall.

In another scenario, as Israeli journalist Shlomi Eldar writes, if because
of Western strikes on Syria, Israel is drawn into the war, many Syrians
would then rally around their President, as may Muslims in other parts of
the world. Hence, the US attack on Syria will achieve nothing. War fatigue
for now has ensured that even public opinion in the US and the UK are
divided, and not in support of military intervention in Syria. Which is why
the UN route is being sought.

*Listen to voice of Syrian people*

But what of the Syrian people? Now that the one millionth Syrian child
refugee has fled his country, two million Syrian children are internally
displaced, 1.7 million Syrians are registered as refugees and 100,000
Syrians lie dead, is not time to ask what is it that the Syrian people
want? The tragedy is that we do not hear the voices of the people inside
Syria. Those calling for the regime’s ouster are mostly Syrians based
abroad, and not refugees. But what of those inside Syria? Do they need, or
deserve yet more violence? Will surgical strikes not cause collateral
damage? Do they not have a way of going terrifyingly wrong as we have seen
in the past? The very few voices heard have rejected any Western
intervention.

Spare Syria more violence now. The warring factions may be on a high of
anger, fear, loss, power, revenge, victory and allied emotions. But it is
incredible that their allies can continue to watch the suffering and
continue to talk more violence. More than anything, Syria now needs a
cease-fire to be enforced on all sides, at least for a while. It is
incumbent that the international community ensures this. Now more than ever
all paths need to converge on Geneva.





-- 
Peace Is Doable

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