Los Angeles Times

11 years after exile, Syria returns to Arab summit

- By Nabih Bulos

BEIRUT — In March 2013, with almost 100,000 dead in the then-two-year Syrian revolution against President Bashar Assad, a Muslim cleric who headed the Syrian opposition was welcomed to take the country’s seat at the annual summit of Arab leaders.

“History will bear witness to who stood with the Syrian people in their ordeal, and who failed them,” said thenPrince Hamad bin Thani of Qatar in his speech introducin­g Ahmad Moaz Khatib to the delegates.

On Friday, 11½ years after his government’s Arab League membership was suspended, Assad returned to the Arab summit, the strongest signal yet of his diplomatic rehabilita­tion within the Arab fold.

“We are pleased today with the presence of his excellency President Bashar Assad in this summit and the ratificati­on of the Arab League’s decision to restart participat­ion of Syrian government delegation­s in Arab League meetings,” said Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman in his speech opening the summit in the Saudi Arabian port city of Jeddah. “We hope that will contribute in supporting the stability in Syria and returning things to normal and restarting its natural role in the Arab world, which will bring good to its people and support all of our aspiration­s to a better future for our region.”

The moment seemed a significan­t turnaround for a leader who spent more than a decade in political isolation, shunned by many government­s around the world for his scorched-earth campaign to quell the 2011 protests against his rule.

The ensuing conflict — which grew into an outright civil war in which Assad’s forces bombed and besieged rebel-held areas and tortured or executed thousands of prisoners — left 580,000 people dead, 6.8 million internally displaced and 5.3 million others as refugees, according to U.N. figures.

Russia and Iran joined the war on Assad’s side; the rebels received support — funding, training, arms and materiel — from Turkey, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and a raft of Western nations, including the U.S.

Though the fighting has come to a stalemate with Assad remaining in power, he presides over a country largely in ruins, with regions that remain balkanized under competing administra­tions (one run by Turkish-supported rebels, another by Islamist jihadists and a third by a Kurdish-led militia backed by the U.S.). Meanwhile, the government, which continues to be sanctioned by the U.S., European Union and United Nations, is desperate to fund reconstruc­tion.

Assad struck a calmly defiant tone in his address Friday, calling on the 22-member body to solve problems internally instead of relying on outside help. He also said the West was “devoid of principles and morals, friends and partners.”

“The most important thing is leaving internal affairs to their peoples, for they are able to manage their affairs, and all we have to do is prevent foreign interventi­ons in their nations and only help when they ask,” he said, adding that Syria’s “past, present and future is Arabism.”

Despite the words of welcome to Assad, member states remain divided over how far they will normalize relations with Damascus. And there is still little clarity on what tangible benefits Assad’s return will bring.

Neverthele­ss, his attendance represente­d a victory for his government.

“It’s a cliche to say, but this is symbolic. Seeing Bashar Assad sit there with other Arab leaders is important in and of itself,” said Aron Lund, a fellow at Century Internatio­nal and a Middle East analyst. “And it helps the government promote the idea it’s back in the region.”

Assad’s return to the summit coincides with a larger push for regional rapprochem­ent led by Saudi Arabia. In March, the kingdom restored ties with its nemesis Iran under a Chinese-brokered agreement. It opened talks a month later with the Houthis, the Iranian-backed rebel group with which it has been at war since 2015. Meanwhile, it has also taken an active role in negotiatio­ns between warring parties in Sudan.

Riyadh’s outreach to Damascus quickened after the Feb. 6 earthquake that hit Turkey and portions of northern Syria, leaving more than 8,000 dead and tens of thousands homeless. Along with the United Arab Emirates (which had reestablis­hed diplomatic relations in 2018) it worked in the months ahead of the summit to overcome reluctance from Jordan, Kuwait, Egypt and Qatar to allow Syria’s reinstatem­ent with no conditions.

Though they acquiesced, the concern among some of the attendees, said one regional diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity, “is that Assad’s actions are being forgotten, or worse yet, rewarded, which sets an unsettling precedent for the region.”

“For the Saudis, his attendance is more about optics. They are trying to demonstrat­e their leadership credential­s in resolving regional issues. But it remains unclear whether the positive signals they are sending will yield positive results.”

Several leaders speaking at the summit emphasized that Assad’s invitation did not mean the end of the conflict but signaled movement toward its resolution.

“Syria’s return to the Arab League is … the start of an Arab track to solve the Syrian crisis,” said Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Sisi.

Both the U.S. and the EU have condemned the overtures to Assad. Last week, a bipartisan group of lawmakers introduced the “Assad Regime Anti-Normalizat­ion Act of 2023,” which bars federal funds from being used to imply “any manner” of U.S. recognitio­n of Assad and would expand sanctions against government­s dealing with him.

“We urge the Biden administra­tion to make clear its opposition to such efforts ... and signal its willingnes­s to impose consequenc­es … on those that undermine accountabi­lity for the regime’s atrocities by restoring ties with Assad and his regime,” U.S. Sens. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) and Jim Risch (RIdaho), chairman and ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in a statement commenting on the Arab League’s reinstatem­ent of Syria this month.

In reopening relations, Arab nations are also hoping for cooperatio­n in dealing with the refugee crisis. Millions of Syrians who fled reside in Turkey, Jordan and Lebanon, bringing complaints that they represent an untenable burden on resources and infrastruc­ture even as anti-migrant xenophobia rises to new levels.

Syria has also become an illicit drug producer, sending tons of the amphetamin­e Captagon to markets across the region. Jordan, now a destinatio­n and transit route for Syrian Captagon, has asked Damascus to tighten border security.

“It’s a transactio­nal situation, where Arab states say, ‘You’re going to get back into the Arab League, but if you want investment­s, economic aid and help lifting sanctions, then you’ll have to play ball on specific issues,’ ” said Lund.

 ?? Syrian Arab News Agency ?? SYRIAN PRESIDENT Bashar Assad, right, greets a delegation in Damascus in February. The U.S. and European Union have condemned Arab League nations’ latest overtures to Syria, whose civil war has killed 580,000.
Syrian Arab News Agency SYRIAN PRESIDENT Bashar Assad, right, greets a delegation in Damascus in February. The U.S. and European Union have condemned Arab League nations’ latest overtures to Syria, whose civil war has killed 580,000.

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