How Syrian Ruling Apparatus Became Its
Albatross: Time Has Run Out For President Assad
11 Feb 2012
By Alon Ben-Meir
This article was filed under following categories:
Syria, Middle East, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Hamas, arab
spring
It was strongly suggested by close top officials in
the Syrian government that I spoke with more than a
decade ago that when Syria's President, Bashar Assad,
first assumed power he was determined to introduce
some significant political reforms. Why then has he
failed to implement at least some of what he had
intended to do and failed to meet the public's
expectations for change following his father's 30 year
reign? The reason is that Mr. Assad inherited from his
father more than merely the office of the Presidency.
He inherited a system of governing: an entrenched
ruling apparatus consisting of the Baath party
leadership, the high military brass, a massive
Intelligence (Mukhabarat) community, internal security
and top business elites; all dominated by Bashar's own
Alawite minority group which had heavily-vested
interests in maintaining the system at all costs. Mr.
Assad was able to assert his rule based only on the
tacit condition that he would preserve the status-quo,
which in the end turned out to be his albatross.
At the onset of the upheaval nearly ten months ago,
Mr. Assad was again inclined to make some concessions
to pacify the people but was immediately overruled by
the same clique of powerful individuals that surround
him today, including his powerful brother, Maher, the
commander of the Republican Guard. The same inter-play
is currently taking place as elements of the ruling
apparatus have tied their fates together with the
knowledge that meaningful reforms would inevitably
usurp many of their powers which they are unwilling to
relinquish, regardless of the public's suffering. For
this reason, any practical solution to Syria's crisis
must take into account the nature of its intra-group
relations and the choices that can be made within such
relations.
The failure of the Arab League (AL) observers' mission
was predictable as they did not have the mandate or
the ability to move freely anywhere and anytime within
the country, being| instead directed by the Syrian
authorities to visit and report about places and
incidents of the government's own choice. From the
start of the observers' mission a month ago,
government forces have killed more than five hundred
Syrians. Following the extension of the mission by an
additional month only a few days ago, the Arab league
decided to suspend the observers' mission as the
indiscriminate killing of civilians continued. Neither
the continuation of such a mission (which was already
thwarted after all of the Gulf states' observers quit
in Syria) nor the call by the AL for Assad to step
down and for new assembly elections within two months
to draft a new constitution would bring about any
serious change. The AL decision to turn to the UN with
the support of the US and the EU at the time of this
writing may produce a watered down resolution at best
that will neither call for Assad to step down nor
impose any meaningful sanctions. Russia has already
made it abundantly clear that it will veto any such
resolution.
Considering the fact that whatever happens in Syria
will have serious regional repercussions, any outside
interference will have to be carefully weighed against
the internal conditions and how they are evolving. One
thing, however, remains clear: significant and
permanent changes will not occur in Syria through any
kind of give and take with the current government as
the problem is not Assad himself as much as the clique
surrounding him which will remain even if he steps
down. In this regard, the AL, with the support of
other major players including Turkey, should develop a
strategy that will squeeze out Assad and his cohorts
even though this may still take the better part of
2012. The strategy should consist of four distinct yet
interconnected components, which should be pursued
simultaneously.
First, fearing that he may meet Qaddafi's fate and
concerned that he may never regain the legitimacy
needed to lead, an offer to negotiate a safe exit and
immunity from prosecution for himself, family, Alawite
leaders and several dozens of his lieutenants should
be placed on the table. This is particularly urgent as
it would need to occur before Assad and his clique are
indicted by the International Criminal Court, which
can happen as soon as charges of en-mass killing are
brought against them. Once Assad is indicted, he will
be discouraged from opting for this course. For this
reason, instead of asking Assad to hand over power to
one deputy (a plan already rejected and dubbed a
"plot" by Syria's Foreign Minister, Walid al-Muallem),
the AL, in consultation with the Obama Administration
and Turkey, should fully and aggressively explore the
"safe exit" option where Assad is offered a safe
haven, sparing his country from racing further toward
the abyss. The "safe exit" option has already worked
in Yemen, and the Saudi Royal family would not object
to allowing Assad and his clique sanctuary, as it did
earlier with Uganda's Idi Amin and more recently with
Tunisia's Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.
Second, since Assad may not opt for the first option,
hoping that Iran and Russia will keep him
well-equipped and well-financed, he hopes of crushing
the uprising. Therefore a joint effort should be made
by the AL, the United States, the European Union, and
Turkey to impose crippling sanctions. These sanctions
should include: cutting off all civilian flights,
ending trade with several Arab State trading partners
(including Jordan and Saudi Arabia), threatening to
intervene militarily through no-fly zones, and
enlisting the use of cyber warfare. Unlike Iraq, an
almost completely self-sustained country, Syria
desperately depends on imports. Sanctions like these
would be very painful and might pressure the entire
ruling apparatus to gradually collapse. The UN
Security Council is currently considering an
Arab-European draft resolution reflecting the demands
of the AL initiative, which calls for Assad to hand
power over to his deputy but mentions no use of
sanctions as a consequence of non-compliance. Despite
Russian objections to the draft, Moscow may eventually
relent with some US inducement. As a senior Russian
envoy has been quoted saying this week, "Russia can do
no more for Assad"—something that should serve as a
serious signal to Assad.
Third, as the first two prongs of the strategy are
initiated, the high military command should be
encouraged to mount a military coup. Such a coup could
gather momentum as the military high brass could
conclude that, given the rising defections and the
state's failure to repress the year-long protests so
far, even undertaking massacres on the scale of Hama
in February of 1982 would not turn the tide. The
military command may then seriously consider the
Egyptian model where the military high brass,
motivated by its own survival, opted for abandoning
Mubarak and his immediate associates, while promising
and implementing real reforms. The Syrian military
remains the strongest institution within the country
and possesses the capability to impose its will. For
its high command, the option of sacrificing Assad and
some two dozen of his cohorts as the symbol of tyranny
would maintain the unity of the army and, above all,
save the lives and interests of the bulk of the ruling
apparatus. This scenario may have been unlikely only a
few months ago partly because of the military's
loyalty to Assad's Alawite community and partly
because of the regime's security firewalls, which have
prevented a military coup in Syria for the last four
decades. But now the conditions on the ground have
changed in a dramatic way and only a dramatic move
will stop the carnage in a situation which is steadily
leading towards a civil war.
Finally, for all intents and purposes the sectarian
conflict has already begun and will likely, if
unimpeded, turn into a full-scale civil war. Should
this scenario unfold, it will eventually bring down
the Assad regime, and no one in his current power
structure will survive. The initially limited
defections are now in the hundreds every single day,
which has allowed for the emergence of the Syrian Free
Army (FSA), as an organized/armed opposition
practically working as the military wing of the Syrian
National Council. The FSA is in control of two key
cities, Douma (on the north-east edge of Damascus) and
Zabadani (close to the Lebanese border), which has
forced the regime into indirect negotiations to stop
the fighting. Should this scenario unfold it will
likely follow the Libyan model of capturing one city
after another, resulting in slaughter, especially
given the recent reports that the regime has already
started distributing weapons in the country's Alawite
areas with the double aim of denying the FSA further
gains and targeting the silent majority's fear of
sectarian divides "a la post"-Saddam Iraq.
Time has run out for President Assad. Following the
mass killings, suffering and deprivation of basic
human rights that the Assad regime has perpetrated on
his people, under no circumstances will Assad be able
to restore his legitimacy as a ruler either externally
or domestically, even if some calm is re-established.
Ironically, Assad, who might have been the first
leader in Syria who actually wanted to institute some
political reforms, might very well end up being the
first to be sacrificed because of the governing
apparatus he inherited but failed to upend. The Assad
dynasty as we know it will most definitely be a thing
of the past, regardless of how long that may take.
A noted journalist and author, Dr. Alon Ben-Meir
is professor of international relations and Middle
East studies at the Center for Global Affairs at New
York University. Ben-Meir holds a masters degree in
philosophy and a doctorate in international relations
from Oxford University.