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Saul Landau

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The Right Path for Washington in Syria

Posted: 06/13/2012 2:12 pm

The Syrian conflict continued to boil -- or boil over -- when Syrian troops fired across the Turkish border on April 9, apparently killing either fleeing refugees or armed combatants. However, despite continued words of caution from the Pentagon and White House about getting into another messy Middle East war, Secretary of State Hilary Clinton pressed for more intervention.

The Syrian Accountability Act of 2003 began the formal U.S. attempt to bring down Assad, but Clinton, the imperial princess, now demands Syrian President Assad resign in favor of the Syrian National Council (SNC). This hastily formed group composed of exiled Syrian Muslim Brotherhood members, and other groupings, many in exile, would magically transform Syria via fair elections into a good democracy -- and sheep will fly.

Washington's "humanitarian" assistance fund for Syria escalated into "non-lethal" aid -- sophisticated satellite communications equipment, and night-vision goggles so "rebels" could "evade" Syrian government assaults. U.S. and Western media have underscored Assad's butchery, but offered little of substance on the opposition and its often savage behavior.

Just weeks after the first March 2011 protests -- Arab Springtime -- the media disregarded eyewitness evidence of armed groups shooting at and killing members of Syria's security forces as well as civilians. Reporter Pepe Escobar witnessed "the shooting deaths of nine Syrian soldiers in Banyas" as early as April 10, 2011 (Asia Times, April 6, 2012). By focusing only on Assad's violence, Western leaders could promote a lopsided view of the conflict. In recent weeks, however, the media could not ignore all "photos and video footage of armed men with heavy weapons proudly declaring their stripes -- some of them religious extremists advocating the killing of civilians based on sectarian differences."

Suicide bombings took place in Damascus and Aleppo, and al-Qaeda called its minions "to battle." The U.S. government ignored al-Qaeda's role and refers only to the "good" SNC, the majority who appear to ally themselves with Syria's Muslim Brotherhood. At a March meeting in Istanbul, sponsored by Turkey and Qatar, however, an unlikely source of dissent emerged. Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said: "We reject any arming [of Syrian rebels] and the process to overthrow the [Assad] regime, because this will leave a greater crisis in the region."

Al-Maliki questioned the motives of Qatar and Saudi Arabia who "are calling for sending arms instead of working on putting out the fire." Iraq, he continued, opposed "arming" the Free Syrian Army and he feared, "those countries that are interfering in Syria's internal affairs will interfere in the internal affairs of any country." Maliki, who governs Iraq as a result of the U.S. invasion and devastation of that country, questioned equating a cause backed by Saudi funding with freedom. "What's wrong with the Free Syrian Army getting funding from Saudi Arabia? Or, when did Saudi Arabia ever support freedom?" he asked (Suadad al-Salhy, Reuters, April 1, 2012).

These remarks were not featured in headlined stories; nor did TV or radio news provide coverage of Maliki's statement. Until recently, we might have depended on Al Jazeera, whose Iraq war coverage won it praise from journalists. However, the network's Syria reports led some reporters to resign over the network's biased reporting. Hassan Shaaban, the Beirut bureau's managing director, resigned in March, "after leaked emails revealed his frustration over the channel's coverage."

Shaaban had filed a story showing armed men fighting with the Syrian army in Wadi Khalid. Al Jazeera dropped the story. Two other Al Jazeera staff quit for the same reasons. Al Akhbar claimed Qatar's foreign policy influenced the reporting on Syria. Al Jazeera maintains headquarters in Qatar and the royal family helped establish the network.

The question in Washington should be: will adding fuel to the violence make matters worse? Assad's forces have defeated -- with huge civilian casualties -- the formal rebel uprisings, but the SNC could sponsor a prolonged terrorist war, which would increase civilian casualties, and not succeed in removing Assad or his Party [the Baath Party] from power.

Logic and reason dictate that Obama should follow the Syrian majority. A February 2012 poll showed "55% of Syrians want Assad to stay," [NOT] motivated by fondness for his government, but "by fear of civil war." The poll also ascertained "that half the Syrians who accept him staying in power believe he must usher in free elections in the near future." (YouGov Siraj poll on Syria commissioned by The Doha Debates, funded by the Qatar Foundation, connected to the royal family. The family has taken a hawkish position on Syria. See Jonathan Steele, The Guardian, January 17)

These facts have not oozed into State Department consciousness, where the rush for U.S. entanglement appears contagious. Good sense should command Secretary Clinton to help save the process former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan set in motion for a negotiated cease fire. The opposition and the Assad side negated the April 10 deadline. This means Syrians will pay a higher human toll. The suffering is already immense.

On April 14, the UN Security Council backed a deployment of the first wave of U.N. military observers to monitor the tentative cease-fire between the Syrian government and opposition combatants. Before the arrangements become final, Washington should weigh in now with Russia, China and the western powers -- not Saudi Arabia and Qatar -- to pressure both sides to stop shooting and start serious talking.

 
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Steeple839
A few brave Federales said thy cld hv hd hm anyday
10:26 PM on 06/13/2012
Reset button

I'll have more flexibility after the election.

Smart Power

Leading from Behind.

Responsibility to Protect.

We are being led by a bunch of Amateurs who have squandered our influence and are just making it p as they go along.
08:59 PM on 06/13/2012
Hey, international politics makes even stranger bedfellows.
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wom122
Primum non nocere
07:01 PM on 06/13/2012
Great post thank you.
05:37 PM on 06/13/2012
It is understandable to hear and read diverging points of view, such as this Mr. Landau article, which completely denies the rights of the Syrian people to gain freedom from an indisputably brutal and primitive dictatorship. So the Syrian people are sheep and their aspiration for freedom is if these sheep will fly. To give Mr. Landau the benefit of doubts, let us presume he is not a racist. But to believe the Syrian regime’s propaganda is an insult. We Syrians, inside and outside Syria, have been watching the atrocities with horror. For 15 months we have watched live video feeds, You tube videos, Skype calls and thousands of phone calls with our relatives, some still alive and some have died. All are indicating unequivocally that a medieval regime which has ruled us for 50 years by fear is killing us in masses to bring back the only instrument of governance ever existed in Syria. FEAR. I should not believe my family, my own experience in Syria, the hundreds of personal acquaintances who died while demonstrating peacefully or those imprisoned and tortured in barbaric fashion and believe Mr. Landau convenient conspiracy theory. Well, let me presume it is truly a US, Zionist and al-Qaida planned conspiracy, like Assad media is repeating every day. Why then the US did not attack Assad until now? The plot has thickened but no one is consummating? It must be a conspiracy against the Syrian people then and not against Assad?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PALEOLOGOS DRAGASH
I think, therefore you are wrong.
05:19 PM on 06/13/2012
Thank you, Saul. Finally, a voice of reason. Too bad Hillary is not listening.
04:48 PM on 06/13/2012
When this article says that 55% of Syrians want Assad to stay, did it ever occur to the author that it is quite possible that many of them would just say that to protect themselves and their families, especially given that the regime is targeting civilians so aggressively? At any rate, Syria is a sticky situation. The Russians have been willing to discuss limiting the Iranian program even though they have sold Iran most of the materials needed (reactors, etc...). However, they are not willing to condemn the Assad regime, though they have strong ties in Syria. That speaks volumes. It makes the Russian government appear regime-ish themselves wherein they are acting out of self-interest of the State instead of reacting in opposition to the aggressive nature of the crackdown by the Syrian government.

This whole situation is really complicated. I'm not anxious to get in the middle of a Syrian civil war, but then again, the French helped the American Colonies revolt against a tyrannical King George, and then sought freedom for themselves. While this is quite different, it is important that the Syrian opposition gets the support of democratic nations. Whether or not that means troops on the ground is the tough part of the equation.
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lenguss
04:12 PM on 06/13/2012
Why do talking heads always say "should"? Full of great advice, which costs them nothing.