http://www.asharq-e.com/news.asp?section=2&id=32391

Damascus without al-Assad and Cairo’s fears

01/01/2013 
By Abdul Rahman Al-Rashed


What if our hopes our disappointed and a third year passes with Bashar al-Assad 
still clinging on to power in Damascus?

At this point we would have no other choice but to apologize, stop writing, or 
pay the price for our mistaken analysis of the situation. Although I am being 
careful not to predict particular dates for al-Assad’s fall, all information 
confirms that his regime cannot last long, and the only predication that I am 
comfortable making is that he will fall by the end of the second year of the 
Syrian revolution. This is the same conclusion that I have previously heard 
from well-informed figures such as Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea, who 
made a similar predication more than 18 months ago, namely since the Syrian 
opposition gave up peaceful protests. At this point, he said that the regime’s 
collapse was guaranteed but that it would take two years, and this predication 
still holds. 

All those preoccupied with the Syrian file, including those who are managing 
and funding the opposition, are saying that the al-Assad regime is worn-out and 
faltering and that it will most likely collapse in January or February of this 
year. The al-Assad regime has prolonged its life not due to the valour of 
al-Assad or his forces but because the superpowers took the decision not to 
intervene, as they did in Libya. They took this decision for plausible reasons, 
including Israeli national security, fear of the outbreak of a civil war, fear 
of the spread of jihadist groups; particularly as such groups are now running 
amok in Libya and threatening Tunisia. In addition to this, there is also the 
character of President Barack Obama who prefers to avoid becoming embroiled in 
foreign military adventures. We must also not forget that the Iranians and 
Russians have thrown their weight behind al-Assad in an unprecedented manner. 
Despite all this and the conspiracies against the Syrian revolution, the 
al-Assad’s regime’s life is quickly running out. This is because the Syrians 
people’s determination did not weaken in the face of barbaric shelling and 
massacres; which was al-Assad’s strategy to intimidate and silence his people. 

The forthcoming year will be a crucial one, without al-Assad. However our 
region will continue to witness the dangerous repercussions of the 2011 
revolutions. Egypt is still in the throes of childbirth, threatened by a year 
full of political and economic dangers if the Brotherhood fail to govern the 
country correctly and drop their hegemony project, which they began to 
implement early on when they monopolized the constitutional drafting process, 
seized control of the judiciary and excluded their revolutionary partners. They 
will not help themselves by cooking up battles over the return of Egyptian Jews 
or exploiting Hamas to stir up trouble in order to create heroes. The weakening 
of the Egyptian Pound is the greatest threat to Mohamed Mursi’s presidency; 
greater than Israel and the opposition. The year will not pass peacefully 
unless the Brotherhood accept a genuine democratic system, as President Mursi 
previously pledged to do. Without this, Egypt will find itself facing economic 
threats and political turmoil. We could even see tanks returning to Tahrir 
Square following a new revolution, with a military council returning to power 
once more! 

Iran is a difficult puzzle to resolve. After losing Syria, as well as losing 
half of its oil revenue as a result of Western sanctions, Tehran may be obliged 
to agree to a truce and the freezing of its nuclear program. Even if this were 
to happen, Gulf States are still facing numerous threats, particularly with the 
al-Maliki government in Iraq explicitly falling under Iran’s sway. 


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