The
Syrian cauldron
What
is being played out in the Middle East
is one of the greatest power games since the end of the First World
War, says Jeremy Salt. Behind the cover of the 'Arab spring',
the obstacles to renewed Western domination of the region are being
removed one by one. The destabilisation of Syria
is bringing the region close to a war with potentially catastrophic
global repercussions.
TENSION
between Turkey and
Syria
along their border is edging closer to flashpoint. On 22 June a Turkish
air force jet was shot down after violating Syrian airspace. The Syrian
government said the plane was hit while inside Syrian airspace. Turkey says it had already left Syrian
airspace and was hit in international airspace.
What
the plane was doing inside Syrian airspace is another matter. Turkey's
President, Abdullah Gul, said it had 'strayed' off course. Other accounts
suggest that it was there to 'light up' Syria's radar
system or test its missile defences. Turkey immediately
sent troops and armour to the border and invoked Article 4 of the NATO
Charter, calling for consultation with its partners in the alliance.
They immediately endorsed the Turkish version. Hillary Clinton called
the shooting down of the plane 'brazen' while William Hague thought
it was 'outrageous', words, one cannot help noting, that they have never
used to describe the missile attacks by their armed forces that have
killed civilians in Afghanistan,
Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia
and Libya.
Another 'incident' might lead to Turkey invoking Article 5, the common
defence article of the NATO Charter, which regards an attack on one
member as an attack on all. War between Syria
and Turkey would then become war between Syria and all NATO members, leading in turn to
confrontation between the NATO/Gulf state bloc on one hand and Russia, China,
Iran
and their allies on the other.
There
is nothing accidental or unwilled about what is happening in Syria.
The government in Damascus
has been deliberately locked into a cycle of violence fed from the outside
by the self-styled 'Friends of Syria'. Both sides are implicated in
the killing of civilians yet the mainstream media has created a narrative
in which virtually all the killing is the work of the army or the 'regime
loyalists' known as the shabiha.
'Activists'
routinely blame every murder, bombing and act of sabotage on the government
even when the victims have been Baath loyalists (as was the professor
murdered by armed men in her home on the outskirts of Homs in late June, along
with her three children and parents). The suffering of families whose
menfolk have been killed after taking up arms against the government
is reported in the media, but not the suffering of families who have
lost members to the armed groups. The jury remains out on the Hula massacre.
While the UN Human Rights Council says in its latest report that 'many'
of the killings 'may' have been the work of regime loyalists, other
evidence points to the massacre having been the handiwork of jihadis,
reportedly including the Faruq Brigade of the so-called Free Syrian
Army. As the Human Rights Council admits that it has no conclusive evidence
as to who was behind this massacre, it might have been more responsible
for it to say nothing unless and until it did have such evidence.
This
unbalanced narrative feeds into the war strategies being framed by the
'Friends of Syria'. These 'friends' insist that the armed campaign they
are sponsoring is directed against the government and not the people.
What 'the people' - by any measure the majority of Syrians - want is
hard to gauge amidst such chaos but evidence suggests they see these
'friends' as their enemies. The referendum in February and the elections
in May were hardly perfect but remain the clearest indications yet of
general support amongst Syrians for a political solution to the crisis
gripping their country. Outside the enclaves dominated by the armed
groups, the people are strongly opposed to these groups and their external
backers, knowing that but for the obstruction of Russia
and China,
NATO warplanes would have been bombing their country long ago.
Outside
governments have fastened on Syria's problems
with the tenacity of leeches. The 'Arab spring' created the opportunity
to reshape the Middle East at its political
and geographical centre and they have seized it. Although paying lip
service to Kofi Annan's ceasefire plan, they are prolonging the violence
in the hope that the army will eventually disintegrate and the government
implode. While the destruction of the government in Damascus
is an end in itself, Syria
must also be seen as a way station on the road to Iran.
If
the Baath government can be brought down, the strategic alliance between
Iran, Syria and Hizbullah
will collapse at the centre. Even if the government is not dislodged,
Syria will be in
such chaos that it would be unable to respond if Iran is attacked.
Hizbullah would be similarly immobilised. Israel would be able to attack without
having to worry about a second front opening up across its northern
armistice lines. President Putin's assurance while on an apparently
unscheduled visit to Israel
that Iran will not develop a nuclear weapon may have
been a last-ditch attempt to ward off an attack on Iran. Perhaps Russian intelligence
has found out that a decision has finally been taken and the date and
time set.
Turkey's initial
response to the 'Arab spring' was sluggish. The Tunisian president was
gone before the government had time to react. It waited almost until
the end before calling on Mubarak to step down. Prime Minister Erdogan
spoke strongly against military intervention anywhere in the region
before coming in behind the armed attack on Libya. On Syria he and his
Foreign Minister claimed to have given President Bashar al-Assad good
advice which he refused to take before deciding that he had to go. In
late summer they threw their government weight behind the establishment
both of the 'Syrian National Council' (SNC) and the 'Free Syrian Army'
(FSA), giving the first a home in Istanbul
and the second sanctuary in southeastern Turkey.
For
the first time in Turkey's republican history a government had committed
itself to 'regime change' in a neighbouring country; for the first time
a government had sponsored an armed group operating across its border
to kill the citizens of a neighbouring country. Even now the moral and
legal implications of this policy have scarcely been touched upon in
the Turkish media.
For
a country which has a long history of other governments meddling in
its affairs, the Turkish position is almost surreal. This is not just
because of the parallel between the PKK and the FSA, both crossing the
borders of neighbouring countries to kill the citizens of their own
country; both claiming to be fighting in the name of human rights and
freedom; and both regarded as terrorist organisations by the governments
of the countries in which they are operating. The history of external
meddling and support for rebels by outside governments goes deep into
the history of Turkey and the Ottoman Empire, from the support for the
Greek rebels in the 1820s, to support for the Bulgarian rebels in the
1870s and Macedonian and Armenian rebels in the 1890s. Intervention
in the name of civilisation was replaced in the 20th century by intervention
in the name of democracy and freedom, and now we have intervention in
the name of humanitarian concern - a continuing theme through these
two centuries - and the 'responsibility to protect'. In a paradoxical
play on history, Turkey
is now intervening in Syria
as the imperial powers once intervened in the Ottoman
Empire and as they are still intervening in the affairs
of other countries.
Other
agendas are easy to see. Saudi Arabia
wanted the US to
attack Iran
during the George W Bush presidency and 'cut off the head of the snake'.
Its interests are partly ideological, directed against Shiism in general
as well as Iran
in particular, while also arising from the traditional Saudi fear of
its large northern neighbour. The US put the Syrian government on its
list of states that support terrorism in 1979 and since the introduction
of SALSA (Syrian Accountability and Lebanese Sovereignty Act of 2003)
has gradually tightened economic sanctions in an effort to bring the
government to its knees. For Israel Syria has always been the visceral
Arab enemy and of course, what Israel
wants, any US
administration will do its best to deliver. Turmoil in the Arab world
suits Israel
down to the ground, literally. It is tightening its hold on all the
territories occupied in 1967 all the time without the world paying any
attention because of the drama of the 'Arab spring'. Not that the world
has ever paid much attention, but for the moment Israel
is having a dream run.
The
one agenda that is difficult to determine is Turkey's. It has
the approval of its partners inside NATO and the collective known as
the 'Friends of Syria' but this has come at a heavy price. Cross-border
trade in the southeast has all but collapsed. Relations with Iran,
Iraq and Russia have been
undermined. Perceptions of government sympathy for a Muslim Brotherhood-type
government in Syria
have aroused the suspicions of Turkish Alevis, especially in the border
province
of Hatay, where
the population is about 50% Alevi. The region was severed from Syria
by the French in 1938 and handed to Turkey. Both Alevis and Christians
still have family ties across the border and both see the Assad government
as an effective guarantor of minority rights. They certainly do not
share their own government's perspective.
What
is being played out is one of the greatest power games since the end
of the First World War. Behind the cover of the 'Arab spring' the obstacles
to renewed Western domination of the region are being removed one by
one. The destabilisation of Syria is bringing
the region close to a war with potentially catastrophic global repercussions
but the rewards are so great that the Western coalition cannot help
itself from pressing against all red lines.
Turkey's involvement is central to Western strategic
planning and if war does come either through accident or design Turkey will be right on the frontline.
A recent poll carried out by the Centre for Economic and Foreign Policy
Research shows strong opposition to any deeper involvement in the Syrian
crisis. The majority of those polled (56%) do not support military intervention
in Syria
and only a small number (less than 8%) support the arming of the Syrian
opposition. The question here is whether the Turkish people realise
how deeply their government is already involved. The ruling party dominates
parliament but Syria
might yet prove to be its Achilles heel.
Jeremy
Salt is an associate professor of Middle Eastern history and politics
at Bilkent University in Ankara, Turkey. This article is reproduced
from PalestineChronicle.com.
*Third World
Resurgence No. 261, May 2012, pp 40-41
|