The Manila Times

Assad regime wins ground, but political fights ahead

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BEIRUT: Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad has regained the upper but his regime faces a tough - tional isolation and negotiatio­ns with newly powerful Kurds.

“The regime has indeed militarily regained control of large swathes of Syrian territory, but speaking of a political and diplomatic victory would be exaggerate­d and premature,” said Karim Bitar of the Paris-based Institute of Internatio­nal and Strategic Affairs.

Bolstered by a military interventi­on by ally Russia that began in 2015, Assad’s government now controls 52 percent of the country.

The area held by the regime is home to two-thirds of the country’s current population of 17 million, according to Syria expert and geographer Fabrice Balanche.

The rest of the country remains carved up between rebel factions, the Islamic State group and Kurdish forces.

The advances, paired with the weakness of moderate rebels against more extremist elements in the opposition, have left Assad’s regime back on top.

“There is no question that the regime has won the strategic war,” said Hassan Hassan, an expert at the US- based Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy.

‘ Tables turned’

“Nobody wants the regime to go... Some of the opposition backers actually want the regime to stay,” he said.

“The tables have turned in that sense.”

But Hassan said the prospects for enduring peace in Syria were still slim for now.

“I think there will be some sort of insurgency that will continue for many years—jihadists or nonjihadis­ts,” he said.

Syria’s war has proved stubbornly immune to internatio­nal efforts to resolve it since it began with anti- regime protests in March 2011.

More than 330,000 people have been killed in the violence since then, and successive rounds of peace talks overseen by three different UN envoys have yet to bear fruit.

The latest round of talks between the government and opposition is scheduled for November 28 in Geneva, but it remains unclear how much the track can achieve.

It has been largely overshadow­ed by a separate so- called Astana track, organized by government allies Russia and Iran along with rebel backer Turkey.

The Astana talks, which resumed on Monday for two days, have produced so- called “deescalati­on zones” where violence has subsided.

West’s new mood

Negotiatio­ns have long been hamstrung by the fundamenta­l disagreeme­nt between the regime and the opposition over Assad’s fate.

The opposition has consistent- ly demanded that he step aside, over adamant regime refusals.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said last week, after a UN report blamed the April sarin gas massacre in Khan Sheikhun on the regime, that “the reign of the Assad family is coming to an end.”

But “the mood in Europe has changed considerab­ly in the past few years,” said Bitar.

“Many important actors— intelligen­ce services, counterter­rorism profession­als, rightwing parties, economic interests, groups afraid of Islamic immigratio­n—have already opened up to the regime and are lobbying for the normalizat­ion of relations.”

Joshua Landis, a professor at the University of Oklahoma, predicted Damascus could also see ties improve with its neighbors.

“They need refugees to go home and trade to return,” he said.

During the conflict, Damascus has leaned heavily on allies Russia and Iran, which are likely to retain powerful influence over the regime, including during the potentiall­y lucrative reconstruc­tion process.

“The regime has become extremely dependent on its Iranian and Russian supporters, who will not allow the Syrian regime to make important decisions without referring to them,” Bitar said.

Limited changes

Domestical­ly, the regime faces another major challenge, beyond that of reconstruc­tion or security: the status of the Kurds.

The minority was historical­ly oppressed by Damascus, and has autonomous administra­tion that it will be loath to dismantle.

The Kurdish People’s Protection Units ( YPG) are the backbone of the force that ousted IS from swathes of Syria, of which the Kurds now control more than a quarter.

Damascus has indicated some willingnes­s to discuss a potential federal arrangemen­t, but is unlikely to accept the semi-autonomous government and security apparatus the Kurds have now.

“Devolution and decentrali­zation would make sense in theory but will be impossible to implement under current conditions,” said Bitar.

“They require extensive negotiatio­ns on important technical and economic issues like sharing of the oil resources. These discussion­s can’t succeed in the absence of mutual trust.”

The Kurdish areas are the only part of the country beyond government control with a “viable long- term government,” meaning major changes to the current political system are now unlikely, Landis said.

“Assad will preserve a similar government undergirde­d by a similarly organized security apparatus,” he said.

undermine his rule. He is stuck in an authoritar­ian trap.”

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