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Sharmine Narwani

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Stratfor Challenges Narratives on Syria

Posted: 12/19/11 03:47 PM ET

Since the first public protests broke out in Syria last March, the narratives about the Syrian crisis have stayed fairly true to the theme of all the Arab Revolts. An authoritarian ruler out to crush peaceful opposition to his regime opens fire on civilians and the number of protestors skyrockets as the body count mounts...

But we are now entering the tenth month of this particular violent revolt - even Libya with its full-fledged civil war didn't take so long. So what gives?

According to the Texas-based geopolitical risk analysis group Stratfor which released an eyebrow-raising piece on Syrian opposition propaganda efforts last week, "most of the opposition's more serious claims have turned out to be grossly exaggerated or simply untrue, thereby revealing more about the opposition's weaknesses than the level of instability inside the Syrian regime."

This is important for two reasons. Firstly, it may be the first time a mainstream US-based intelligence-gathering firm openly questions the existing narrative on Syria. Secondly, Stratfor's findings begs the question: what are we basing our policy initiatives on if our underlying assumptions are inaccurate?

How unstable is Syria, really? How widespread is opposition to the regime of Bashar al-Assad? The death-toll that has us riveted with disgust - today, the highest daily death rate yet - how accurate are those numbers? Who do they include and are they verifiable? Are local activists even capable of distinguishing between a dead pro-regime civilian and a dead anti-regime civilian - especially now that both sides are armed and firing?

I cannot begin to dispute those numbers and details, so I will not try. But I will ask the question: where are all the "facts" coming from?


Inherent Bias in Syrian Data?
The problem with information that originates from opposition groups is that there is a clear interest in disseminating "beneficial" data and underplaying "damaging" statistics. And that dynamic applies to the government too - which is why we take Syrian regime pronouncements with a grain of salt.

You don't see the Syrian opposition taking an active role in publicizing the slaughter of rank-and-file soldiers, for instance - except to claim these forces are being shot for deserting the army. Twitter is abuzz right now with news that more than 70 of today's 100+ dead are "deserters."

Nor do you hear about the numbers of pro-regime civilians killed by the armed opposition - some of them allegedly while "demonstrating" in support of the Syrian regime.

Now, this does not mean that the Syrian opposition lies outright to gain sympathy and foreign support - mostly because the "opposition" is not homogenous and comes in different shapes, sizes and flavors.

But Strafor clearly questions the intent of some of these groups based on very recent evidence of disinformation campaigns:

The Stratfor article focuses primarily on opposition efforts to create the impression in the past few weeks that there is a significant split within President Assad's own clan and within his Alawite minority sect, members of which man the top jobs in the country's armed forces and key government positions.

Among these high-profile gaffs are a December 10 report alleging that "Syrian Deputy Defense Minister and former chief of military intelligence Asef Shawkat had been killed by his aide and former General Security Directorate chief, Gen. Ali Mamlouk."

Stratfor posits that the unfounded "image of two senior-ranking Sunni members of the regime drawing guns on each other" helps to create " a compelling narrative" for groups that wish "to undermine the perception that al Assad's inner circle is united in the effort to suppress the opposition and save the regime."

In yet another example, a December 9 statement published in the Saudi-owned Asharq al Awsat by the previously-unknown "Alawite League of Coordinating Committees" which claims to represent the Alawite community in Syria, "rejected any attempt to hold the Alawite sect responsible for the 'barbarism' of the al Assad regime." Stratfor says the planted story gives "the impression that the Alawite community is fracturing and that the al Assad regime is facing a serious loss of support within its own minority sect."

The US-based analysts then cite their own Syrian opposition source who "acknowledged that this group was in fact an invention of the Sunni opposition in Syria."

On the same day, more mainstream opposition groups including the Syrian National Council (SNC), the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights began disseminating "claims that regime forces besieged Homs and imposed a 72-hour deadline for Syrian defectors to surrender themselves and their weapons or face a potential massacre."

That news made international headlines - Homs has been the raging center of anti-regime dissent after all, with death tolls that appear to be well above those of other hotspots. Stratfor's investigation, however, found "no signs of a massacre," and warns that "opposition forces have an interest in portraying an impending massacre, hoping to mimic the conditions that propelled a foreign military intervention in Libya."

The article then goes on to suggest that any suggestions of massacres are unlikely because the Syrian "regime has calibrated its crackdowns to avoid just such a scenario. Regime forces," Stratfor argues, "have been careful to avoid the high casualty numbers that could lead to an intervention based on humanitarian grounds."

And so on and so forth.


Wrongful Narratives Muddy The Waters
Stratfor identifies some clear objectives that drive propaganda efforts by Syrian opposition groups:

- Convincing Syrians inside Syria (going beyond the Sunni majority to include the minorities that have so far largely backed the regime) that the regime is splitting and therefore no longer worth supporting.


- Convincing external stakeholders, such as the United States, Turkey and France, that the regime is splitting and is prepared to commit massacres to put down the unrest, along the lines of what the regime carried out in 1982 in Hama.

- Convincing both Syrians and external stakeholders that the collapse of the al Assad regime will not result in the level of instability that has plagued Iraq for nearly a decade, or in the rise of Islamist militias, as appears to be happening in Libya. To this end, the FSA has emphasized its defensive operations and the defense of civilians to avoid being branded as militants. Meanwhile, the political opposition has stressed that it wants to keep state structures intact, so as to avoid the Iraq scenario of having to rebuild the state from scratch amid a sectarian war.

Stratfor points out that opposition groups have made headway in getting their messages out to the mainstream western media, and that these outlets regularly "quote casualty totals provided by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, without the ability to verify the information." But the article also warns that "the lack of coordination among various opposition outlets and the unreliability of the reports threaten to undermine the credibility of the opposition as a whole."

Syria today signed the Arab League protocol that will make way for a fact-finding mission. Provided that this important process does not get hijacked by regional politics - an unlikely scenario even with the best of intentions - we may start to see verifiable information about what is taking place inside the country.

Without facts, the Syrian story does not stand a chance in overcoming the enmity and rancor felt by both sides. False narratives, even heartfelt ones, will only keep conflict buzzing. Kudos to Stratfor for underlining the importance of information transparency.


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07:45 AM on 12/30/2011
Personally, I would question Stratfor's motives for publishing this - I just hope they are not being employed by the Assad regime or a proxy!

Clearly, it is difficult for any outside observer to know which figures are accurate or not. But you do develop an instinct for what is true or a blatant lie. The Assad Government has been caught out several times posting video that is even from a different country! By contrast, the opposition videos, while raw, are posted quickly and most seem completely genuine.

As a commentator, I don't post anything too gruesome and anything I feel is suspect. I also give a wide "margin of error" inference to figures. But at the end of the day, there is little doubt that Assad is busy committing a massacre of his own people in order to keep himself and his cronies in power.

Given a free election tomorrow he would certainly be removed. To suggest anything else is disingenuous. Peter Clifford http://www.petercliffordonline.com/syria
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Sharmine Narwani
11:23 AM on 12/30/2011
Many opposition videos have been debunked too. Some of these have been widely touted as atrocities committed by the regime, which have then turned out to be opposition gunmen/assassins killing soldiers/pro-regime supporters. Probably the most famous of these videos is the one on YouTube which the opposition claimed was footage of regime supporters tossing the dead bodies of protestors over a bridge. It was all over Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya before it emerged that this was in fact footage of the opposition tossing the bodies of soldiers off the bridge.

I find your comment about developing "an instinct" for truth to be absurd. You are obviously knee-deep in the dominant "narratives" about Syria, i.e., those that appear in English. The Arabic-language press at least has much more coverage of the debunked footage, death-tolls. I think what is interesting is how the mainstream media here keeps mum about the fact that many Syrians still support the regime and about how many of the dead - an average of three a day since March - are Syrian soldiers/security.
06:40 AM on 12/30/2011
Interesting article.
Where would you place the internal opposition based in Syria?
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Sharmine Narwani
11:32 AM on 12/30/2011
The internal opposition is prepared to engage in dialogue with the Syrian government on reforms, which is why the external opposition - many of whom have not laid foot in Syria in decades - is ferociously opposed to them. On the other hand, the internal opposition consists of more figures known to the Syrian population. There is much talk within these groups of a reform-based program for change that will deliver a "soft-landing" for Syria...culminating ultimately in the 2014 presidential elections, at which point we will quickly find out if the majority of Syrians support another seven years of Bashar al Assad - or not.

Frankly, the external opposition have a lot to answer for after a series of bold-faced lies and demands for foreign intervention. It seems to me that the internal folks are a better bet for Syria's future - and to prevent further bloodshed. I hope to find out more about these groups and individuals in the next month - and will write about my observations here.
09:14 AM on 01/01/2012
Thanks for the quick answer. I agree, some Syrians (people I've spoken to) are disappointed by the external opposition calling for international / foreign / arab intervention in addition to the very recent reports that depict some of its members willing to coordinate efforts with Israel. So these Syrians have turned to the internal opposition as the sole alternative for the reasons you just described.
Given the very recent rapprochement between one of the leaders of the internal Syrian opposition with the SNC, things are not as promising ...
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Gracie fr
12:07 PM on 12/23/2011
As for this morning's horrific bombings, even the Washington Post 's leading article, "At least 40 dead in Damascus attack that protest leaders deem suspicious" cannot verify who, why or to what end...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/explosions-rock-damascus-state-media-reports-many-dead/2011/12/23/gIQAHsWFDP_story_1.html
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Gracie fr
12:02 PM on 12/23/2011
It is difficult to find English lanuage alternative news sources expressing a different opinion on the ongoing violence in Syria. Most of what we heard and read does not waver from the line "Bashar al Assad and his minions are murdering the people of Syria".Confronted with gore, bloodshed and a beseiged civilian population in Idlib or Homs, the gut reaction is to feel outrage and clamor for a solution, any solution including military intervention. After Libyia, Egypt, Bahrain and Gaza, one needs to be circumspect and question what one is shown and told. Sharmine Narwani is one of the few voices advocating caution against knee jerk emotionalism and the urge to rush in where angels fear to tread. In truth, nobody really knows who is killing who, and the accumulating bodies have a definite purpose to serve......
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karim banned
A fool's mind is at the mercy of his tongue and a
12:14 PM on 12/23/2011
Here is one.

http://www.presstv.ir/detail/217340.html

Westerns are kept in dark and fed with disinformation. The 1% warmonger elite control all the big media outlets in US.
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Sharmine Narwani
10:44 AM on 12/22/2011
For those of you whose only argument is to slam the messenger instead of the message, here's the Guardian saying much of the same thing now, albeit with typical MSM kid gloves: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/dec/16/syria-opposition-media-war

James Harkin brings us testimony from inside Homs: "The idea that there was an "ultimatum" delivered to the people of Homs on Friday and a further military build-up was, to the best of his knowledge, "a fantasy, not true at all. It was simply invented."

The Syrian Revolution is at least half manufactured. For readers who regret blindly following WMD narratives in the lead-up to the Iraq war, try reading between the lines on Libya, Syria and now Iraq.
01:59 PM on 12/22/2011
Let the Assad government stop the embargo on independent journalists and let them in to report on the situation. Your claim that the revolution is half manufactured is as credible as any opposition's statement you're trying not so subtly to refute and poke holes in. Let the media in, unrestrained, and we'll know who is are the liars and who are trying to hide their war crimes. I guess the 40,000+ murdered in Hama in 1982 were also half manufactured.
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Sharmine Narwani
11:23 PM on 12/22/2011
If you are trying to extrapolate the geopolitical and domestic conditions of Syria in 1982 to today, I'm afraid I have nothing to say to you. The external opposition have gone on the record with now many overt fabrications. You can dispute those or defend the disinformation as presented by myself, Stratfor and the Guardian piece.
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Json
Cynical dreamer, sarcastic idealist...
05:07 PM on 12/22/2011
Perhaps the attacks are due to the way you started your article by attempting to debunk the narrative of
"An authoritarian ruler out to crush peaceful opposition to his regime opens fire on civilians and the number of protestors skyrockets as the body count mounts..."

However, neither the Stratfor paper or the Guardian article support that. The Stratfor primarily argues that the divisions within the regime may not be a serious as we are led to believe. The Guardian article focuses on whether the 72-hour ultimatum is accurate.

What no one seems to be debunking is the idea that the Syrian government is murdering citizens in the street.

"The Syrian Revolution is at least half manufactur­ed."

Ok. but the manufactured half seems to be reports of Alawite divisions and threats of an impending massacre in Homs. The non-manufactured half (which is the half most people are focused on) is the murders that have occurred and, of course, that the Assad's have been running a brutal despotic regime for over 40 years.
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Sharmine Narwani
11:38 PM on 12/22/2011
Json - media complicity in this narrative is as complete as the Iraqi WMD story. The issue you address is really ultimately going to be resolved by a close look at the Syrian death-toll, as reported by the external opposition. Does that list of 5,000 names consist entirely of unarmed protestors - or not?

As you say: "What no one seems to be debunking is the idea that the Syrian government is murdering citizens in the street."

The details of those deaths are to me the most compelling evidence of what this Syrian "crisis" is all about. Do me a favor and call the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights - number can be found on their Facebook page) and ask them how they verify their information. Or, better yet, call the UN Commission on Human Rights and ask them how they verify their list of dead Syrians. And then get back to me.

People on both sides are going to propagandize - I accept the inevitability of this - but the lies in this current narrative on Syria are just staggering.
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Galilee
I boycott products from Syria & Gaza dictatorships
07:48 AM on 12/22/2011
Some Arabs hate Israel more than they love their fellow Arabs. They would rather support a cruel dictators like Assad and Nasrallah then have peaceful democracies.
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chuck nathaniel
Your micro-bio is pending approval
07:34 PM on 12/27/2011
Pretty impossible to have a peaceful democracy when Russia and the US are constantly subverting your efforts at every step.
07:10 PM on 12/21/2011
Syrian oligarchy has large clientele base firmly entrenched in Syrian society and developed over forty years.

Syrians I knew in the nineties reckoned 25% of their neighbors in Damascus supported the government. Supporters are connected through systems of privileges and obligations associated with jobs, housing, cars, land, education and medical. These people are the connected.

Three quarters are the disconnected. Most keep their heads down and comply. However some do not for a number of reasons, mainly unemployment, hardship, social exclusion, persecution. The regime has also committed many, many crimes against the person over the decades so there are those motivated by revenge. They may number only in the tens of thousands but they will fight to defeat the tyranny. they will fight for freedom.

Assad could have negotiated and made gradual moves to democracy. Instead he chose to declare war on those who oppose the regime. So be it.
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Sharmine Narwani
11:05 AM on 12/22/2011
Ten of thousands does not equate to "most" Syrians - the supposed silent majority also have a right to decide their fate, correct? Syria is an authoritarian state, but enforcing regime change will only lead to chaos and even more violence. The Arab Spring has opened a door to progress everywhere in the region - it is a unique opportunity for governments to take that leap. If they don't, they will fall. But what I have been observing in Syria is very much a made-for-TV revolt - yes, there is a hard-core disgruntled minority, but external players (including most Syrian exiles) have coat-tailed this into a whole other thing. They have used color revolution tactics to try to catapult these small-scale protests into regime change, and don't care what it takes to get there. In the process, they have become ever more disinterested in what the "Syrian people" want.

What astounds me is that the MSM do not report in any significant way about the increasingly outspoken domestic Syrian opposition who are focused less on regime change than on actual democratic reforms - the dismantling of the police state, you may say. Many of these are advocating a "soft landing" - incremental, time-lined reforms that will culminate in the 2014 presidential elections: the last phase at which point we will know what the Syrian majority actually thinks about Bashar al Assad.
11:57 AM on 12/22/2011
MSM perhaps not reporting reformist efforts as it is clear reformist path has been blocked by Ba'ath regime. I have watched Assad addressing Syrian Parliament of TV. it is disgusting sham. Worse i think than the kiss-ins of princes on Saudi TV News and that's pretty awful.
01:42 PM on 12/22/2011
And the protests in Hama and Deir ElZur were small scale? And why you're beloved minority-protecting regime shoots at demonstrators?
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califlefty
Oh how I miss real editors!
01:33 PM on 12/21/2011
I just found this on the wires: "The Arab League just nominated Sudanese Lt. Gen. Mohammad al-Dabi to head its mission in Damascus. Previously, Al-Dabi served as the Sudanese government’s top representative for Darfur in which capacity he obfuscated international efforts to alleviate the mass murder the Sudanese government sought to perpetrate in that western province".

The timing of your blog posting is remarkably suspicious.
11:34 AM on 12/22/2011
In what way?
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califlefty
Oh how I miss real editors!
01:05 PM on 12/21/2011
When did you turn into George Galloway?
09:48 AM on 12/21/2011
US, and Western, interference in Syrian politics dates back to the 1940s. Decades before Hafez and Bashar, Damascus stood out as a major opponent of imperialism. It did not join CENTO or the Baghdad Pact. It aligned itself with Nasser's Egypt. Its alliance with the Soviet Union made it a pariah. When Bush 2 came into office, he was surrounded by advisors who had already drawn up a grand plan for Mideast domination. This included the destruction of Syria. Efforts to entice Syria into a conflict like US raids into Syria, overflights, raising tensions with constant complaints of porous borders, etc. did not draw Damascus out. When Bush left, wonks inside and outside DC still influenced US policy towards Bashar. The support for democracy in the Middle East would be more believable if it included our friends in the Gulf or Jordan or Egypt. Our interest has little to do with freedom, but rather the control of the Mideast and oil. Not being reported by Western media outlets is the buildup for war. Turkey is ready to invade. American, British and French personnel are training rebels, providing communication equipment and intelligence. US soldiers from Iraq are being positioned in Jordan. In all this, the major news sources act in complicity by feeding unsubstantiated stories from opponents. The bloodbath that will follow the fall of Bashar al-Asad will be poorly reported on, and no Western source will take responsibility for the death and destruction.
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Wozzeck
Pearl Bay, Australia
10:22 PM on 12/20/2011
The HP World Section is complicit in selling Syrian opposition propaganda to its readers. It's a wonder that this well-reasoned blog appears here. Of course the huge photographs which allegedly show Syrian government misdeeds which usually crown the top of the page, will sway many of the lazy readers who won't bother to read the rare skeptical blog such as this
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terroristmd
01:05 PM on 12/21/2011
You are mistaken...Even Sharmine gets read on Huffpo because its the definition of free press. Then again you can go to the world section and watch youtube clips of soldiers shooting at civilians in the streets of Syria, it kinda makes everything Sharmine say look a little shady.
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Sharmine Narwani
12:35 PM on 12/22/2011
How do you know what it is you're watching on YouTube? If you weren't committed to the safe confines of DC narratives, you might inquire further. I had zero stake in Libya, for instance - it never really figured in my geopolitical examinations of the Mideast and North Africa. Yet what happened there stinks to high heaven to anyone who is looking at it impartially. We have yet to hear the end of the Libya story, I can assure you.
06:55 PM on 12/20/2011
Could the auteur treat us to a similarly thorough analysis of Syrian state tv, and it's "dubious" and such claims? or have they all been independently verified. Another thing I notice is that a lot of those that didn't blink once when the game was on Gaddafi, now find a plethora of ifs and buts to evade the main point, namely that it wasn't opposition that ran a nepocratic system for decades with institutionalised torture and all kinds of abuses as stndard practice.
06:40 PM on 12/20/2011
I strongly question Ms. Nawani prerogative in writing such none sense about what is happening in Syria right now. Is it because she is worried for the small minority of Christian population in Syria, who are strongly afraid and rightfully so, that the extremist Muslims will be in power in Syria, if the Assad regime falls. She remind me by the comments made by our state secretary made early summer: “To wait and see Mr. Assad solution to the problem based on her believes that Bashar Assad is a reformer and is different from his father and their clan. “The apple never falls away from the tree”
I served under the Assad Sr. in the military secret service for 3 ½ years, and let me tell you, what you are hearing from the people in Syria, now, is completely accurate and truthful, and definitely not a part of the NSC controlled propaganda. These people on the grounds are in real danger and their stories are accurate.
01:58 PM on 12/20/2011
Welcome back.Since Assad threw out the press and is suppressing information flow, I'm sticking to the position that he's slaughtering the opposition. So long as the army stands with him, the resistors don't have a chance. Unfortunately.
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skialethia
αω vs military might
01:37 PM on 12/20/2011
Media manipulation by Syrian Opposition:

http://tv.globalresearch.ca/2011/08/skeptical-syria-media-reports-framed-manipulated