so, what?
Was Putin right about Syria? - The Washington Post
What
a difference a year makes. Around this time last year, the West was
gearing up for military action against the regime of Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad, who was accused of carrying out chemical weapons
attacks on his own people. That intervention never came to pass, not
least because domestic public opinion in countries such as Britain and
the United States was opposed to further entanglements in the Middle
East.
Now, the U.S. is contemplating extending airstrikes on Islamic State
militants operating in Iraq in Syria — fighters belonging to a terrorist
organization that is leading the war against Assad. The Islamic State's
territorial gains in Iraq and continued repression and slaughter of
religious minorities there and in Syria have rightly triggered global
condemnation. "I am no apologist for the Assad regime," Ryan Crocker, a
former U.S. ambassador to Syria, told NPR. "But in terms of our
security, [the Islamic State] is by far the greatest threat."
The irony of the moment is tragic. But to some, it doesn't come as much
of a surprise. Many cautioned against the earlier insistence of the
Obama administration (as well as other governments) that Assad must go,
fearing what would take hold in the vacuum.
One of those critics happened to be Russian President Vladimir Putin,
who warned against U.S. intervention in Syria in a New York Times op-ed
last September. He wrote:
A strike would increase violence and unleash a new wave of
terrorism. It could undermine multilateral efforts to resolve the
Iranian nuclear problem and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and further
destabilize the Middle East and North Africa. It could throw the entire
system of international law and order out of balance.
Some of the crises Putin catalogs have worsened anyway, no matter
American action or inaction. But Putin's insistence was couched in a
reading of the conflict in Syria that's more cold-blooded than the view
initially held by some in Washington. "Syria is not witnessing a battle
for democracy, but an armed conflict between government and opposition
in a multireligious country," Putin wrote, suggesting that the nominally
secular Assad regime, despite its misdeeds, was a stabilizing force
preferable to what could possibly replace it.
Putin decried the growing Islamist cadres in the Syrian rebels' ranks:
Mercenaries from Arab countries fighting there, and hundreds of
militants from Western countries and even Russia, are an issue of our
deep concern. Might they not return to our countries with experience
acquired in Syria?
That's a concern very publicly shared now by U.S. and European
officials, who are alarmed by the considerable presence of European
nationals among the Islamic State's forces. A British jihadist who spoke
with a London accent is believed to have carried out the shocking
execution of American journalist James Foley this week.
That Western attention has shifted so dramatically from the murders
carried out by the Assad regime to those carried out by the militants
fighting it is a sign of the overwhelming complexity of the war, which
is collapsing borders and shaking up politics in countries across the
Middle East.
Nor is it necessarily vindication for Putin, who in the past year has
turned into the hobgoblin of the liberal world order. As my colleague
Adam Taylor wrote this year, the Russian president's op-ed makes awkward
reading for Moscow when held up against its own aggressive meddling in
Ukraine. Putin's solemnizing over the integrity of international systems
is hard to take seriously considering his government's controversial
annexation of sovereign Ukrainian territory in March and continued
obstruction of a diplomatic resolution to the Ukraine crisis in the U.N.
Security Council.
Others skeptical of Putin's stance on Syria point to Moscow's vested
interests in the Assad regime, which furnishes Russia access to a naval
base on the Mediterranean and is a frequent buyer of Russian military
hardware.
In March 2011, in the shadow of pro-democracy uprisings in Tunisia and
Egypt, Syrian protesters took to the streets. Their largely peaceful
demonstrations were met by heavy-handed, violent crackdowns by state
security forces. Eventually, the upheaval turned into conflict and now a
full-blown sectarian civil war that has claimed the lives of at least
191,000 people, according to the U.N. this week.
Some in Washington argue that if only the Obama administration had
started arming and empowering the "moderate" Syrian opposition sooner,
the extremist forces now in the news would not wield such influence and
power. But that, as Middle East scholar Marc Lynch explains over at
Monkey Cage, is a hopeful and naive assumption. It's hard to imagine any
scenario where more direct U.S. involvement in the Syrian conflict,
aimed at toppling Assad, would not somehow also play into the hands of
the Islamist factions committed to the struggle.
More than three and a half years later, there is a lot of water — and
blood — under the bridge. But it's worth considering what Putin's
government insisted not long after the violence began. In his New York
Times op-ed, Putin reminded readers that from "the outset, Russia has
advocated peaceful dialogue enabling Syrians to develop a compromise
plan for their own future." That "plan for the future," the Russians
insisted, had to involve negotiation and talks between the government
and the opposition, something which the opposition rejected totally at
the time.
In November 2011, Putin's foreign minister Sergei Lavrov criticized
other foreign powers, including the United States, for not helping
pressure opposition forces to come to the table with the Assad regime.
"We feel the responsibility to make everything possible to initiate an
internal dialogue in Syria," Lavrov said at a meeting of APEC foreign
ministers in Hawaii.
The Arab Spring was in full bloom and U.S. officials thought regime
change in Syria was an "inevitable" fait accompli. That calculus appears
to have been woefully wrong. Now, the conflict is too entrenched, too
polarized, too steeped in the suffering and trauma of millions of
Syrians, for peaceful reconciliation to be an option. Russia could very
well have been window-dressing the Assad regime's crimes by parroting
Damascus's calls for dialogue, which the opposition has long considered
insincere. But the chance for that sort of earlier rapprochement, in
hindsight, seems a thin ray of light in the darkness that has since
engulfed Syria.
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