The Syrian Conundrum And The Yemeni
Predicament: Maneuvering To Cling Onto Power
28 December 2011
By Osman Mirghani
It is no wonder that the official Yemeni authorities
have objected to the Arab League's resolution
regarding Syria. The situation in the two countries
may be different in numerous aspects, yet there are
also marked similarities, especially regarding the way
in which the two regimes have handled Arab efforts to
find a solution, and their attempts to circumvent such
endeavours or use them as a tool to buy more time.
This is all in the hope that the two regimes will
succeed in quelling the popular uprisings and abort
the popular demands of change. The two regimes offered
guarantees but failed to fulfil them, and they
announced pledges which they also failed to implement.
The reason is the same in both cases; the lack of a
real desire to carry out changes that respond to the
people's aspirations and demands that they have
expressed through their continual protests, in spite
of the suppression and tyranny they have faced.
From the outset these two regimes have considered the
protestors to be traitors, and deemed their demands to
be a conspiracy plotted by foreign parties. It was
clear since then that the two regimes would not offer
concessions to meet the popular demands, and that they
would resort to all means and tricks to quell the
protests. In any case, it was clear that both regimes
would continue their tyranny and suppressive policies.
Ali Abdullah Saleh gambled on the fact that the West
would need him in its war against al-Qaeda in Yemen,
and that other regional countries were dreading the
security unrest and chaos in a country deemed
geographically difficult, a country with a complex
political and tribal structure and a heavily armed
population. Therefore, President Saleh addressed his
people with his famous phrase "I will not leave. You
leave."
As for the Syrian regime, it has gambled on the fact
that the West needs it even if it did not like it,
because Western powers dread all other alternatives
and seek not to destabilize the situation near the
Israeli border. Such a way of thinking was exposed by
the statements of Rami Makhlouf, the Syrian
president's nephew and a former influential figure in
the regime, when stating to the "New York Times"
newspaper that if there was no stability in Syria,
then there would be no stability in Israel. For anyone
who considers such statements to be old or not in line
with the regime, we must refer to the series of
threats launched by the Syrian leadership on several
occasions, when saying that it would ignite the entire
region and escalate the unrest and troubles in other
countries. We must also refer to the leadership's
statement that any harm inflicted upon Syria will not
be limited to its borders, but will extend to the
neighbouring states and the Gulf region.
This was not the only gamble, as Damascus and Sana'a
have both relied on the assumption that Arab official
reactions will remain crippled and ineffective, and
that the maximum the Arabs can do is to issue
condemning statements and call for an end to the
violence and bloodshed. Thus at the beginning the
Syrian regime rejected any Arab action or
intervention, for it believed that the solution must
come from within. In effect, this meant further
security suppression to quell the popular uprising,
more superficial solutions, and loose promises of
reform. Later on, the two regimes adopted a policy of
procrastination and embarked on attempts to buy time
by offering promises and pledges that were never
fulfilled. They also announced their acceptance of
Arab initiatives, but without taking actual steps to
put them into effect.
The success of this gamble was guaranteed in the past,
but the Arab world begun to change as never before
when Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali fled his country and
Hosni Mubarak stepped down from power, in response to
stormy protests and popular uprisings. The Arab stance
changed during the events in Libya, where resolutions
adopted during the Arab League's recent meetings
created a turning point in the course of the Libyan
revolution. At that time, Gaddafi and his son Saif
al-Islam reacted to the Arab League's position with
the ugly phrase "To hell with the Arabs, and to hell
with their league." Recently we have heard the same
language in the reaction of Syria's envoy to the Arab
League, following its recent resolutions that
surprised Damascus, which did not expect the League to
adopt such strong action. In fact, it was not the
Syrian regime alone that failed to expect the Arabs to
come up with timely decisions, going beyond mere
rhetoric and statements to genuine action. The Syrian
protestors had previously carried banners condemning
the Arab League's deadlines given to the Syrian
regime, claiming that they did nothing to prevent the
suppression and killings.
The Arab League's recent statements alone will not
force the Syrian regime to respond to its people's
demands of change, but they will at least give a boost
to the protestors, and open the door for upcoming Arab
and international measures to exert more pressure on
the regime. The resolutions may also be a tuning-point
in the course of events. The Arab stance this time
went a step further when it addressed the Syrian army
and demanded that it refrain from acts of violence and
killing civilians. The Arabs invited the Syrian
opposition for a meeting at the League's headquarters
to discuss measures for the upcoming period and agree
on a unified vision, or more precisely, to draw up a
roadmap for the course of events and the future of
Syria. These two steps are of great significance and
convey a message that the majority of Arab states
reject the Syrian regime's account of events, and that
they are no longer convinced by its promises. Thus
they are inclined towards accepting the demonstrators'
call for the regime to step down. Perhaps, in this
context, one can understand the Jordanian King's
statement on Monday, in which he urged the Syrian
president to step down for the sake of his people.
Syria is now likely to witness major transformations
in its crisis, after the regime has alienated all
parties that tried to help it end the crisis, and
convinced them that it is not serious about its
promises of change and ending the violence. In view of
such a stance, the Arabs, at long last, have overcome
their complex of failing to take clear and strong
measures against the Syrian regime, fearing that that
this would be interpreted as supporting the demands of
the protestors and their call for change.
As long as the situation develops this way in Syria,
Yemen will not be spared the consequences. This is
because President Saleh has also convinced everyone
that he is maneuvering to cling onto power, and that
his unfulfilled promises have now become a predicament
threatening the GCC initiative. The only alternative
available now is to increase the pressure to
accelerate his departure, in order to avoid further
violence.
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