23 Feb 2012 By Tariq
Alhomayed The protests that took place in Mezzeh – in the
heart of Damascus –surprised everybody; the Syrian
regime, regional and international states,
particularly those that have been cautious [over the
situation in Syria], in addition to al-Assad regime
supporters. This is also something that applies to the
politicians. This means that everybody, in the coming
days, will celebrate the fall of Damascus. Those monitoring the situation in Syria will have
noticed positional changes and unexpected reversals
[on Syria], which is something that may even reach
defections from the al-Assad regime itself! Regionally
speaking, we see Egypt withdrawing its ambassador from
Damascus and all the talk is now about the necessity
of Egypt cutting its relations with the al-Assad
regime; indeed surprise has been expressed from within
Egypt itself that it has taken Cairo this long to take
this position. Some people are attributing the latest
Egyptian position to the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood
escalation against the al-Assad regime, which is
something that has embarrassed the decision-makers in
Cairo. This may be true, but the most important reason
is what happened in Damascus, for after protesters
dramatically took to the streets there – which is
something that did not even happen in Tripoli during
the revolution against Gaddafi – nothing remains for
the al-Assad regime or the cautious [states]. Indeed
what many have failed to pay attention to is the fact
that the Damascus protests took place just 700 meters
away from al-Assad's palace! This is something that
could have an impact on the composition of the al-Assad
regime itself, accelerating the internal divisions
within the regime, as we previously mentioned,
particularly as there is information about the
approaching moment of division, which will be revealed
in the coming days. The shaking of the capital, any
capital, means that that the regime has begun to
shudder. There is also now explicit talk about some
businessmen leaving Syria to save themselves, and
their money, not to mention claims that the al-Assad
government is practically divided in reality. The other indication that the politicians will
celebrate the fall of Damascus is the statement issued
by the Chinese Foreign Ministry, which contradicts
what was put forward by the al-Assad regime media
following the visit paid by the Chinese Vice Foreign
Minister to the country. Whilst the al-Assad media
claimed that the Chinese envoy had expressed Beijing's
complete support for the al-Assad regime, the
statement issued by the Chinese Foreign Ministry said
that the Chinese Vice Foreign Minister had informed
al-Assad of Beijing's endorsement of the Arab
initiative. This is an extremely important indication,
for it means that China is trying to redeem the
terrible mistake it made at the UN Security Council,
whilst it is also trying to distance itself from the
latest crimes committed by the al-Assad regime. The other issue here is Russia publicly stating
that Moscow is still waiting for a Gulf response on
its request for a meeting, which is what we revealed
last week, and undoubtedly the question that poses
itself in the reader's mind at this instance is: why
has the Sino-Russian tone [on Syria] changed now? The
logical answer to this is that the recent actions
taken by Damascus has forced, and will force,
everybody – including Beijing and Moscow – to
celebrate the fall of Damascus, whilst the horror of
the massacres being carried out by the al-Assad regime
in Syria does not allow any state to form an alliance
with a state that kills children. One might say: what
about Iran? Here the answer is completely difference,
for al-Assad's survival is a case of life and death
for Tehran, because the collapse of the al-Assad
regime no doubt means cutting the hand of Iran in the
region! Therefore, after al-Assad has shed the blood of the
Syrians, and faced the protests in Mezzeh, we have to
wait in suspense for what follows the fall of
Damascus. Tariq Alhomayed is the Editor-in-Chief of Asharq
Al-Awsat, the youngest person to be appointed that
position. He holds a BA degree in Media studies from
King Abdul Aziz University in Jeddah, and has also
completed his Introductory courses towards a Master's
degree from George Washington University in Washington
D.C. He is based in London. Comments 💬 التعليقات |