Fragile tightrope though it might be, the
so-called "cessation of hostilities" in Syria was holding this past week,
despite a smattering of truce violations. But the eyes of diplomats and other
observers were more on the relationship between superpowers Russia and the
United States than on the belligerents in the five-year-old Syrian Civil
War—clearly a growing misnomer, considering the conflict’s grave international
repercussions and implications.
With the cessation of hostilities pact reached
last month more between regional and global leaders than among the multiple
belligerents in the actual war, Moscow and Washington suddenly find themselves
having become strange bedfellows—an odd state of affairs after events not only
in Syria but also in Ukraine and elsewhere that have had the two nuclear powers
at each other’s throats more since 2014 than at any other time since the Cold
War era of a quarter-century ago. On first glance, this should be good news.
And to a certain extent it is, since their decision to actually sit down and
talk about how to end the Syrian war has brought an at least temporary lull in
the fighting. And in a crumbling nation on the brink of collapse and
dissolution like Syria is, a lull in the fighting for any reason whatsoever
can’t help but be considered “good news”.
What’s worrisome, however, is how, exactly,
each superpower side in this increasingly obvious proxy war will make use of
this break in the storm to its own advantage—and, as such, to the almost
certain long-term detriment of the Syrian people.
The BBC, for instance, quoted Lieutenant General Sir Simon Mayall, a
former senior Middle East expert for the British government, as saying that his
concern about the pact was that it seemed to be all about “the Russians making
the weather." What he meant by this was that it was Putin and Moscow
calling the shots now in Syria, since the Russians have not only gotten
involved in international airstrikes—far surpassing any air action taken by the
US-led coalition—on “terrorist” targets, but have also taken a strong lead in
this latest truce and negotiation progress. This action on Moscow’s part is
clearly not out of any altruistic, humanitarian fervor, but because Russia has
everything to lose should dictator Bashar al-Assad be ousted and is, therefore,
scrambling to remain on the cusp of every international process taking place in
the Arab country, so as to stay several giant steps ahead of Washington and its
at least potential allies in the region.
Speaking of the Russians, General Mayall also told the BBC that, "It
was in their gift to offer a ceasefire on behalf of the Assad regime. That
slightly worries me in a part of the world where the Americans have been the
guarantors and the people who make the weather."
For Washington’s part, in its earliest clashes with Russian President
Vladimir Putin’s government over Moscow’s attempts to help Assad thwart the
Syrian popular uprising, the Obama administration was adamant that “Assad must
go.” But in this latest approach to the Syrian question in which Russia and the
US find themselves sharing charge of the “cessation” process, the US is
suddenly conceding that, perhaps, at least "for the time being", Assad
can stay. Why? Because the direct threat to America security isn’t Assad or
even Putin—who, clearly, has acted in the past few years like a diplomatic and
military loose cannon—but the international terrorist group Islamic State
(ISIL), which is just about everybody’s headache, but especially the West’s.
Pretending that Assad can form a practical part of any sort of
transition toward peace and democracy in the Arab country, after the heartless dictatorial
cruelty with which he has treated his own people, falls at least within the
ballpark of “things delusional”. But for now Washington appears to think that
not raising Moscow’s hackles is a safer bet than the superpowers going head to
head, and as we said before, Assad poses no clear and present threat to the
United States. Furthermore, when it comes to a choice between Islamic State and
Assad, Washington appears to agree with Moscow that Assad is the lesser of two
evils. The point is, however, I think, that it shouldn’t be up to either
Washington or Moscow to decide whether Assad stays or goes. That choice should
be the exclusive province of the Syrian people, and the Syrians are the ones
who are having the least say in how the tragic, nightmare, five-year-old civil
war will be resolved—if at all.
In spite of the relative initial success of the US and Russia-backed “cessation
of hostilities”, at least 135 people have been killed since it came into effect
a week ago. This week started off with rocket and mortar attacks on the Kurdish
residential area of the city of Aleppo, one of the most heavily targeted urban
areas of the war. A Kurdish rebel spokesman said at least nine civilians had
been killed and dozens more wounded in the attacks. The UK-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, which is monitoring the Syrian War, said that more
than 70 rockets and mortar shells were fired during the attacks, adding that
they had been carried out by several armed groups, including the Islamist al-Nusra
Front, which has been excluded, along with ISIL, from the truce by both Russia
and the United States. Without a doubt, the extent to which ISIL is linked
to—or separate from—the possibility of peace in Syria must be considered a factor
that forms a major sticking point in Syria’s troubled outlook. But it should
not take precedence over the Syrian people’s legitimate claim to liberty and
their call for an end to forty years of tyranny.
Along these lines, the so-called “cessation of hostilities” has
provided, if nothing else, an immediate possibility for common everyday Syrians
to express themselves publicly for the first time in a very long time. For
people in some of the worst-hammered rebel-held areas of the country, the
fragile truce has offered them their first opportunity in years to turn out in
public en masse without being bombed
by Russian-supported government forces or Islamist insurgents. And despite the
terrible punishment that they have been subjected to over the course of the
last half-decade, turn out they did this past week, in more than a hundred mass
demonstrations calling not only for peace and democracy but also for unity
among nationalist rebels. Above all, they repeated their call for Assad to step
down or be removed.
There was clearly a message for the superpowers in last week’s protests
as well: that after nearly 300,000 deaths, millions injured and mutilated, the
country in shambles and the displacement and/or exile of half the population,
the Syrian people are not about to allow the superpowers or anyone else to
hijack their revolution, which began as a peaceful protest and a massive
grassroots movement toward an independent democracy. Any attempt to ignore this
fact—whether in seeking to entertain Russia’s strategic regional interests or
in deference to Washington’s War on Terror—is to turn a blind eye toward the
fundamental causes behind the Syrian Civil War and toward the right to
self-determination of the Syrian people. Pretending to “save” Syria by ignoring
the will of its people will doom to certain failure any external attempt to
find a solution and end the conflict. At best, any such “solution” would render
only a temporary lull in the violence, since, as every true world peace advocate
knows, lasting peace cannot be imposed, it much be justly conceived and
jealously guarded.
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