27 July 2012 By Tariq Alhomayed Do Arab ministers really think that their call for
Bashar al-Assad to step down and for Kofi Annan's
mission to ensure a "transfer of power" in Syria will
reach the ears of al-Assad or Moscow? Or is it that
the Arabs have decided to issue this call based on
some Russian signals, most notably the Russian
Ambassador to Paris' claim that al-Assad wants to
leave "in a civilized manner"? Whatever the answer, the Arabs have to remember
that Moscow has "played" the international community
since the outbreak of the Syrian revolution, just as
it betrayed the Syrians by standing by the tyrant of
Damascus for 17 months, providing him with weapons and
diplomatic cover. It is not inconceivable that
Russia's "signals" today are just another trick.
Likewise, no one can rely on al-Assad to take a
"courageous step", as the Arab ministers in Doha
urged, and no one can believe that al-Assad "could
stop the destruction and the killings by taking a
courageous decision", as Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh
Hamad bin Jassim said. Whilst the Arab ministers were
reading their statement calling for Bashar al-Assad to
step down, his brother Maher al-Assad's army division
was running riot in Damascus, executing young people
on the streets. In truth, the only good to come from the Arab
meeting's statement is the fact that Arab foreign
ministers have pressured their ambassadors in New York
to call for an emergency UN General Assembly meeting.
This meeting will issue recommendations for measures
including the establishment of safe areas in Syria, to
provide protection to Syrian citizens and enable
relief workers to carry out their duties. Yet there is
a pressing need to accelerate this particular step,
and not wait for the UN to act. The number of Syrian
refugees is increasing considerably, and the magnitude
of murder and destruction carried out by al-Assad's
forces is beyond horrific, as it has now become clear
that al-Assad wants to enact revenge by killing the
largest number of Syrian revolutionaries possible,
after confirming that there is no hope of him
regaining control of the situation. This is exactly
what Muammar Gaddafi did before him, and the
protection of the Syrians does not need further
stalling or delays from the Security Council, but
rather the accelerating establishment of safe areas to
fracture al-Assad's forces, especially with the
increasing number of defections. The Syrian National
Council was right when it said in a statement issued
on the eve of the Arab meeting in Doha that "the
friends of the al-Assad regime are protecting it
politically, providing it with lethal weapons and all
manner of continual support, so where are the many
friends of the Syrian people? Are they undertaking the
obligations of this friendship?" The obligations of this friendship are to create
safe areas, especially after the Free Syrian Army (FSA)
has captured many border crossings, not to mention the
fierce battles it is fighting in Damascus and Aleppo,
without the assistance of the international community
which contents itself with observing and condemning
whilst al-Assad burns Syria and the Syrians in
revenge. The Arabs must understand that al-Assad is
now irrelevant, and strengthening the capacity of the
FSA and establishing safe areas is more important.
Such a move would prompt the Russians to follow the
lead of the Arabs and the international community, and
not vice versa, as the Arabs should not be waiting for
a man who kills women and children to take a
"courageous step". 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 |