Weekend Herald

Syrians despair over a nation torn apart

Seven years on from the start of civil war there is no end in sight to fighting

- Zeina Karam and Philip Issa

For Syrians marking seven years of war this week, their country has never looked as helpless or fragmented.

President Bashar al-Assad has decimated the rebellion, thanks to massive military aid from Russia and Iran, but foreign powers have carved out zones of influence across the country. Hundreds of thousands of Syrians are trapped in besieged areas, and heavy fighting is under way in the nearby towns and suburbs of Damascus, and in the north, where alQaeda-linked militants are clashing with rival insurgents and Turkish troops are battling a Syrian Kurdish militia.

The violence has accelerate­d even as the United States, Russia, Iran and Turkey worked diplomatic tracks to broker local truces and freeze the lines of conflict over the last year. Those efforts now appear to have been aimed at mapping out areas of influence.

“I don’t even see Syria anymore,” said Zaina Erhaim, a Syrian journalist who left the country in 2016 and now lives in London.

“It’s called Syria on the map. But if you can think about an ordinary Syrian who wants to go from Daraa to Idlib, can you think about how many countries or nationalit­ies he’s going to be passing to reach there?” she asked.

A short list would include the remnants of Syria’s Western-backed opposition, Lebanon’s Hizbollah and other Iran-backed Shia fighters from as far away as Afghanista­n, Syrian troops, Russian pilots, al-Qaedalinke­d jihadis, US-allied Kurdish forces and Turkish tank crews.

Nearly half a million people have been killed in Syria since Arab Spring protests erupted in 2011, after security forces arrested a group of teenagers who scrawled anti-Assad graffiti on a wall in the southern city of Daraa.

A demonstrat­ion calling for reforms in Damascus’ Old City on March 15 is now widely seen as the start of the uprising. Three days later, security forces opened fire on a protest in Daraa, killing four people and drawing first blood.

The protests spread across the country, and nearly everywhere they were met with batons and bullets. Within months, the protesters began taking up arms and the cycle of bloodshed accelerate­d.

Today, hopes of democratic Syria seem distant, as the rebellion has splintered and the violence has spawned extremism. The activists who organised the initial protests have been hunted down or driven out of the country, either by Syria’s feared security agencies or the jihadis who haunt “liberated” areas.

Around 5 million Syrians have fled the country, with most of them struggling to get by in neighbouri­ng countries as donor fatigue worsens by the year.

“The thing that’s new is that for most of the Syrians living outside, there’s no more hope for return. Syria is no longer on their horizon,” said novelist Dima Wannous, who left Damascus for Beirut in 2011 and moved to London in 2016.

The defeat of Isis (Islamic State) over the past year raised hopes of a broader resolution of the conflict. Instead, the fall of a common enemy has reignited older rivalries and freed up fighters for new battles.

Syria has redeployed its elite forces to the eastern Ghouta suburbs of Damascus, where they hope to eliminate the last rebel bastion on the edge of the capital with the aid of Russian air power. Airstrikes and shelling have killed more than 1200 people in recent weeks despite a ceasefire adopted by the United Nations Security Council. Some 400,000 residents are trapped under a crippling siege, with many spending hours or days at a time crammed into makeshift undergroun­d shelters without water or electricit­y.

In northern Syria, Turkey is battling a Syrian Kurdish militia that it views as an extension of the Kurdish insurgency within its own borders.

At least 10,000 civilians streamed out of eastern Ghouta to government­held

The thing that’s new is that for most of the Syrians living outside, there’s no more hope for return. Syria is no longer on their horizon.

Dima Wannous

territory yesterday, following a night of massive bombardmen­t. Thousands more fled the Kurdishhel­d Afrin enclave in northern Syria, after Turkish forces tightened their siege around the town. The chaotic scenes broadcast on state television reflected the deepening despair of ordinary Syrians.

The US, which is allied with both Turkey and the Kurds, has sought to defuse the tensions, to no avail. It isn’t the first time the US, which called on Assad to step down back in mid-2011, has found itself sidelined in Syria.

Hundreds of American special operations forces are deployed across northern and eastern Syria, where they are patrolling alongside a Kurdish-led force to prevent Isis from regrouping.

But their footprint is nowhere near the size of Iran’s. Thousands of Iranbacked fighters from Lebanon, Iraq and Afghanista­n have set up a constellat­ion of bases across the country, part of a corridor of arms and influence stretching from Tehran to the Mediterran­ean Sea — and Israel’s doorstep.

Israel has carried out numerous air raids in Syria to prevent the transfer of arms to Hizbollah, and over the past year it has repeatedly warned against the growing Iranian presence. Syrian air defences shot down an Israeli jet in February, the first time they are known to have done so since 1982.

Until now, the various foreign powers have been content to leave the fighting to their local proxies, but the risk of a direct confrontat­ion — between Iran and Israel, or even Russia and the US — has steadily grown.

“Tensions are rising in ways where the trigger becomes much easier to happen,” said Maha Yahya, director of the Beirut-based Carnegie Middle East Centre.

Syrians say their own country has become an afterthoug­ht.

“Syria has been swallowed up,” says Wannous, the novelist. “In Syria you feel you no longer have a place, you no longer have a country.” AP

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Eastern Ghouta, an area in and around Damascus, has become the target of a brutal assault by the Assad regime. Olivia Rudgard
Picture / AP Eastern Ghouta, an area in and around Damascus, has become the target of a brutal assault by the Assad regime. Olivia Rudgard

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