http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2013\05\08\story_8-5-2013_pg3_2



Wednesday, May 08, 2013

VIEW : Syria and chemical weapons — S P Seth

 Any large-scale military action to secure the chemical weapons might result in 
large explosions and scattering of the poisonous gases affecting friends and 
foes 

The US is under concerted pressure 
from its allies to jump into the Syrian civil war on behalf of the rebels. It 
is already supporting the overthrow of the Bashar al-Assad regime in all sorts 
of ways, just short of indiscriminate supply of arms to the rebels. Indeed, the 
CIA is involved in facilitating the supply of US arms through third parties, 
like Qatar, Jordan, Turkey and so on. But after its bitter experiences of the 
Afghan and Iraq wars, it is sensibly keen to avoid another quagmire in Syria, 
though it is difficult to say if it will stick to that resolve. The US is 
deeply worried about the direction that a post-Assad Syria might take.

This was reflected in President Barck Obama’s recent talks at the White House 
with the visiting emir of Qatar, Sheikh Hamid bin Khalifa al Thani. President 
Obama said that their two nations had been discussing the best way to remove 
Assad and “strengthen an opposition that can bring about a democratic Syria 
that represents all people and respects their rights.” The US, like Qatar, and 
most Arab countries, plus Turkey, are committed to remove Assad but what will 
replace him is the key issue.

Whether or not the US gets directly involved, by way of supplying arms directly 
to the rebels, will be influenced greatly by the credible evidence about the 
alleged use by the regime of chemical weapons. Britain and France appear 
inclined to this view, as do the Arab countries supporting rebels. The Assad 
regime, on the other hand, is accusing the rebels of using chemical stuff. It 
has dismissed the allegation against it as a “barefaced lie.”

Israel too has chipped in to accuse the Assad regime of using chemical weapons. 
According to General Itai Brun, chief of research and analysis for the Israeli 
army’s military intelligence division, “To the best of our professional 
understanding, the regime used chemical weapons against fighters in a series of 
incidents in recent months.” Elaborating, he said, “The dilated pupils, the 
frothing at the mouth and other signs testify, in our view, to the use of 
liquid chemical weapons, apparently sarin.” But there is no concrete evidence 
to support this. 

Indeed, according to John Kerry, US Secretary of State, Prime Minister Benjamin 
Netanyahu was unable to confirm reports of Syria’s use of chemical weapons in 
his phone call to the Israeli leader. Similarly, the US Defence Secretary, 
Chuck Hagel, said in Cairo, after meeting Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi 
that “When I was in Israel, they did not give me that assessment.” And he 
added, “This is a serious business and you want to be as sure as you can be on 
these kinds of things. Suspicions are one thing, evidence is another.” 

But the Obama administration remains under intense pressure, internally and 
externally, to act directly against the Assad regime. Internally, powerful 
Republicans like, John McCain, a former presidential candidate, favours the 
Libyan model of establishing safe operational corridors for rebels to operate, 
a no fly-zone and arming the rebels. He has invoked Obama’s warning that if the 
Assad regime were to use chemical weapons against its people (as they have 
done, according to him), it will constitute a “red line” for US intervention. 
Within the US intelligence community too there is growing belief with “varying 
degrees of confidence” that the regime did use chemical weapons.

Externally, the United Kingdom and France too seem to believe that the Assad 
regime, most likely, used chemical weapons last month in Aleppo and outskirts 
of Damascus. And now Israel has come out with its assessment about the regime’s 
culpability. But one has to be very careful about Israeli intelligence. Even 
the US, its protector and ally, is not persuaded by it. At the best of times, 
Israel’s bonafides are suspect on issues relating to the Middle East. And what 
is happening in Syria today is probably the worst of times in that region.

For the most part, apart from bombing, as it did the other day, suspected 
weapon supplies for Hezbollah in Lebanon, and occasional shooting across the 
Golan Heights, Israel has so far largely stayed out of the Syrian civil war. It 
would suit Tel Aviv to see its enemies, both the Syrian regime and the rebels, 
tear themselves out in a fratricidal war. As for any preference between the 
two, it would probably incline towards the Assad regime that had kept a lid on 
the Syrian tinderbox that is now blowing up. What has then led Israel to come 
out with its intelligence assessment on the use of chemical weapons?

An important, if not compelling, reason is that Israel is extremely worried 
about the safety of the vast stockpile of chemical weapons in Syria. It is, 
therefore, very keen for collaborative action, led by the US, to secure these 
stockpiles. Up until recently, Syria’s chemical weapons have been fairly 
secure. With the Syrian situation becoming unstable by the day and the regime 
on the back foot, it is feared that they might be tempted to use them as a last 
resort. If the claims about the recent use of sarin gas are true, then it is a 
serious portent of things to come.

However, in the shifting sands of the Syrian political and military landscape, 
were these weapons to fall under control of the rebels, considering that the 
most effective elements among them are now the jihadist groups, the question of 
securing chemical weapons would become even more crucial. For Israel, right on 
Syria’s borders, some preemptive action to stop the rebels from laying their 
hands on such explosive material might become necessary.

Israel also fears that, in its dying days, the Assad regime might seek to 
transfer some of these stocks to their Lebanese ally, Hezbollah. Israel and 
Hezbollah have some serious unresolved business between them. Israel had 
mounted a major invasion of Lebanon in 2006 inflicting death and destruction. 
The subsequent reconstruction and rebuilding work was done with considerable 
financial help from Iran. From Israel’s viewpoint, any military action designed 
to secure chemical weapons will further weaken and/or overthrow the Assad 
regime, which will rupture the nexus between Iran, Syria and the Hezbollah. The 
US and its allies in the west and the Middle East share this strategic 
objective about the removal of the Assad regime. But as Hezbollah has come out 
to support the Assad regime with its own volunteers and militia, this will 
further plunge the Middle East into an even wider and bigger disaster.

In this situation, Israel is keen that the matter of chemical weapons in an 
unstable Syria be resolved, with or without real proof of their use by the 
regime or the rebels. However, securing the weapons is not going to be easy 
because they are scattered all over the place. Any large-scale military action 
to secure the chemical weapons might result in large explosions and scattering 
of the poisonous gases affecting friends and foes, as well as large-scale 
casualties among the civilian population. Besides, to keep them safe and secure 
will require stationing ground troops that would have the smell of the Afghan 
and Iraqi quagmire, which the United States would very much like to avoid. In 
other words, there are no easy choices in Syria.

The writer is a senior journalist and academic based in Sydney, Australia. He 
can be reached at [email protected]


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