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Syria: the First Domino to Fall?
Scotsman.com via FrontPageMagazine.com ^
| 4/17/03
| Fraser Nelson
Posted on 04/16/2003 9:59:26 PM PDT by kattracks
SYRIA is beginning to wobble; its old regime could soon fall. Behind its resolute rejection of Washingtons accusations, its Baathist regime is weakening. It may be the first Middle East domino to topple after the end of war in Iraq.
The man whose finger is on the Damascus domino is not Donald Rumsfeld, the U.S. Defense Secretary. The victor will be Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president, who is now standing his strongest chance of toppling the old guard who have blocked his reforms.
This is the domino theory, an integral part of the multi-layered logic for war with Iraq. No matter how many emollient words come out from London, the all-important question is: whos next?
The list is long - Irans theocracy, Saudi Arabias religious police - but the idea is not to wage war on such countries. Those who believe there is a secret military agenda have failed to understand the lessons of the Cold War.
The Soviet Union was toppled not by blood and iron, but by the contagion of democracy - set loose in Eastern Europe and then felling the entire communist system. What worked then may work for the Arab dictatorships now.
The "fall" of Syria will not be announced by the crashing of statues or the rumbling of American tanks in Damascus. It will happen when its very own president manages to harness current events to empower his own modernizing agenda.
Mr Assad is no Nelson Mandela. But since succeeding his father three years ago, he has been struggling against the Baathist old guard who hoard power, run local fiefdoms and feather their nests in the same way as their political cousins in Iraq.
Educated in London and with an English-born wife, Mr Assad is no enemy of the West. At 37, he is one of the youngest world leaders - and his diagnosis of Syrias problem chimes with that of Washington.
His country is an economic museum, where 1960s cars fill the streets after Syria shut itself off from the world under the introspective dictatorship of his father. His prescription: modernization, market reforms and weakening of the old guard.
His problem is lack of control. There are, for example, 13 separate police units power bases in Syria - each standing ready to resist change.
Their old world is rapidly aging. The fall of Saddam Husseins regime is a disaster for Syrias Baathist elite - and suggests the modernising agenda of Mr Assad is now backed by the tide of world events.
The message coming out of Damascus in English is one of staunch defiance of the U.S. - and the war with Iraq. But the whispers in Arab show more nuances to the picture.
A Qatar-based newspaper said last weekend that Mr Assad is preparing a night of the long knives for his Baathist rivals, whose power has been immeasurably weakened by the Iraq war.
When Mr. Rumsfeld threatens terrible things to Syria, his words may provide covering fire for Mr. Assad - with the hope that he may be easing himself into a Gorbachev role.
In London, officials are hopeful that Mr. Assad is coming their way. The first suspicious move, it is argued, is his blanket promise that no members of Saddams regime have entered Syria.
This is a county with a 370-mile border with Iraq. It is quite impossible to give such blanket assurance - and so, when members of Saddams Gestapo are found, someone will have defied his orders. Most likely a secret police branch. And they will be punished.
How serious is Mr. Assad? He has sent out mixed messages, and Washington is concerned that London is being a little too optimistic in its interpretation.
Two years ago, he allowed publication of the first non-state newspaper since the Baathist seized power in 1963. A central bank was opened; 700 political prisoners were released.
It was Mr. Assad who visited the Queen last year, backed Washington in voting for United Nations Resolution 1441 over Iraq and handed over an al-Qaeda operative wanted for organising the 11 September hijackers.
But his reforms, the so-called "Damascus spring," ended in 2001 when Baathist officials - wary of losing their power bases - arrested a dozen opposition leaders and blocked further reform.
This sent a coded threat to Mr. Assad. But it also drew a dividing line between the young president and the Baathist goons who have become the White Houses enemy.
The negative signs are that this is, after all, the same Mr. Assad who has hailed Hezbollah as a "legitimate movement of liberation."
When the West gives Mr. Assad modernising rope, he seems to take it. This is exactly the plan devised by the U.S. hawks when the Afghanistan campaign was finished. The weapon to deploy in the Middle East was the taste of democracy - a political contagion with a habit of spreading to its neighbours.
Autocratic governments in Egypt, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Tunisia will now be clearly concerned that a precedent-setting democratic regime is on its way in Baghdad.
They may soon find that the anti-war protests which swept most Arab countries - leading to clashes between the masses and authorities - were not pro-Saddam so much as against their own governments.
The stage is fast being set for a reversal of the hatred of the United States in Arab streets. If the peace is fought with as much success as the war, the Stars and Stripes may soon become associated with political liberalism in Arab world.
Syria is a tough test case for the domino theory. But the battle is far more nuanced than the shouting from both sides makes out.
TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: assad; baath; bushdoctrineunfold; collateralbenefits; democracy; evil; iraq; liberation; next; syria; transformation; warlist
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1
posted on
04/16/2003 9:59:26 PM PDT
by
kattracks
To: kattracks
Thank God We have a President with balls! The Baath party is being hunted to extinction like the cancer they are.
2
posted on
04/16/2003 10:06:13 PM PDT
by
Spruce
To: kattracks
Interesting take.
To: kattracks
If the peace is fought with as much success as the war, the Stars and Stripes may soon become associated with political liberalism in Arab world. BIG "if", since peace is usually messier than war, but... I have my fingers crossed.
4
posted on
04/16/2003 10:09:24 PM PDT
by
demosthenes the elder
(If *I* can afford $5/month to support FR: SO CAN YOU)
To: kattracks; *war_list; W.O.T.; *Bush Doctrine Unfold; Dog Gone; Grampa Dave; blam; Sabertooth; ...
Well, this is very different than anything else that I have been reading regarding Syria!
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5
posted on
04/16/2003 10:19:38 PM PDT
by
Ernest_at_the_Beach
(Where is Saddam? and where is Tom Daschle?)
To: kattracks
So interesting, I was just about to post it...
6
posted on
04/16/2003 10:22:12 PM PDT
by
KayEyeDoubleDee
(const vector<tag>& theTags)
To: Allan
Ping.
This is a different view of Assad than I've read elsewhere.
7
posted on
04/16/2003 10:24:15 PM PDT
by
Mitchell
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Another of the "Crawford Deal" legs?
8
posted on
04/16/2003 10:30:06 PM PDT
by
blam
To: Kevin Curry
Hmmm, very interesting.
Iraq the first dominoe, . . . wonder what the order of the other dominoes is?
- The ALPHABET "News" MEDIA.
- Democratic Party.
- Syria.
- Iran.
- Hollywood.
- France.
- Germany.
- California.
- Seattle.
- North Korea.
- Mexico.
- Cuba.
9
posted on
04/16/2003 10:37:20 PM PDT
by
SandRat
(Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
To: kattracks
Mr Assad is no Nelson Mandela. Well, at least the Syrians have one thing going for them.
10
posted on
04/16/2003 10:43:55 PM PDT
by
Hugin
To: blam; kattracks
I don't know, but I found this excellent cartoon :
11
posted on
04/16/2003 11:00:33 PM PDT
by
Ernest_at_the_Beach
(Where is Saddam? and where is Tom Daschle?)
To: Hugin
Mandela is shit!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
12
posted on
04/16/2003 11:02:37 PM PDT
by
noutopia
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
13
posted on
04/16/2003 11:03:38 PM PDT
by
blam
Comment #14 Removed by Moderator
To: Kurdistani
I think you may be right that this is wishful thinking.
Mr. Assad, may you live in interesting times.
To: demosthenes the elder
http://www.drudgereport.com/flash.htm Saudi sacks preachers for raising political issues in sermons
Thu Apr 17, 2003 00:01:21 ET
Dubai (dpa) - Saudi Arabia has sacked preachers for conveying political or news reports in their sermons, a Saudi newspaper reported Thursday.
``It is inappropriate for preachers to convey to the faithful political or news reports in their sermons, as the preacher should be neither a broadcaster nor a journalist,'' said Saudi Minister of Islamic Affairs Sheikh Saleh Al Sheikh quoted by Arab News.
``The duties of the preachers have always been know. However, during their sermons, they sometimes react to the difficult situation Moslems have lately been facing, and then they make pronouncements that are not fully compatible with the Islamic law,'' added Al Sheikh.
The decision to fire the preachers was taken at a meeting chaired by the minister and attended by the heads of the central committees responsible for implementing programme for mosques and their staff.
Saudi Arabia, a U.S. ally, is very sensitive to criticism against Washington from the pulpits in the mosques.
Many preachers have criticized Washington for the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and its support for Israel.
16
posted on
04/17/2003 1:05:36 AM PDT
by
XBob
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Yes, it is different from everything else we've read about Syria. For that reason, I'll file it under "hopeful, but doubtful." Still, an interesting read.
17
posted on
04/17/2003 7:00:06 AM PDT
by
MizSterious
("The truth takes only seconds to tell."--Jack Straw)
Bump
18
posted on
04/17/2003 9:59:29 AM PDT
by
NormsRevenge
(Semper Fi .. Support FRee Republic.. God Bless America!!!)
To: XBob
well, it is a start, if a small one.
19
posted on
04/17/2003 11:37:42 AM PDT
by
demosthenes the elder
(If *I* can afford $5/month to support FR: SO CAN YOU)
To: kattracks
Syria has to be treated with some seriousness. After all, they have warehoused all the WMD from Iraq, according to today's news.
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