Syrian Peace Overtures: Timing is
Everything
Nir Boms and Elliot Chodoff
Since he
abruptly returned from Britain to Syria five years ago
to inherit the regime from his ailing father, thirty-six
year old Syrian strongman Basher al-Assad has rarely
smiled in public. After all - running Syria is a serious
business. But lately, it seems that Assad is showing the
world a different face. While visiting Cairo last week
to discuss the situation in the Middle East he actually
cracked a half-smile.
Last month, in a series of
interviews to Arab and international media, Assad announced that he is
willing to engage in peace talks with Israel, without any pre-conditions.
Just weeks before that surprising statement, he announced that he would
begin to withdraw his troops from Lebanon, signaling his compliance with UN
Security Council Resolution 1559. And if that were not enough, Assad decided
to host a preparatory meeting that will help, no less, to ensure the
“freedom of information in the Arab world.”
Are these indicators of a new,
friendlier Assad than we have seen over the past few years, or has the
Dictator of Damascus, Jr. finally adopted the style of his father, also
known as the Sphinx?
Diplomatically speaking, Assad’s
sudden campaign for peace in the region is perfectly timed. Facing
increasing criticism of his regime’s human rights record and continued
involvement in Lebanon and Iraq – policies that have subjected him to
economic sanctions by the US under the Syria Accountability act – Assad
desperately needs to shift attention away from his regime’s repressive
content to a softer style while continuing with business as usual. If you
can’t dazzle ‘em, you can certainly baffle ‘em.
The “withdrawal” of forces from
Lebanon – which in fact was the third recent redeployment of Syrian forces
that number about 25,000 - was cleverly timed as well. In August of this
year, UN Security Council decision 1559 condemned the Syrian occupation of
Lebanon and outlined a timetable for a Syrian military pullout. Assad, whose
recent meddling in Lebanese politics allowed the pro-Syrian president,
Lahoud to win another term - a move that was heavily condemned in Lebanon
and abroad – had to find a way to show at least some compliance with the
will of the international community. Approximately 60 buses with Syrian
troops have reportedly made their way back to Damascus – but the heavy
Syrian equipment, including tanks and artillery, has remained in place.
Little movement was observed in the ranks of the Muhabbarat, the Syrian
intelligence service, which controls the most important power centers in
Lebanon’s political and economic structure. And no movement was observed in
the south, where the Syrian backed Hizbullah still maintains control over
terrorist training camps, armories, missile caches and a TV station that
preaches Jihad against the West.
The timing of the overture to
Israel comes at a critical point in Israel’s political climate. Israeli
Prime Minister Sharon is in the midst of a groundbreaking step to withdraw
Israeli settlements and military bases from Gaza. Initially planned as a
unilateral action, the withdrawal is evolving into a coordinated first
initiative with an emerging post-Arafat Palestinian leadership. The Sharon
move, while cautiously supported by a majority of Israelis, has drawn
criticism from much of his right wing constituency and has threatened his
government’s ability to serve out its term. Opening a new Syrian track will
raise the issue of the Golan Heights, a subject even more sensitive to
middle of the road Israelis than the West Bank and Gaza. Assad is well
aware of the fact that for Sharon to enter into negotiations over the future
of the Golan today would be tantamount to political suicide, and would bury
the Gaza plan. It is no coincidence that Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak
stated last week that only Sharon is capable of making peace today.
Perhaps Assad’s new face is best
described with his initiative for “freedom of information in the Arab world”
under which Syria hosted a preparatory conference that aimed to help
coordinate the governance process of the internet. Syria has only two
Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and both are state-controlled. The Syrian
Computer Society (SCS) intercepts e-mail in order to identify and monitor
dissidents. Among its impressive list of political prisoners Syria holds
the first known Cyber dissident - Abdel Rahman Shagouri, a Syrian citizen,
was arrested on 23 February 2003 at a checkpoint near Damascus for e-mailing
a banned newsletter.
Assad’s timing makes perfect sense
and so do his intentions. Navigating between increased international
pressures and facing Syrian Islamists who are determined to destabilize both
the Iraqi arena as well as the Israeli one - Assad will pursue every avenue
to shift attention away from his own commitments and toward the traditional
Israeli scapegoat.
Nonetheless, Assad’s
well-calculated offer should not be dismissed out of hand. It is clear that
peace and stability in the region cannot be reached without a decisive
Syrian campaign against the headquarters of the terrorist groups in Lebanon
and Damascus. A Syrian will to address these issues – that may be advanced
through the mediating efforts of Americans and Europeans who seek to bring
the Middle East conflict to its end, may actually prove as constructive in
the long run. Anything else will be no more than another round of Middle
Eastern style empty rhetoric.
Elliot Chodoff is a military
political annalist of ME-On Target Nir Boms is the Vice President of the
center for Freedom in the Middle East.
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