http://www.asharq-e.com/news.asp?section=2&id=30513


Competition heading towards Damascus

29/07/2012 
By Abdul Rahman Al-Rashed


The race to inherit power after the fall of the al-Assad regime has accelerated 
after signs of its fall became clear to everyone, even its allies: The Doha 
meeting, the statements from Riyadh, the call from Rome, the clashes on the 
border with Jordan, Turkey’s threat that it would intervene to confront the 
separatist PKK on its border with Syria, in addition to the political and 
military revolutionary blocs both inside and outside Syria.

The fall of the Syrian regime in its final days will not be easy, as some had 
imagined, and the inheritance of power will be even more difficult than the 
scene we are currently facing. Everyone is possessed by a desire to move Syria 
onwards to a different future, and bid farewell to four decades of iron-fisted 
rule, with the exception perhaps of the “Syrian dissidents” who met in Rome [to 
call for a political solution to the crisis], the affiliates of the regime and 
some of its symbols that have allied with Tehran and Moscow since last year.

The fear is that this competitive and hasty race towards Damascus may beget 
more chaos, and open the door wide for forces who want to sabotage Syria. Here 
I am talking specifically about Iran and its affiliates. The Syrian groups 
competing are, in the most part, nationalistic, and represent different trends 
of various internal categories. However, unless they expand their circles of 
participation, fall under one umbrella, accept pluralism and leave it up to the 
Syrian citizen to choose between them at a later stage, they will find 
themselves bottlenecked at the regime’s hour of exit. Even though the past 
years of Syrian rule did not allow us to identify all forces, this does not 
mean they were not present. Pluralism within the Syrian social fabric is an 
old-established fact, whether in terms of ideas, politics or movements. 

The Syrian arena is now at the height of its mobility: there is the Syrian 
National Council, the Free Syrian Army, the Democratic Movement, the Muslim 
Brotherhood, the Kurdish National Council, the powerful Arab tribes, the 
Turkmen movements, the Association of Syrian Ulama, the Coalition of Secular 
and Democratic Syrians, the historical families such as al-Shishakli and 
al-Atassi, and of course the coordinators and the various revolutionary forces 
on the ground. 

It is too early, of course, to draw a Syrian political map, but it is not too 
early for the Syrians to think about gathering together collectively under a 
new flag. From there they can think about mechanisms of political 
representation and action, and later the formation of a government. No one 
wants the al-Assad regime to fall only for its formula to remain in place, i.e. 
a totalitarian, security-based regime that abused the Syrians ever since it 
seized power in the Baathist coup of 1963. The only safe choice to avoid the 
risk of a vacuum in the post-Assad phase is a broad umbrella that accommodates 
everyone, leaving the majority of the Syrian people with the option to choose 
later on. It is not a question of settling scores, but it is about a shared 
future. 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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