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      Syria on the Brink:  
	  Uprising Victim to Regional, International Power 
	  Play  
	  By Ramzy Baroud  
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 22, 2011  
    Syrians 
	continue to be victimized, not only in violent clashes with the Syrian 
	military, but also by regional and international players with various 
	agendas.    Protests in Syria began on January 26, and a more 
	inclusive uprising was set in motion on March 15. The initial demand was for 
	serious political reforms, but this was eventually raised to a demand for 
	full regime change, encompassing the unconditional departure of President 
	Bashar al-Assad and his Baath Party, which has ruled Syria for decades.  
	  Soon, there was a deadlock. The uprising failed to weaken the links 
	between the regime, army and other security agencies. It also remained 
	confined to areas outside the two most populated cities, Damascus, in the 
	southwest, and Aleppo in the north. On the other hand, protests seemed 
	extensive and prevalent enough to reflect a real sense of outrage at 
	government practices, which grew with the reported deaths of Syrians all 
	over the country. Despite a relentless military crackdown, and the killing 
	of 3500 Syrians (according to a recent UN human rights office report), the 
	government has not been able to quell the uprising, nor to provide a 
	convincing political initiative that could spare Syria further bloodletting.
	   It could be argued that the impasse originated in Syria’s own 
	political culture, espoused by the Baath Party’s legacy of shunning dialogue 
	in times of crisis. More, those who ultimately designated themselves as 
	Syria’s opposition remain largely divided, and often seemed to provide 
	conflicting roadmaps for achieving democracy.    Earlier revolutions 
	in Tunisia and Egypt were spared the terrible fate of people’s priorities 
	becoming merely another agenda item to be decided by outside powers. Both 
	revolutions had quickly reached the critical mass required to topple their 
	dictators, denying outsiders the chance of meddling in the outcome. The 
	situation in Syria, however, developed at a different pace. The uprising 
	lacked the full support of the urban middle class. The army neither broke 
	away from the ruling party, nor remained neutral. Additionally, months of 
	violence – in which a successful Western military intervention in Libya 
	toppled the regime of Mummer Ghaddafi – provided outside powers with the 
	needed time to position themselves as the caretakers of Syria’s future. In 
	other words, a popular uprising was decidedly hijacked and is currently 
	being managed from Western and Arab capitals.    It was as though 
	ordinary Syrians began realizing that their vision of achieving revolution 
	from within was futile, and they bought into the illusion that only outside 
	intervention could bring lasting change. These voices were emboldened by 
	members of the Syrian National Council – seen as the lead opposition to the 
	Baath regime – whose behavior seemed to model that of the Libyan National 
	Transitional Council. The latter had blithely welcomed NATO to Libya, 
	initially to ‘protect civilians’ from possible Libyan army retaliation, but 
	eventually to carry out an airstrikes campaign that largely increased the 
	number of deaths in Libya.    Adopting a model that rationalizes 
	foreign intervention – which is incapable of exacting change without extreme 
	violence – will bode horrible consequences for the Syrian people and the 
	whole region. With the Syrian government failing to win the trust of large 
	segments of the Syrian population, the opposition’s growing dependency on 
	outside forces, and some Arab media networks fanning the flames of 
	sectarianism and civil war, the Syrian deadlock is morphing into something 
	even more dangerous: a Lebanon-style civil war or a Libyan-style foreign 
	military intervention.    The fate of Syria is no longer likely to be 
	influenced by the Syrian people themselves, nor by their government. All 
	eyes are now on the United States. US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton 
	tried to clarify the US position in her recent comments. In the case of 
	Libya, NATO and Arab countries banded together “to protect civilians and 
	help people liberate their country without a single American life lost,” she 
	said. But in other cases, as in Syria, “to achieve that same goal, we would 
	have to act alone, at a much greater cost, with far greater risks and 
	perhaps even with troops on the ground.”  For now, according to 
	Clinton, US priorities in the region would have to remain focused on “our 
	fight against al-Qaeda; defense of our allies; and a secure supply of 
	energy” (The Washington Post, November 7).   Russia and China, worried 
	that another US regime change venture could jeopardize their interests in 
	the region, remain steadfast behind Damascus and critical of the factions 
	that oppose the Assad regime. “We are concerned with news of ongoing 
	aggression by extremist gunmen such as those which took place in Homs, Hama 
	and Idlib in recent days with the provocative aim of forcing security 
	agencies and the army in Syria to retaliate, and then launching a campaign 
	via international media outlets,” said Russian Foreign Affairs Minister 
	Sergei Lavrov in a recent statement (The Lebanese Daily Star, November 11). 
	  The lines are thus drawn, between US-led Western camp and Russia and 
	its own camp, which vehemently rejects a repeat of a Libyan scenario in a 
	volatile region of unmatched geopolitical significance.    Whatever 
	the outcome of this tussle, the Syrian uprising is increasingly being 
	deprived of its own initiative. Currently, the issue of Syria is being 
	entrusted to the Arab League, which lacks both credibility (since it is too 
	divided between regional interests) and any history of successful political 
	initiatives. On November 2, Syria announced that it had agreed to an Arab 
	League plan which called for the withdrawal of security forces from the 
	streets, the release of prisoners and talks with the opposition.    
	However, it is very probable that some Arab countries are keen to employ the 
	league in a similar fashion to the way it was used with the war on Libya: a 
	mere springboard that eventually allowed NATO’s war to take place. Signs of 
	such a scenario are becoming clearer, especially following the league’s vote 
	to suspend Syria’s membership on November 12. Indeed, In a New York Times 
	editorial on November 8, the role of the Arabs seems to be confined to just 
	that. The Arab League “should eject Syria and urge the United Nations 
	Security Council to condemn Mr. Assad and impose international sanctions 
	against the regime,” the Times counseled. “Russia and China will find it 
	harder to block a Security Council resolution — as they did in October — if 
	the Arab world calls for action that goes beyond the sanctions already 
	imposed by the United States and Europe.”    And so the saga 
	continues. If Syria doesn’t wrestle its fate from the hands of these 
	self-serving forces, the Syrian uprising and Syria as a whole will continue 
	to be marred by uncertainties and foreboding possibilities.     - 
	Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London), available on Amazon.com.   
	  
       
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