http://www.ips-dc.org/articles/syrian_upri_sing_morphs_into_regional_and_glo
bal_wars

Syrian Uprising Morphs Into Regional and Global Wars


August 10, 2012 . By Phyllis Bennis <http://www.ips-dc.org/staff/phyllis> 


A divided, balkanized Syria looms as a dangerous possibility as even UN
Secretary-General Ban ki-Moon acknowledges the conflict has become a proxy
war between world powers.


The news from Syria is really bad these days. And bad stuff in Syria doesn't
stay in Syria - though Syrian civilians are paying by far the biggest price.
With outside governments calling the shots in a civil war, arming both
sides, and motivated less by concern for civilians than by their own narrow
national interests, we've got serious trouble.

And right now unfortunately, that outside super-power game remains dominant.
Syria has become the crucible for a number of separate wars, battles for
power and influence, for regional resources and access, for strategic
location and military expansion. These wars pit regional contenders of the
Arab Gulf states and Turkey against Syria and Iran. They set the terms of
the rising sectarian battle between Sunni-dominated Saudi Arabia and Qatar
vs. Shi'a power in Syria, Iraq and Iran. They shape the Middle East
competition between the U.S. and Russia for global military/strategic power.
And crucially, of course, Syria is a central component of the U.S., Israeli
and western campaign against Iran.

Even UN Secretary-General Ban ki-Moon, who usually reflects Washington's
positions, acknowledged that the Syrian conflict has become a
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-19106250> "proxy war." He
called on the major powers to overcome their rivalries to figure out how to
stop the violence. So far, no such move is underway. It should not be
forgotten that Moscow's implacable hold on its naval base at Tartus, on
Syria's southern Mediterranean coast, matches perfectly Washington's
commitment to the Bahrain port that hosts the Pentagon's 5th fleet. Russia
will fight for its Tartus base to the last Syrian - just as the U.S. will do
anything, including supporting a Saudi military intervention to suppress
peaceful Bahraini protesters, to keep the 5th fleet in port.

And none of those players have any interest in what happens to the Syrian
people.


Syria's Democratic Opposition Alive but "Drowned Out in the Cacophony of
Artillery and Rifle Fire"


The little bit of good news, such as it is, is that the original democratic,
largely non-violent Syrian movement that rose defiantly in early 2011 as
part of the Arab Spring, has not entirely disappeared. Former ABC News chief
in the Middle East and long-time Syria hand Charlie
<http://www.democracynow.org/2012/8/3/charles_glass_with_annans_exit_influx>
Glass described:

"the people who actually started this, people who had done time in prison
over the years, who were prisoners of the Assad regime who wanted popular
demonstrations, who wanted civil disobedience, who wanted negotiations with
the regime, to have a transition - a peaceful transition - in which they
would ultimately be freed elections by which the regime could would lose,
those people's voices are being drowned out in the cacophony of artillery
and rifle fire all around Syria at this time. These people, I think, are
disenchanted with the United States. .[T]hose people in the peaceful
opposition do not want to become pawns in a super power game."

Charlie Glass is right. In the United States at least, we do not hear those
voices. The opposition voices we hear are those the U.S. has embraced as its
own - the widely disparate, disconnected, mostly unaccountable militias of
the Free Syrian Army, and the exile-based and badly divided political forces
grouped in the National Syrian Council. All those groups are being
strengthened with money, new weapons, and crucially, political endorsement
from the U.S., Europe and their regional allies. They clearly have some
level of support inside Syria, as does the regime itself, but it's far from
clear just whom the western-backed armed opposition really represent.

The internal opposition remains - holding on to political mobilization,
remaining committed to non-violence as much as possible, and opposing U.S.
or other international involvement in the military struggle.

But in the meantime, there are deadly battles raging in the ancient city of
Aleppo and in parts of Damascus itself, as well as in towns across the
country. The government military has escalated its attacks, though it faces
serious challenges in personnel and especially in equipment, helicopter
gunships and other weapons unable to cope with the blistering heat and sand
of a Syrian summer. The opposition military forces appear to be stronger,
with access to tanks and other heavy equipment either captured from
government bases or brought over with defecting soldiers. Unlike much of the
internal democratic, non-violent opposition, the NSC and the FSA completely
reject any negotiations or political settlement supported by many Syrians
inside. But there can and will be no military solution to the Syria crisis.

The role of outside forces reinforcing either side's military serves only to
expand the fighting. The weakening of either military force could reduce the
brutal cycle of fighting. The government military appears to be facing new
military challenges from equipment degradation and through defections, which
could help reduce the fighting. But the rising sectarianism of the Syrian
conflict remains dangerous. The flight of high-ranking government officials
from inside the Syrian regime, such as the recent defection of Prime
Minister Riad Hijab, represents a powerful attack on the regime's
legitimacy. But almost all of the most senior defectors are from the few
non-Alawites among the top echelons of Syria's military and political
elites. Hijab, for example, is a Sunni. So the Alawite identity of the
Syrian government's remaining power center is stronger than ever. The Syrian
military could be reduced to essentially an Alawite militia, with the regime
left intact but forced to retreat to an isolated Alawite redoubt. A divided,
balkanized Syria looms as a dangerous possibility.

Increasing the militarization of the conflict - including by repairing or
replacing the regime's weapons, or sending more, better, heavier arms to the
opposition - will not end the killing, it will lead to more.

At the moment the Obama administration seems clear it does not want or
intend to join the fighting in Syria - certainly not with ground troops, and
for now not with warplanes or bombs either. The most important reason is
that the Syria military, especially its anti-aircraft defense system, is one
of the strongest in the region. A U.S. bombing campaign in Syria, unlike in
Libya, would not simply end when the pilots turned their planes around and
flew home. 

As then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/03/world/africa/03military.html?_r=2&partner
=rss&emc=rss> reminded us last year while discussing Libya, establishing a
no-fly zone "begins with an attack on Libya to destroy the air defenses.
That's the way you do a no-fly zone. And then you can fly planes around the
country and not worry about our guys being shot down. But that's the way it
starts." That was Libya -which had virtually no anti-aircraft defense
system. This is Syria. If they bomb Syria, U.S. planes will be shot down.
Pilots will almost certainly be killed or captured. That puts the U.S. right
into the war, not as supporters of one side, but as participants on the
ground. Because even if you didn't intend to send in ground troops, when the
first pilot is shot down, his boots will be on the ground. And that means
other troops - probably special forces - will be sent in to rescue the
pilot, and some of them get captured or killed, and Syria starts to look
much more like Iraq than Libya.


Kofi Annan Resigns


On the United Nations and international diplomatic front, there are two new
developments: Kofi Annan's resignation and the Security Council's inability
to agree on a resolution that might help end the fighting in Syria. 

Given the primacy of outside actors, and despite the escalation of the war,
the former secretary general's decision to resign from his post as UN (and
officially, Arab League) envoy on Syria was certainly understandable,
absolutely reasonable, and maybe inevitable. Annan was not even close to
success in achieving a ceasefire, the starting point of his six-point peace
plan. But his resignation reflects two stark realities. First, that as is
always the case, outside players - most especially the United States, Saudi
Arabia, Qatar, Turkey, Russia, Iran - are operating solely for the own
narrow strategic interests, not for the interests of the Syrian people. And
second, the UN Security Council and its member states provided no support
for any potential political solution, acting instead to strengthen the
military forces on both sides.

It is telling that Annan directly criticized the Council and its members,
especially the five permanent members - Britain, China, France, Russia,
U.K., U.S. - known as the Perm Five. While the Council had endorsed the
Annan plan early on, there was never any real support for it or for the work
of the UN observer team in Syria. The three U.S.-British-French resolutions
called for harsh UN sanctions and a range of other economic and diplomatic
pressures on the Syrian regime. They were all vetoed by Russia and China.
The U.S. and its allies maintained (and for the moment, probably truthfully)
that it had no intention of engaging directly in the military battle against
the Syrian government. But the three insisted all of those resolutions be
taken under Chapter VII of the UN Charter - the same precondition required
to authorize the use of force.

The resolutions might well have set the political stage for direct
U.S./European/NATO participation in the fighting. Looking at the precedent
of last year's Council vote on Libya, when the Council-authorized "no-fly
zone" was immediately transformed into an all-out U.S./NATO air war, that
kind of escalation was a reasonable assumption.

We'll never know whether, for instance, Russia might have accepted
resolutions calling for pressure, even perhaps including an arms embargo
(prohibiting military sales, assistance, repairs or anything else) to both
sides - if they were not based on Chapter VII. That might have actually had
some value. Instead the resolutions failed.


But is the UN paralyzed, or is it actually doing its job?


Ironically enough, the great divide between the Perm Three (the U.S.,
Britain and France) and the Perm Two (Russia and China), that stalemated the
chance of a Chapter VII authorization, actually allowed the Council to
follow its Charter obligation to prevent the "scourge of war" from spreading
further. In other words, if the Council had agreed on a Chapter VII
resolution, there would have been a greater likelihood of escalation and
more violence, than of bringing a quick end to the war.

There is a kind of revisionist history of the United Nations. The terrible
legacy of the "humanitarian interventions" of the 1990s and the Iraq War of
2003 means the UN is considered a failure when it rejects participation in
military action, rather than being recognized as a failure when it joins the
war train. We should remember that one of the greatest achievements of the
UN was the refusal of the Security Council to endorse George W. Bush's war
on Iraq in 2002-03. The eight months of UN resistance brought the global
institution into partnership with the extraordinary global peace movement of
that period - the moment when "the world said no to war." That should be a
moment to reclaim, not to reject.

One of Syria's non-violent resistance leaders, Michel Kilo, was part of the
opposition delegation that travelled to Moscow, meeting with Russian
officials to try to figure out a strategy to end the fighting. "If this
destruction goes on and the ruling regime wins, it will rule over ruin and
thus suffer a strategic defeat. If the opposition wins, it will inherit the
country in an unmanageable condition. In any case, it is necessary to stop
this violence, stop this bloodshed.

  _____  

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