Syrians fearful of becoming next Iraq
Syrians fearful of becoming next Iraq
Believe toppling of Bashar Assad's regime would unleash nation's divisions
Dec. 12, 2005. 04:37 AM
DAMASCUS—Ask everyday Syrians where their country is headed and you immediately sense the bleakness of the moment. The most hopeful answer is "nowhere." The alternatives, they say, are worse. Catastrophically worse.Such is the grim public mood on the eve of another dossier of United Nations investigative findings into the Feb. 14 assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri, which is widely expected to deepen the international glare on the corridors of power in Damascus.However much Syrians despise the bare-knuckle corruption that passes for national leadership, it is clear that fear of becoming the next Iraq trumps all. They will suffer onward in lockstep, offering Pavlovian support for their defiant young President Bashar Assad, even if it means enduring UN sanctions. Because really, what choice do they have?"It sounds sick to say it aloud, but Syrians would rather die of hunger than from civil war or conflict. They want reform, but if reform means Iraq, count them out," said Marwan Kabalan, a political scientist with the Centre for Strategic Studies at Damascus University."It is a sad situation, but the fact is they feel like spectators with absolutely no say in the matter. Syrians today are so passive, so submissive, so completely depoliticized, all they can bring themselves to hope for is stability. So they will back a regime they don't like no matter what happens."Diplomats in Damascus describe an emotional rollercoaster ride in the nine months since Hariri was killed, with both the Assad regime and its citizens driven from one nervous peak to the next. Each political climax, from Syria's withdrawal of troops from Lebanon to the preliminary UN findings on Hariri, which brought suspicions dangerously close to Assad's ruling junta, raised wild speculation that the regime could collapse upon itself.But in the two months since lead UN investigator Detlev Mehlis delivered findings that brought suspicion upon a range of Syrian intelligence leaders, up to and including Assad's brother Maher and brother-in-law Assef Shawkat, Damascus has effectively "circled the wagons to preserve itself," in the words of one political insider."Damascus sees the Bush administration driving everything. And the regime has been very effective in working to drag things out," said a Western diplomatic source in Damascus."The game they are playing is to see who can last longer, them or (George W.) Bush? They're betting they've got the longer life span, and once a new American president comes along they'll be okay." But the missing ingredient, analysts say, was Syrian popular support. Assad tackled the issue head-on last month in what many describe as the most important speech of his life, pressing enough emotional buttons to rally his reluctant people onside for possible UN sanctions."Assad's speech was a very personal claim of leadership hitting all the old emotional buttons that resonate with the Arab world — honour, national pride and resistance," said one diplomat."He framed the pressure from Mehlis together with the struggles of Palestine, Hezbollah and the resistance in Iraq. He drove home the overriding Arab principle that you don't let a stranger come into your house and beat up the family. He even invoked the name of Allah five times in a single statement, which was a shock to all of us. No Syrian leader has ever appealed on religious grounds before."The impact was visceral. Even the regime's most critical opponents found themselves struggling not to stand up and shout "Yes!"But when Syrians awoke the next day, they found their currency in free fall, as a rush to convert the Syrian pound to U.S. dollars triggered an 18 per cent devaluation."I started to wonder, `What is he doing to us?'" a Syrian lawyer who asked for anonymity told the Toronto Star. "Some people here are pretty certain Syria's guilty in the death of Hariri. So now we must prepare for sanctions to protect six people who are criminals anyway?"Today on the streets of Damascus a government-sponsored disinformation campaign backs up Assad's bluster. Lawyers and students parade into protest tents in support of the regime, and the government continues to work energetically to discredit the initial Mehlis findings by casting doubt on several witnesses responsible for the most damning testimony.
| `It sounds sick to say it aloud, but Syrians would rather die of hunger than from civil war or conflict.' Marwan Kabalan, political scientist |

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