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5 reasons Syria's war suddenly looks more dangerous
By   Tim Lister , CNN
May 10, 2013 -- Updated 0944 GMT (1744 HKT) CNN.com 
(CNN) -- While the world's attention was focused on Boston 
and North Korea, the conflict in Syria entered a new phase -- one that 
threatens to embroil its neighbors in a chaotic way and pose complex 
challenges to the Obama administration.
What began as a protest 
movement long ago became an uprising that metastasized into a war, a 
vicious whirlpool dragging a whole region toward it.
Many analysts believe the United 
States can do little to influence -- let alone control -- the situation. And it 
could make things worse. Fawaz Gerges of the London School of 
Economics argues against the United States "plunging into the killing 
fields of Syria ... because it would complicate and exacerbate an 
already dangerous conflict."
Others contend that if the United 
States remains on the sidelines, regional actors will fight each other 
to "inherit" Syria, and hostile states such as Iran and North Korea will take 
note of American hesitancy. They say inaction has given free rein 
to more extreme forces.
And in the wake of the strikes 
against Damascus, apparently by Israeli planes, critics argue that 
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is now more vulnerable than ever and 
U.S. intervention could help finish him off.
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Republican Sen. John McCain has 
revived calls for a no-fly zone. And introducing legislation to arm the 
Syrian rebels in the U.S. Senate on Monday, Democratic Sen. Robert 
Menendez said: "There will be no greater strategic setback to Iran than 
to have the Assad regime collapse, and cause a disruption to the terror 
pipeline between Tehran and Hezbollah in Lebanon."
But more than two years since the 
revolt against al-Assad began, regional analysts say Syria is in danger 
of becoming the next Somalia, which collapsed into fiefdoms 20 years ago and 
has been stalked by anarchy, terrorism and hunger ever since. 
Except Syria would be worse. Its religious and ethnic fault lines extend across 
borders in every direction; Somalia's anarchy was largely 
self-contained. Somalia never had chemical weapons, nor the missiles and modern 
armor that make Syria one of the most crowded arsenals in the 
world.
And unlike Syria, Somalia was never central to a titanic struggle between 
different branches of Islam: Sunni and Shia.
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Given that background, here are five reasons Syria's war suddenly looks more 
dangerous.
1: Israel and Hezbollah's proxy war 
For two years, Israel has looked on with growing anxiety as brutal repression 
in Syria has become de facto 
civil war. Now a high-octane game of regional poker is under way. The 
Israelis have not admitted carrying out the devastating strikes of last 
week, but U.S. officials tell CNN they have no doubt Israel was 
responsible.
Why would Israel suddenly become an active participant? While much has been 
said about President Barack 
Obama's "red line" -- that the use of chemical weapons in Syria would 
make him reassess U.S. involvement -- the Israelis have a different 
threshold: the transfer of advanced missiles to al-Assad's ally, the 
Shiite Lebanese militia Hezbollah.
Their main worry, U.S. officials 
say, was the possible transfer of Iranian-made Fateh-110 missiles, whose 
accuracy would pose a new threat to Israel. A consignment of these 
ballistic missiles had recently arrived at Damascus' airport. Similarly, the 
second Israeli strike before dawn Sunday was on a "research 
facility" near Damascus where weapons destined for Hezbollah were kept.
According to Jane's Intelligence, 
Iran's Defense Ministry reported the test firing of an upgraded 
Fateh-110 last year, and the Iranian Aerospace Industries Organization 
claimed it had a range in excess of 180 miles (300 kilometers.)
Israel's motive was not to degrade 
the Syrian military. It was about sending al-Assad a message (copied to 
Iran and Hezbollah): "If you try to raise the regional stakes by passing a new 
generation of short-range ballistic missiles to Hezbollah, the 
response will be swift and severe."
Gerges, author of "Obama and the 
Middle East," told CNN that we are seeing "an open-ended war by proxy. 
... On the one hand you have Israel, regional powers and the Western 
states; on the other hand you have Iran, Hezbollah and Syria."
Is Syrian war escalating to wider conflict?
Middle East analyst Juan Cole 
agrees, writing on his blog: "It is not that the Israelis and Hezbollah 
are in any direct conflict, but they are gradually both becoming more 
active in Syria on opposite sides. It is an open question how long this 
process can continue before the conflict does become direct."
One miscalculation could provoke a wider escalation.
The stakes for Hezbollah are 
enormous. For nearly 30 years, it has been sustained by Iranian and 
Syrian support. If Syria becomes a Sunni-dominated state, Hezbollah's 
"rear-base" vanishes, and suddenly it looks more vulnerable to its 
archenemy Israel, one of whose strategic goals is to counter the growing 
missile threat from the north. 
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Military analysts believe Hezbollah has an arsenal of some 50,000 missiles and 
rockets, supported by a 
sophisticated, hardened infrastructure that would be even harder to 
uproot than during its last conflict with Israel in 2006. Little wonder 
that Israel has deployed two of its Iron Dome missile-defense batteries 
in its northern cities.
Will the Syrians retaliate for the 
strikes, which they describe as a declaration of war by Israel? To do so would 
divert resources from the regime's battle for survival. Not to do so would 
convey an image of weakness in the face of the "Zionist 
enemy."
Al-Assad has a history of not 
retaliating against Israel, most notably when the Israelis took out what was 
purported to be a Syrian nuclear installation in 2007. According to Cliff 
Kupchan with the Eurasia Group, Israel has calculated that 
"Bashar al-Assad is incapable of fighting on two fronts, that Iran will 
keep its powder dry for a possible future conflict over its nuclear 
program, and that Hezbollah will not attempt significant retribution 
without approval from its sponsors."
But one risk to Israel is that in 
weakening the Assad regime, it may strengthen some of the best organized and 
most potent rebel factions: jihadist groups such as the al-Nusra 
Front, which has already declared its affiliation with al Qaeda in Iraq.
2: More than ever, it's sectarian 
In the early days of the Syrian 
uprising, people who were anti- and pro-regime shared one common dread: 
that Syria would descend, Bosnia-style, into sectarian horror. Now, in 
the fight to prevail, that has become a reality.
Moderates have been sidelined, and 
despite efforts to revitalize the opposition's political leadership in 
exile there is still no umbilical cord between the government-in-waiting and 
the fighters inside Syria.
The Free Syrian Army coexists with a strong Sunni jihadi element, while the 
regime is mobilizing "irregular" Alawite militia and Hezbollah fighters.
Syria's (largely Sunni) rebels say 
hundreds if not thousands of (Shia) Hezbollah fighters are now fighting 
for the Assad regime. Hezbollah's secretary-general, Hassan Nasrallah, 
said last week that his party would not stand by and watch the Assad 
government fall. Regional analysts believe there is a very real risk 
that along the poorly marked Syrian-Lebanese border, Sunni jihadists 
will come up against Hezbollah units, setting off a vicious 
war-within-a-war.
The Syrian opposition sees Iran and Hezbollah everywhere. The head of the 
UK-based Syrian Observatory for 
Human Rights, Rami Abdel-Rahman told the newspaper Asharq al-Awsat that 
"Iranian and Hezbollah officers are running the operations room in the 
battle for Homs and are controlling the army operations in the city."
He warned of "massacres against the Sunni community living in the besieged 
areas if the army captures these areas."
Such massacres were reported in the past week in the coastal Sunni enclaves in 
Baniyas and al-Bayda. The 
State Department said over the weekend that "regime and shabiha forces 
reportedly destroyed the area with mortar fire, then stormed the town 
and executed entire families, including women and children."
3: Al-Assad goes for broke? 
After being on the defensive for 
months, the Syrian regime has recently launched a series of brutal 
counterattacks against areas controlled by rebel factions, seeking to 
restore precious lines of communication and reconnect Damascus with 
other parts of the country. In so doing, it appears Assad has relied 
even more on the shabiha -- loyalists with an existential stake in the 
regime's survival.
As veteran Middle East watcher 
Anthony H. Cordesman of the Center for Strategic and International 
Studies has put it: "The Assad regime seems ready to escalate in any way it can 
to either preserve power or effectively divide the country."
Among the areas where this 
counteroffensive has been most intense is Daraya, south of the capital, 
which has been reduced to ruins on the principle that "if we can't 
control it nor shall you." To the east of Damascus, regime forces have 
encircled rebels in the Gouta region, relieving the immediate threat to 
Damascus airport, which is at one end of the critical air bridge between Syria 
and Iran.
As critical as these areas around 
Damascus is the town of Qusayr between Homs and the Lebanese border, 
once home to 50,000 people. Videos uploaded in recent days show the 
regime pouring artillery fire into the town and conducting airstrikes 
from above; whole blocks have been demolished. Claims emerged Wednesday 
from opposition sources of new massacres around the town.
Qusayr sits astride one route to 
the Syrian coast and another to the Lebanese border. For the rebels, 
holding Qusayr is important because it's another way of strangling the 
regime's ability to sustain itself, and it complicates Hezbollah's 
access to Syria.
The signs are that al-Assad is 
investing heavily in trying to break the rebels' hold in key parts of 
south and central Syria, reversing the gains they had made in a series 
of hard-won victories last year.
Short of forceful foreign 
intervention, some military analysts argue for tying al-Assad's hands 
behind his back by providing the rebels with more anti-armor and 
anti-aircraft missiles and a communications infrastructure. More 
ambitiously, some say the international community should enforce what 
might be called a "no-move" zone, selectively picking off regime forces 
from the air or with missiles.
In essence, that's what NATO's 
mission in Libya became. But it would take considerable airpower and the use of 
facilities across the region to gain control of the Syrian sky. 
The chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin Dempsey, 
said at the end of April: "The U.S. military has the capability to 
defeat that system (of Syrian air defenses), but it would be a greater 
challenge, and would take longer and require more resources" than in 
Libya.
4: Chemical Weapons 
For much of last year, Obama's "red line" seemed a largely hypothetical one. 
But as al-Assad's situation 
grows more desperate and control of chemical weapons stocks more 
difficult to guarantee, there are indications that some chemical agents 
have been used in limited quantities in places like Daraya. The 
questions are: how much, of what and by whom?
The announcement by a senior U.N. 
official Monday that rebels may have used sarin gas during an operation 
near Aleppo in March means this red line is even more difficult to 
discern. The U.N. commission subsequently said it "has not reached 
conclusive findings as to the use of chemical weapons in Syria by any 
parties to the conflict."
Establishing "custody" and the systematic use of such weapons is very difficult 
in the absence of monitors on the ground.
A U.S. State Department official on Monday would say only: "We take any reports 
of use of chemical weapons 
very seriously and we are trying to get as many facts as possible to 
understand what is happening."
But understanding and countering 
the threat are miles apart. The Pentagon estimated last year it might 
take 70,000 troops to secure or destroy Syria's massive stockpiles -- 
and the situation on the ground has deteriorated since then.
In Cordesman's view, "Any U.S. 
forces that tried to deal with the chemical weapons in Syria through 
ground raids would present the problem of getting them in, having them 
fight their way to an objective, taking the time to destroy chemical 
stocks, and then safely leaving."
5: Players and Puppets: Iraq, Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan 
Syria is surrounded by neighbors 
with a stake in influencing the outcome of its civil war. Most -- and 
other more distant states such as Qatar and Saudi Arabia -- are backing 
their own factions as well as supporting the "government-in-waiting." 
Now more than ever they feel the force of that whirlpool.
Iraq's beleaguered Sunni minority 
is more and more in confrontation with a Shia-dominated government in 
Baghdad allied to Iran. The Sunni tribes of Anbar and Ramadi have 
historical connections with their brethren across the border and would 
welcome a Sunni-dominated government in Syria as a valuable 
counterbalance to a hostile government at home.
For more than a year, there have 
been persistent reports of weapons crossing the border to help the 
Syrian resistance and evidence of co-operation between Syrian and Iraqi 
jihadists. Resupply convoys headed through Iraq to the Syrian regime 
have been ambushed in recent months.
In the view of Ian Bremmer, 
president of the Eurasia Group, "Iraq is teetering back towards civil 
war, with direct implications for the investment climate across the 
country, and deepening geopolitical conflict between Iran and the Sunni 
monarchies" of the Gulf.
Turkey is also growing alarmed at 
the prospect of a more "Balkanized" Syria. It already has 322,000 
refugees on its soil, according to latest figures from the UNHCR, the 
U.N. refugee agency, with another 100,000 clamoring to cross.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has upped his rhetoric in recent 
days, criticizing the Israeli 
strikes but reserving his most passionate denunciation for the Assad 
regime.
"You, Bashar Assad, will pay for 
this. You will pay heavily, very heavily for showing courage you can't 
show to others, to babies with pacifiers in their mouths," he told an 
audience over the weekend.
But Erdogan is struggling to turn 
indignation into influence. As the International Crisis Group noted in 
March: Turkey "now has an uncontrollable, fractured, radicalized 
no-man's-land on its doorstep."
The Jordanians know how that feels. They are trying to cope with 450,000 Syrian 
refugees -- equivalent to 
some 7% of the Jordanian population -- growing restless and desperate in 
makeshift camps. The number in Lebanon has shot up to 455,000, 
according to the United Nations. In all, the Syrian conflict has 
generated an extra half million refugees in just two months.
Lebanon -- whose sectarian equation mirrors that in Syria -- cannot help but be 
dragged into the war next 
door. Several Salafist sheikhs in Lebanon have declared jihad against 
the Syrian regime in response to Hezbollah's growing involvement. One of them, 
Sheikh Ahmed Assir, called on Sunnis in the city of Sidon to form brigades to 
help the resistance in Qusayr. And rocket fire, apparently 
from the Free Syrian Army, has landed in Shiite areas around the 
Lebanese town of Hermel.
A land of bad options 
Some critics of the Obama 
administration say there is a moral imperative to intervene in Syria in 
the face of slaughter (at least 70,000 Syrians have died so far.) In the 
Washington Post, former Obama adviser Anne Marie Slaughter has recalled the 
"shameful" failure to confront genocide in Rwanda.
But Cordesman writes: "Syria has 
become the land of bad options. The Obama administration has reason to 
hesitate in intervening."
And Joshua Landis, who runs the 
blog Syria Comment and is director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the 
University of Oklahoma, warns that even "a humanitarian 
intervention will become a nation-building project, as was the case in 
Iraq."
With the number of internally displaced now put at 4.25 million people, that 
would be a huge project.
The dream among diplomats a year 
ago was that a moderate opposition could be brought together with some 
regime elements to ease al-Assad from power. As the Syrian war threatens to 
become a regional one, the United States and Russia are dusting off 
that option, calling for an international conference within weeks that 
would be attended by both the government and the opposition.
"The alternative is that Syria 
heads closer to the abyss, if not over the abyss and into chaos," said 
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.
© 2013 Cable News Network.   Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.  All Rights 
Reserved. 
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