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Assad Is
Speaking
Nir Boms and
Erick Stakelbeck
In his three and a half years as Syrian President,
38-year-old Bashar Al-Assad has been called many things
by U.S. officials. Misunderstood is not one of them.
Yet, if Assad’s recent comments to the New York Times
are any indication, the U.S. has it all wrong when
it comes to the Syrian dictator. In a wide-ranging
interview published in the November 30th edition of the
Times, Assad—in what undoubtedly came as a great
surprise to the hundreds of political dissidents
languishing in Syrian prisons—spoke of taking “better
steps towards democracy.” Citing his commitment to
progress, he declared, “We [Syria] have to change…I
don’t agree to stand still…We are moving forward slowly
but steadily.” Assad’s paean to democracy followed
similar remarks by Syrian Vice President Abdel-Halim
Khaddam at the Ba’ath Party conference in November.
Acknowledging that “regional and international
developments require the (Syrian) government to adapt,”
Khaddam promised that "the (Baa’th) party is studying
the issue of developing its political thinking.”
Could this be the same Ba’athist regime that has guided
Syria to a seemingly permanent place on the U.S.’s list
of state sponsors of terrorism? The same repressive
dictatorship that remains in an official state of war
with Israel while, according to the 2002 State
Department Report on Human Rights, continuing to commit
“serious” human rights abuses?
A new profile of the Syrian ruler appeared to emerge
from the New York Times interview: Assad is a
man of peace, more than willing to negotiate with Israel
immediately and “without any Syrian conditions.”
Moreover, he expressed a desire to form closer ties with
the U.S., with whom Syria shares “many common
interests.” Perhaps, under Bashar Al-Assad’s leadership,
the Syrian leopard—long hostile to both the U.S and
Israel and inexorably tied to Islamic terrorist
groups—is finally changing its spots?
The answer, unfortunately, is a resounding “no.” Far
from a steely-eyed reformer, Assad is merely an
inexperienced despot committed—at the behest of a
corrupt “old guard” still loyal to his late father,
Hafiz—to maintaining the Ba’athist status quo. Outside
the pristine offices of the New York Times,
Assad’s rhetoric appears slightly less forthcoming. As
recently as October 15, for instance, Assad told the
London-based Arabic daily Al-Hayat, “With this
Israeli government in power, there will be no peace,”
and added, “the U.S. is in disagreement with countries
in the world, and we are one of these countries.”
Indeed, it appears that the true motive behind Assad’s
recent talk of reform is not a genuine desire for change
but a cockroach’s instinct for survival.
The passage of the Syria Accountability Act (likely to
be signed by President Bush) in both the House and
Senate is one reason for the current public relations
campaign coming out of Damascus. The Accountability Act
can be seen as a direct result of the Assad regime’s
continued occupation of Lebanon and support for
terrorist groups like Hamas, Hizbollah and Palestinian
Islamic Jihad, not to mention the growing number of
terrorists arrested in
Iraq
carrying Syrian passports.
Applying further pressure on Assad and the Ba’ath Party
are the rising voices of opposition being heard both in
Syria and abroad, highlighted by a successful conference
of Syrian opposition leaders in Washington last month.
The conference led to the emergence of a Syrian
Democratic Coalition, a merger of 10 pro-democracy
Syrian parties that called for an end to 40 years of
Ba’athist rule and the creation of a democratic Syria.
The Coalition is actively calling for the release of all
Syrian political prisoners, including the economist Dr.
Aref Dalila and physician Dr. Walid al-Bunni, founding
members of the Syria-based Committee for the Revival of
Civil Society. Last August, Dalila and Al-Bunni were
found guilty of attempting to change the Syrian
constitution by illegal means, inciting armed rebellion
and spreading false information. As a result, for the
next 10 years, they will languish in a Syrian prison.
Earlier this year, Syrian parliament members Mamoun
Homsi and Riad Al-Seif were sentenced for similar counts
to five years imprisonment. Veteran political activist
Riad Al-Turk was sentenced to thirty months in June, and
human rights activist Habib Saleh to three years, also
in June. Despite Bashar Al-Assad’s words to the
contrary, such treatment is commonplace for any Syrian
who wishes to speak of freedom.
Interestingly enough, on December 10, the Kurdish Yekiti
Party plans to hold a peaceful march in front of the
Syrian Parliament in
Damascus.
In addition, the Party’s leadership in Germany is
fasting in front of the German Parliament on December
10, 11 and 12 and holding a march in front of the
foreign ministry in Berlin.
Considering developments like these, it is clear that
Bashar Al-Assad has good reason to be worried. It’s no
wonder he told the New York Times “it is normal
for us to seek good relations with the United States in
all fields.” At this point, Assad and his Ba’athist
benefactors need all the friends they can get.
Nir Boms is
Vice-President of the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies and Erick Stakelbeck is head writer for the
Investigative Project, a Washington, DC-based
counterterrorism research institute.
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