Los Angeles Times

Syrian oil official said to defect

Analysts are split on the act’s significan­ce. Meanwhile, a foreign peace envoy seeks a political solution.

- Patrick J. Mcdonnell reporting from beirut

Syria’s deputy oil minister reportedly defected from the government of President Bashar Assad on Thursday, and a high-level internatio­nal peace envoy seeking a cease-fire in Syria warned against further “militariza­tion” of the bloody conflict.

The reported move by Abdo Hussameddi­n, whose videotaped message abandoning the Assad administra­tion was posted on YouTube, would be the highestlev­el civilian defection to date from the embattled government in Damascus, which is facing a yearlong rebellion, internatio­nal isolation and a reeling economy.

On the video, shown widely on internatio­nal news channels, Hussameddi­n says he can no longer overlook “the crimes of this regime.” He urges fellow officials to abandon “the sinking ship,” even though he says he anticipate­s that the government will burn his house and “persecute” his family.

There was no official word from the government, and the authentici­ty of the video could not be independen­tly verified.

Hussameddi­n presumably has considerab­le knowledge about insider dealings in the oil sector that are reputed to have enriched members of the president’s inner circle.

However, analysts were divided over the significan­ce of his reported defection.

Hussameddi­n is not regarded as especially close to the Syrian leadership. And his possible departure may be an isolated incident, not indicative of deeper fissures in the government.

But such a defection would be a blow to the government’s narrative of cohesion and loyalty despite a rebellion that has seen thousands killed and some areas of the country slip into the hands of armed rebels. The revolt has seen many defections from the Syrian military, but not of its highestran­king officers.

On Thursday, news services quoted a rebel official as saying that four more brigadier generals had defected to the opposition, bringing to seven the number of generals who have switched sides.

Pro-government websites and Facebook pages were already dismissing the importance of the reported Hussameddi­n defection, describing him as corrupt, said one Syrian analyst.

The Syrian opposition hailed the reported defection, and a U.S. State Department spokeswoma­n, Victoria Nuland, said in Washington that the report would be “very good news” if true.

But most analysts agree that Assad still has a unified inner circle, including many members of his Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam. Some members of Syria’s Alawite minority have come to view the conflict as a fight for survival against a militant Islamist rebellion arising out of the Sunni Muslim majority and fanned by Sunni Persian Gulf states such as Saudi Arabia, one illustrati­on of the many geopolitic­al dimensions of the Syrian conflict.

Saudi officials, who have publicly backed arming the Syrian opposition, view the fall of Assad as a prospectiv­e major blow to the kingdom’s regional nemesis, Iran, where Shiite Islam dominates. Tehran remains a close ally of Assad.

Some analysts fear a sectarian-tinged proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran in Syria should the conflict become an all-out civil war.

In Cairo, meanwhile, Kofi Annan, special envoy to Syria from the United Nations and the Arab League, said a political solution was needed for the Syria crisis. The former U.N. secretaryg­eneral warned against any moves that would escalate the violence in Syria.

Annan seemed to endorse negotiatio­ns with the regime, an approach many opposition activists have rejected. The major opposition umbrella group, the Syrian National Council, has said the time for dialogue is over and Assad must step down, a position supported by many in the opposition.

Assad, whose family has ruled Syria for more than 40 years, has said he would never abandon his post and has pledged reforms, including a new constituti­on passed in a national referendum last month.

Many nations, including the United States and various Western and Arab allies, have also called on Assad to resign. But the White House has rejected the idea of providing arms to Syria’s rebels despite calls from some in Congress, including Sen. John Mccain (R-ariz.), to do so. The White House says it is still hopeful a political settlement will result in Assad’s departure.

Russia and China have rejected demands for Assad’s resignatio­n and called for a negotiated settlement. The two superpower­s have twice vetoed U.N. Security Council resolution­s condemning Assad’s handling of the crisis.

In Syria, opposition activists said the killing continued in the western city of Homs and elsewhere. The Local Coordinati­on Committees, an opposition network, reported at least 62 killed across the nation Thursday, including 52 in Homs. patrick.mcdonnell @latimes.com Times staff writer Paul Richter in Washington and special correspond­ent Alexandra Sandels in Beirut contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Youtube ?? DEPUTY minister Abdo Hussameddi­n reportedly defected on video.
Youtube DEPUTY minister Abdo Hussameddi­n reportedly defected on video.

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