Syria's leader does not seem happy in his work. As the crisis
deepens, he could choose to run, to fight or to negotiate
By Simon Tisdall
Bashar al-Assad said in his Damascus speech that he still had the support of the Syrian people. Photograph: Ho/AP
Bashar
al-Assad went into typical passive-aggressive mode in his Damascus speech,
vowing to crush dissent while simultaneously promising vague reforms. Broadly
defined, this sort of behaviour involves procrastination, stubbornness,
resentment, sullenness, obstructionism, self-pity and a tendency to create
chaotic situations. Since the Syrian uprising erupted around his ears last
March, Assad, who never really wanted the presidency and has proved himself
spectacularly ill-suited to it, has exhibited all of these character defects
and more.
The
Syrian leader's state of mind is increasingly relevant as the nine-month-old
national crisis deepens, with no sign yet of how or when it may be resolved.
Critics say the president is isolated and out of touch with reality; others
that he is a pawn, or even a hostage, in the hands of more powerful relatives
and military figures. He certainly does not give the impression of being happy
in his work.
Whatever
the truth, with the deaths of at least 5,000 people laid at his door, with Arab
leaders joining the US and Europe in demanding his resignation, with the
prospect of a UN crimes against humanity prosecution looming and with the
regime's collapse and all-out civil war a distinct possibility, the pressure on
Assad must be all but unbearable. Will he crack? And what are his options?
1. Flight
If
the situation gets simply too hot to handle, Assad could try making a run for
it, as did the Arab spring's first victim, Tunisia's former president, Zine el
Abidine Ben Ali. He headed for Saudi Arabia, a favourite refuge for displaced
dictators such as Uganda's Idi Amin and Yemen's Ali Abdullah Saleh. Assad
turning up on their doorstep would be an embarrassment for Saudi leaders (who
do not like him), but if it brought stability back to the region, it might be
worth it.
Alternatively,
Assad could make a dash for Iran, his long-time ally, or even Russia, which has
consistently shielded his regime from international censure and has sent a
naval taskforce to the Syrian port of Tartus in a show of solidarity. If he
does decide to leg it, a key consideration will be what to do with his British-born
wife, Asma, and their three children. Any request from her to return to her
family home in Acton, west London, could present Britain with an interesting
diplomatic and security headache.
Assad
insisted in his speech that he was not going anywhere. But Gaddafi-style, he
also sounded seriously deluded. "I am not someone who abandons
responsibility. I am in this position because of support from the people and if
I leave, it will be because of the desire of the people."
2. Fight
The
current approach to the crisis comes straight from the play-book written by
Assad's late father, Hafez. He notoriously put down an earlier uprising in Hama
in 1982, when up to 10,000 people are said to have died. The difference this
time is that, so far at least, bloody repression has not worked and the unrest
in not confined to one city or region. Increasingly, regime opponents backed by
defecting military personnel have resorted to armed resistance across the
board. Assad also says they are getting assistance from abroad, a claim that is
difficult to verify.
"The
situation in Syria is heading towards a religious, sectarian, racial war, and
this needs to be prevented," Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Turkey's prime
minister, warned this week, voicing a concern that is shared across the region
and in the west. Assad's dilemma is that if the killing continues unchecked –
in other words, if he cannot definitively reassert his control – the Arab
League mission may be discredited and withdrawn, leading to direct UN security
council action and possible Libyan-style intervention.
So
far there is no sign the violent crackdown is working. But in his speech, Assad
suggested he would not change tack – while again appearing to deny reality.
"There is no cover for anyone. There are no orders for anyone to open fire
on any citizen," he said. His main aim was to restore order and this could
only be achieved by "hitting terrorists with an iron fist … there is no
tolerance for terrorism or for those who use weapons to kill".
3. Negotiation
Assad
again floated vague promises of reform, including a constitutional referendum
on a proposed multi-party system in March. But his credibility is shot among
many, if not most, Syrians after years of failing to carry through similar
pledges. If Assad pushed for genuine change, he could risk being dumped by
regime associates, notably by his tough-guy brother, Maher, the most powerful
man in Syria's security apparatus who is blamed for much of the recent killing.
Assad
has also burned his boats with leading Arab states and western countries,
including the US and Britain, which initially entertained high hopes of his
leadership when he took over in 2000. They and neighbours such as Turkey now
see no alternative but for him to stand down. Ironically, Israel – Syria's old
enemy – might prefer it if he survived, for the sake of a stable border. And if
the alternative to Assad is an anti-western, Sunni Muslim-led regime, then the
US and Iraq, for different reasons, might also secretly prefer him to stay.
Apparently
heedless of such nuances and of his need for support if he is to negotiate his
way out this mess, Assad poured contempt on fellow Arab leaders in his speech.
"The Arab League has failed for six decades to take a position in the Arab
interest … We should not be surprised," he said. Yet at the same time he
said Syria would not "close the door" to any Arab proposal that
respected its sovereignty and unity. This suggests he still hopes for some
face-saving regional formula that would enable him to stay in power.
Egypt
may yet serve as a model for what happens in Syria. In this scenario, the
regime figurehead – Hosni Mubarak/Assad – is removed and put on symbolic trial
but the regime itself, represented by the military and other powerful insider
forces, having offered up this high-profile sacrifice, remains largely intact.
The revolution appears to have succeeded, the violence mostly stops, and there
is a big celebratory party. But the morning after, it slowly dawns that nothing
much has really changed.
-This commentary was published in The Guardian on 10/01/2012
-Simon Tisdall is an assistant editor of the Guardian and a foreign affairs columnist. He was previously a foreign leader writer for the paper and has also served as its foreign editor and its US editor, based in Washington DC. He was the Observer's foreign editor from 1996-98
-Simon Tisdall is an assistant editor of the Guardian and a foreign affairs columnist. He was previously a foreign leader writer for the paper and has also served as its foreign editor and its US editor, based in Washington DC. He was the Observer's foreign editor from 1996-98
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