Khaleej Times

Partition could be an answer to the long civil war in Syria

Syria already has been de facto partitione­d by the opposing forces, with no political leadership collective­ly representi­ng all

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Syria was never a country whose 14 provinces and eight main communitie­s were voluntaril­y bonded together by secularism and tolerance. Not surprising­ly, the sixyear civil war became violently sectarian and ethnic. At ceasefire talks on May 4 in Astana, Kazakhstan, Russia proposed four “de-escalation zones” with Iran, Turkey, and itself serving as guarantors. Partition is necessary. But having three nations that greatly abet the strife serve as enforcers will not produce peace. An impartial plan must be formulated and implemente­d.

Since 1971, under father Hafez Al Assad and son Basher, Syria has been ruled by Alawites comprising 13 per cent of the population. Through oppressive rule, they and their Shiite partners engendered among Sunnis, 74 per cent of the population, a desire to extract retributio­n. Christians, Druze, Jews and Yezidis found a degree of security by bending to the Alawite leadership’s wishes, but thereby came to be seen as complicit. After the civil war broke out in March 2011, the Syrian president’s security agents increased imprisonme­nt, torture and execution of dissidents. His air force launched barrel and hose bombs and chemical attacks on civilians.

Bashar Al Assad’s internatio­nal partners became entwined in this ethno-sectariani­sm. Russia deploys its aerial firepower to reinforce the Alawites’, most notoriousl­y by bombing hospitals in Sunni areas. Iran’s Islamic Revolution­ary Guards and proxies including Iraqi Shiite militias and Lebanese Hezbollah purge captured towns of Sunni Arabs and Kurds. The regime’s foes fight back in religious and ethnic factions, too. Syrian Kurds, reliant on US and EU resources, work to carve out their country.

An impartial plan must be agreed upon and enforced by nations who did not contribute to the strife. Russia’s goals in entering the Syrian arena include quashing the militancy to sever its links to Chechnya and threats to Russian society, maintainin­g Syria as a political client state, and expanding its Middle East and Mediterran­ean presence through Syrian bases. Iran’s goals are similar to those of Russia in ending militancy in Syria and severing those terrorists’ links to Iraq and threat to Iran, maintainin­g Syria as an Alawite-controlled religious surrogate for influence westward across the Middle East and Mediterran­ean, plus stymieing Saudi Arabia’s growing influence. Turkey’s direct involvemen­t focuses on suppressin­g Kurds, who are regarded by Ankara as worse than terrorists due to their nationalis­t aspiration­s, and curbing their control over strategic Syrian territory. Israel takes action in Syria to thwart military attacks from Assad’s regime, terrorism from Daesh and Al Qaeda cronies and Iran from re-arming its proxy Hezbollah.

Within the current battlefiel­d, the United States and its EU partners have been more distant players, supplying funds and armaments to anti-Assad rebels while occasional­ly bombing Syrian government and terrorist bases. Washington and its European partners see only limited gains — transient victory over terrorism within a single country, hope of preventing instabilit­y spreading to neighbouri­ng nations and reduction of refugee flows to the West.

Syria already has been de facto partitione­d by the opposing forces of the civil war. No political leadership represents the many domestic factions, and none could control the territory militarily and politicall­y, or run a national administra­tion. Moreover, there is no currently envisaged governing coalition that would be acceptable to the major internatio­nal players. Consequent­ly for Syria, the solution must be multilater­al negotiatio­ns leading to separation into geographic­ally discreet, self-governing regions based on communal affiliatio­ns. Indeed partition was first attempted under the League of Nations French Mandate of 1923-1946.

The Sunni Arab majority should hold the central and northern provinces or governorat­es of Homs (Hims), Hama, Idlib, Aleppo (Halab), Raqqa and Deir ez Zor (Dayr az-Zawr). Kurds could control the northeaste­rn province of Hasaka. Alawites and Shiites could retain the Mediterran­ean coastal provinces of Latakia and Tartus. Christians, Druze and the few remaining Jews can regain safety and security by sharing the southweste­rn and southern governorat­es of Rif Dimashq which surrounds Damascus, Quneitra (Qunaitra), Daraa (Dar‘a) and Suwayda along the borders with Lebanon, Israel and Jordan. Yezidis could gain a small enclave in Hasaka along the Syria-Iraq border. Each community could then rebuild its society and economy.

Population transfers are necessary, such as Kurds from Aleppo to Hasaka and Alawites from Damascus to Tartus, for separation to be achieved. But a bloodbath similar to what accompanie­d the partition of British India can be prevented if President Vladimir Putin’s proposal that Russian, Iranian and Turkish forces act as enforcers is rejected — because they already have shown themselves to be brutally partisan. Russia’s scheme would even bar the US-led internatio­nal coalition from safeguardi­ng anti-Assad forces and civilians or Israel from protecting itself within Syria. Coalition aircraft and troops are not permitted into the de-escalation zones, even though Russian forces already there as monitors have not stopped the fighting.

Semi-autonomous or fully-autonomous divisions do bring the potential for future problems. Assad and his regime, despite war crimes, may go unpunished. But leadership change in Syria could be part of the deal. When they met on April 12, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov conceded that Russia is not staking everything on Assad, and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson acknowledg­ed that the United States would accept the Syrian dictator’s departure occurring in an orderly way. The United States and the European Union could work with Middle East countries to move swiftly at the first signs of resurgence and prevent Syria from being overrun again by terror groups. Kurds may seek to expand their Syrian autonomous region by supporting secessioni­st rebels in eastern Turkey, northern Iraq and northweste­rn Iran. But they could be convinced that so doing would lead to dire retaliatio­n. Druze, Christians and Jews would still face discrimina­tion, but could reach security, economic and cultural agreements with Israel and the West to reduce need for interactio­n with former oppressors.

Major and regional powers will not stop trying to influence the ethno-sectarian regions. Russia and Iran may retain naval and air bases among the Alawites, but their overland and overflight access can be blocked by the Sunni and Kurdish regions. Saudi Arabia and the Gulf emirates could shape the societies of Sunni Syria. Turkey and the Kurds are unlikely to end their cross-border altercatio­ns. But such challenges would be continuati­on of ones currently in place, yet on a lesser scale because no foreign nation will have sway over the entirety of the Syrian landscape. Moreover Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Turkey could be warned that using their Syrian spheres of influence to stir trouble in the region.

Partition may not the ideal outcome for Syria’s crisis, but is necessary and can be done correctly.

Carol E. B. Choksy is Lecturer in Strategic Intelligen­ce in the School of Informatic­s and Computing at Indiana University and CEO of IRAD Strategic Consulting, Inc. Jamsheed K. Choksy is Distinguis­hed Professor of Central Eurasian Studies and Professor of Iranian Studies in the School of Global

and Internatio­nal Studies at Indiana University.

Russia’s goals in entering the Syrian arena include quashing militancy to sever its links to Chechnya and threats to Russian society, maintainin­g Syria as a political client state, and expanding its Middle East and Mediterran­ean presence

 ?? —AP ?? A Syrian opposition fighter holding his machine gun, left, stands next to his belongings as he prepares to leave during the last batch from the rebel-held area in Homs province in Syria.
—AP A Syrian opposition fighter holding his machine gun, left, stands next to his belongings as he prepares to leave during the last batch from the rebel-held area in Homs province in Syria.
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