Obama And The Syrian Caricature: Washington Now Extremely Late To Respond To The Syrian Crisis
30 April 2013
By Tariq Alhomayed
The US administration has declared its determination
to provide non-lethal assistance in the form of
bullet-proof vests, night vision goggles and other
devices to the Syrian opposition. The assistance comes
in response to recommendations made by the US State
Department in coordination with international parties.
There has also been a news leak about updated plans
for US military intervention in Syria. The question on
everybody's lips is whether Obama has changed his
attitude towards the embattled nation.
Imagine the following caricature: Obama is running,
carrying a big net and trying to catch something
falling from the sky. That thing is Syria.
In reality, the US administration is taking a back
seat on the Syrian crisis—an attitude it also adopted
when handling the Libyan crisis. But there is one
small difference between the two: in Syria, the US is
not seated behind NATO troops, but rather behind the
Free Syrian Army (FSA) and the Al-Nusra Front.
Washington is allowing all of these groups to lead in
the hope that it will reap the last-minute benefit:
seeing Assad removed from power with the least
possible effort.
Anyone who contemplates US's stance towards Syria must
understand that Washington does not take any
initiative in its response to the crisis; rather, it
moves only in reaction. All that matters to the US
administration is to get involved the second Assad
falls, in order to claim victory in the hope that they
can influence the next stage of Syria's existence.
What the US government has not yet understood is that
Syria is far more complex than Egypt or
Tunisia—indeed, it more complex than any of the Arab
Spring states, or even Iraq. The more time Washington
allows to pass before it assists the FSA and the Al-Nusra
Front, and the longer it refuses to confront Iran, the
more difficult and destructive the situation for Syria
and the region will become. These effects may last for
decades to come. The Syrian revolution is not like the
Egyptian one, where the Americans jumped on the
bandwagon and claimed to have been victorious. Even in
that conflict, a senior American official privately
admitted that his country had committed many serious
mistakes in Egypt.
Syria will be more complex: Iran and Hezbollah exist
in the same way as Al-Qaeda, and they are just as bad.
There is also a long-entrenched climate of suspicion
and intimidation, and accusations of treason are
commonplace. If Washington fails to have a strong
presence in Syria, the future will be even more
difficult than the situations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Washington is now extremely late to respond to the
Syrian crisis, and it will be racing against time if
it decides to intervene directly.
The situation on the ground is complicated and is only
getting more complex as rebels advance. The sectarian
divisions that have existed in that country for so
long have already taken deeper roots. Washington must
be made aware of how late it is to start intervening
in the crisis—of how it must intervene as soon as
possible instead of sitting in the back seat behind
the FSA, the Al-Nusra Front, Iran and Hezbollah. The
US, the Arabs, and the international community must
make the next move—they cannot let anyone beat them to
it.
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.
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