http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article39433

Syria & Middle East: Without compelling change on ground there is no end for war

Monday 24 October 2016, by ACHCAR Gilbert, EZZAT Dina

Without compelling change on ground there is no end for war in Syria,
says prominent political scientist Gilbert Achcar.

With US President Barack Obama approaching the final weeks of his time
in the Oval Office, it is clear he is leaving behind an incomplete
vision for democracy and peace in the Middle East, anticipated in his
Cairo speech eight years ago.

Syria is perhaps one of the worst troubles left behind by the Obama
administration.

In the eyes of prominent political science professor and commentator
Gilbert Achcar, Obama did not merely fail to provide answers to the
dilemma in Syria before the peaceful calls for democracy metamorphosed
into civil war; he is actually responsible for the suffering of the
Syrian people that has persisted endlessly for five years.

“The Obama administration and Barack Obama himself are directly
responsible for the massacre in Syria,” Achcar said in an interview
with Ahram Online.

According to Achcar, while Russia was getting heavily involved in
Syria directly and through its regional allies, the Obama
administration failed to take the side of the opposition and it did
even put a ceiling on the support that regional powers were providing
for those acting against Syrian “dictator” Bashar Al-Assad.

“The Obama administration denied the opposition anti-aircraft missiles
at a time when Assad and his allies from Russia were heavily
bombarding the cities where the call for democracy started,” Achcar
said.

This, he argued, created a situation of imbalance in favour of Assad
and left millions of Syrians devastated and dispelled from their own
homes and their entire country, carrying “a firm belief that the US is
to blame for their plight,” he said.

Unlike other commentators, the Lebanese-born and London-based
professor of political science sees no war by proxy in Syria, “simply
because in Syria there is no balance, and because while Russia is so
heavily involved the US is involved to a much lesser degree.”

This lack of balance, which he is not certain will be reversed by a
new US administration come January next year, is the driver of ongoing
war in Syria.

“There is no end in sight and all the political negotiations are
simply unable to secure an answer because the situation on the ground
does not compel Assad to go. The opposition cannot come to accept the
rule of this dictator—especially considering that in 2013 and 2015,
with limited means, they managed to make considerable progress in the
face of Assad and regional allies including Hezbollah and other
militias,” he said during a telephone interview.

“Short of a decisive change on the ground there cannot be any ending
of the war in Syria because the dictator will continue his war with
the support of the Russians; he would not settle for any compromise as
long as he knows that the opposition is being denied serious defensive
weapons,” he insisted.

Achcar is not willing to confuse the war on ISIS with the war in
Syria, and said it is impossible that the Obama administration could
have been fooled into believing that one is the other. Rather, the
Obama administration—and possibly Israel—feared the collapse of Syria
in the absence of a credible replacement that could have won approval
by all concerned regional and international partners.

Syria, Achcar insisted, will be one of the greatest and most important
challenges for the next US presidency. He believes that despite
setbacks, the Arab Spring that began in Tunis in the very late days of
2010 is bound to reemerge, because it reflects the true will of people
who have had enough with economic injustice and poor governance.

Author of two volumes on the Arab Spring printed in 2013 and the
spring of this year under the titles of The People Want: a Radical
Exploration of the Arab Uprising and Morbid Symptoms: Relapse in the
Arab Uprising, Achcar sees Syria through the lens that the old is dead
and the new is yet to be born.

This is precisely the point he argues in his two volumes: the old
regimes which prompted so much contempt—demonstrated in the squares by
the masses—cannot be resurrected no matter the political ploys of
their remnants. But the “progressive alternative” is not there yet,
“and meanwhile we see the continued struggle within the old, between
military and Islamist, and not between the old and the new as some
might think.”

Achcar has no doubt in his mind that contrary to the narrative given
by Assad and other leaders in countries currently suffering the
setback of the Arab Spring, the US was not the one to instigate the
massive show of rebellion.

“Those who promote this argument seem determined to overlook the very
shocking unfair distribution of wealth in Arab countries,” Achcar
said.

He insisted that in Syria with Assad, in Egypt with Hosni Mubarak and
even in Libya with Muammar Qaddafi “who had been collaborating with
the West since 2003,” the US was taken by surprise and was not sure
how to react.

“Actually, the only country that could not have been qualified as a US
ally was Syria – although of course the US never treated Syria as an
enemy; like Israel, the US was content with a Syrian regime that kept
the borders with Israel peaceful and handled the Palestinian
resistance in Lebanon,” he said. “Despite the friction with the Bush
administration, around Syrian opposition to the occupation of Iraq as
well as Syrian alliance with Iran and Hezbollah, the Obama
administration had improved its relations with Damascus,” he added.

According to Achcar, the US actually tried to “co-opt the revolution
in Syria” in its early days through “the association of the Muslim
Brotherhood and Qatar” but it failed, “just as it failed to present
the other Arab Spring countries with regimes that could both appease
the demands of the masses and still do business with the US.”

Today, Achcar argues that in every Arab Spring country the US remains
engaged with regimes that have not bowed to the demands of the masses,
beyond “empty slogans and false promises” to meet the “actual demands
of redistribution of wealth and developmental policies, and of course
democracy.”

According to Achcar, while some try to address their socio-economic
woes by pursuing IMF-prescribed reform measures, “this too is part of
the old and it does not provide a sustainable shield against a
socio-economic explosion.”

However, he argues, the basic political dilemma remains unresolved:
the military versus the Islamist, “and now we are actually talking
about Sunni Islamist versus Shia Islamist with both Saudi Arabia and
Iran at loggerheads.”

According to Achcar, this is why the situation is still unsettled “and
will remain as such as long as no new breakthrough manages to finally
finish the old and introduce the new; we will see a lot more upheaval
and it could take several more years or a few decades but the old has
to go completely and the new has yet to be born.”

This elimination of the old and the birth of the new are indispensable
but not inevitable, argued Achcar. Short of this indispensable radical
change, the region will keep suffering from instability and violence.

Dina Ezzat

P.S.

* Ahram Online. Monday 24 Oct 2016:
http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/246448.aspx

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