Arab News

The never-ending Syrian conf lict

A brutal war lasting almost a decade has blown the Middle East’s fault lines wide open

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As such, the Iraq experience has provided an insurance policy for dictators and autocrats worldwide — as long as their brutality is kept within their own borders, they can enjoy immunity. That has enabled Syrian President Bashar Assad to carry out what the UN has described as crimes against humanity amounting to “exterminat­ion” of the civilian population, without any real fear of being held to account.

America’s fatigue with its seemingly endless wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n allowed a resurgent Russia to fill the US void in the Middle East. Having positioned itself during the 1990s and 2000s as a leading opponent of American interventi­onism, Moscow is now doing all the things it had been criticizin­g the

US for (and which it had done with equal vigor during the Cold War). Without Russia’s direct interventi­on in the Syrian conflict, Assad would have been finished years ago. Meanwhile, his patron in Moscow has repeatedly shielded him from censure in the UN Security Council, as the US has done for Israel. The many injustices facing the Arab world over the decades — some imposed from outside, others fostered from within — led to vibrant and determined movements that campaigned for self-determinat­ion, human rights, justice, equality and internatio­nal law. Those movements provided hope to counterbal­ance despair and disillusio­nment. The Syrian conflict snuffed out that hope. Activists who had joined those movements out of principle realized that many of their peers were motivated instead by agenda. Many activists, journalist­s, parties and government­s that cheered the removal of pro-Western dictators at the outset of the Arab Spring suddenly found all manner of excuses to support the one in Damascus. To them, Syrians are less deserving of basic human rights because they do not fit into a certain worldview.

Worse, their popular struggle to secure those rights has been met with contempt and deception. Assad and his supporters are using the Israeli propaganda playbook. Meanwhile, the global political left, which had historical­ly positioned itself as a champion of human rights and an opponent of imperialis­m, is full of people for whom rights are selective, and for whom only the West is capable of imperialis­m.

The invasion of Iraq was opposed worldwide, but there was no illusion of Saddam Hussein as being a benevolent or misunderst­ood leader. Yet Assad, who is no less brutal, is the subject of hero worship.

The “war on terror” narrative nurtured by him and his supporters — and copied from Israel and the US — has led to suspicion and demonizati­on of millions of Syrian refugees fleeing to neighborin­g countries, Europe and further afield. The current rise of populism in Europe and elsewhere can be attributed in considerab­le measure to this antirefuge­e sentiment.

Like the rest of the media, Arab News had to cover the conflict from beyond the actual warzone due to the inherent physical danger and because of access restrictio­ns. Here too, the Assad regime took a leaf out of Israel’s and America’s book of war strategy: Deny access to a war zone, then dismiss all accounts, footage and citizen journalism from there as propaganda because it is unverified. As an Arab proud of my heritage and privileged with freedoms that are denied to so many of my ethnic kin, my main motivation for becoming a journalist was to give a voice to Arabs silenced either by their own government­s or by media bias and misreprese­ntation in the West.

Over the decades, there has been much cause for despair, but for me — as an Arab, a journalist and a proponent of universal human rights — what has happened in Syria has elevated that despair to a whole new level. That country — historical­ly known for its civilizati­on, culture, hospitalit­y, tolerance and diversity — is where the words “never again” have gone to die, buried under the rubble of a hospital or hanging from a regime torture cell as the rest of the world has either looked away or cheered on.

HOW WE REPORTED IT

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 ?? AFP ?? Syrian President Bashar Assad took a leaf out of Israel’s and America’s book of war strategy, Sharif Nashashibi writes.
The Iraq folly cast a shadow over the Syrian conflict, with Iran able to fulfill its goal of becoming a regional hegemon, and the internatio­nal community deeply reticent about foreign involvemen­t in other countries, even when a government is butchering its own people.
That has enabled Syrian President Bashar Assad to carry out what the UN has described as crimes against humanity amounting to ‘exterminat­ion’ of the civilian population. Meanwhile,
American fatigue in Iraq and Afghanista­n allowed a resurgent Russia to fill the US void in the Middle East. Moscow’s direct interventi­on in the Syrian conflict turned the tide in Assad’s favor.
AFP Syrian President Bashar Assad took a leaf out of Israel’s and America’s book of war strategy, Sharif Nashashibi writes. The Iraq folly cast a shadow over the Syrian conflict, with Iran able to fulfill its goal of becoming a regional hegemon, and the internatio­nal community deeply reticent about foreign involvemen­t in other countries, even when a government is butchering its own people. That has enabled Syrian President Bashar Assad to carry out what the UN has described as crimes against humanity amounting to ‘exterminat­ion’ of the civilian population. Meanwhile, American fatigue in Iraq and Afghanista­n allowed a resurgent Russia to fill the US void in the Middle East. Moscow’s direct interventi­on in the Syrian conflict turned the tide in Assad’s favor.
 ??  ?? Human rights activists and witnesses said Syrian security forces opened fire on tens of thousands of protesters in Deraa, killing 25 and wounding hundreds.
Wire story on Arab News front page, March 16, 2011
Human rights activists and witnesses said Syrian security forces opened fire on tens of thousands of protesters in Deraa, killing 25 and wounding hundreds. Wire story on Arab News front page, March 16, 2011

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