The Pak Banker

Piling mistake upon mistake

- Prem Shankar Jha

THE only way to achieve a peaceful transition to democracy in Syria is through the regime. Destroying the state will lead to a power vacuum and chaos For two years, the United States and the European Union have done everything short of sending their own troops and aircraft into battle to evict Bashar al-Assad from power in Syria. Only recently have they begun to realise that they have made a historic mistake: in the euphoria created by the Arab Spring, they are in imminent danger of handing over the entire Arab world to Islamists for whom democracy is anathema.

In a front page editorial titled 'The Death of a Country,' The Economist has warned that if the West now simply draws back and lets the civil war run its course, Syria will become "a new Somalia rotting in the heart of the Levant."

"Almost everything America wants to achieve in the Middle East will become harder. Containing terrorism, ensuring the supply of energy and preventing the spread of weapons of mass destructio­n … Syria's disintegra­tion threatens them all." Where The Economist goes dangerousl­y wrong is in heaping all the blame for this on Mr. Assad. Had he not "embraced a policy of violence from the start" and "attacked the Arab Spring with tanks and gunships" and turned his Alawite praetorian guard upon Sunnis, he would not have "turned peaceful demonstrat­ors into armed militants" and drawn hosts into Syria.

To prevent Syria from turning into another Mali, therefore, it asks the U.S. and the EU to administer the same medicine it fed to Qadhafi in Libya - impose a no-fly zone, destroy Syria's air force and missiles, and arm 'non-Jihadi rebel groups' with surface-to-air missiles. These prescripti­ons reveal a profound ignorance of the situation in both Libya and Syria. What is more immediatel­y relevant is that its view in not shared by any leader of the democracy movement in Syria. On the contrary, in an article in The Guardian on June 22 last year, Haytham Manna, the chairman of the 16-party National Coalition for Transition to Democracy, and Mr. Assad's most trenchant critic in the early days of the insurgency, placed

the

jihadi the blame for the sidelining of the democracy movement squarely upon the West's complicity in allowing the Istanbul based Free Syrian Army to recruit Islamist foreign fighters for the assault on Syria.

Six months later, on December 18, he wrote that the Syrian people had come to regard the foreigners not as liberators but as oppressors. "When the Syrian army attacks alNusra it is not as the suppressor of the popular movement, but the guarantor of the unity of Syria's diverse society … It is the alliance between foreign jihadists and some Syrians that risks tearing the country apart, leading to religious extremism, long-term sectarian war, and the persecutio­n of minorities and various civilian groups."

The Economist correctly per- ceives that as Syria disintegra­tes, the jihadis could use "lawless territory as a base for internatio­nal terror (and) menace Israel across the Goal Heights." But what it does not perceive is that the collapse of the Assad regime will hasten this process and end by putting Israel in mortal peril. One has only to trace the likely aftermath of its collapse to understand why. First, the end of Mr. Assad will not necessaril­y mean the return of peace. As happened in Afghanista­n, it will make 5,000 to 6,000 foreign jihadis redundant and turn them into loose cannons in the country. Repatriati­ng them will be far from easy because the 'Arab Spring' has shattered their home economies and left millions without work. This is why Libyans make up the largest contingent among the foreign fighters in both Syria and Mali. But they cannot stay on indefinite­ly in Syria either for, with no common purpose left to unite them, the rivalry between the jihadis and more moderate opponents of Mr. Assad will almost certainly erupt into a struggle for power. Unlike the proxy war that it was able to wage upon Mr. Assad, this is a war the West will not be able to stay out of.

The moderates within the newly created Syrian National Coalition of Opposition and Revolution­ary forces (SNCORF) already fear this. That is why within three months of being elected, its President Moaz al Khatib, a former Imam of the Omayyad mosque in Damascus, declared himself willing to attend a conference with Bashar al-Assad to chalk out a peaceful transition in Syria. But his weakness was exposed when the diehards in the SNCORF forced him to retract his offer within days. The only remaining option is also the easiest. This is to channel their fervour into a new jihad. The inevitable next target will be Jordan because it lies on the direct route to Al Quds (Jerusalem) and the Al Aqsa mosque, the second holiest shrine in Islam.

Jordan will either cave in or give them free access to the West Bank. That will leave Israel surrounded, and isolated. Any pre-emptive action it takes to make its borders more secure such as re-occupying the Sinai to block access to Gaza will alienate the Arabs, increase the sway of the jihadis, and blight the prospect for a return to democracy and religious moderation in the foreseeabl­e future.

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