Old warrior Grumblings

Syria and Lebanon Visit
April 2007

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Syria

First impressions of welcoming, civilised, easy-going Damascus are always hard to reconcile with its current vilification as a member of “The Axis of Evil”. Now harder than ever, as it struggles to provide a safe haven to 1.4 million Iraqis. A full 10% of the Iraqi population has found refuge from the civil war in Syria and Jordan- but only negligible assistance has so far been given to them by the UN and other international bodies. Even local American diplomats who privately recognise the immense Syrian humanitarian contribution, have to criticise it in public. The resulting psychological strain is perhaps why their tours of duty are limited to 2 years by the State Department, while other diplomats serve 4 years.

Not all is gentle and hospitable in Syria however. Its democracy is a façade. Damascus in April was covered with election placards advertising the candidates for local government, representing a sincere attempt at democracy on the lowest (city) level. But the Government itself remains firmly in the hands of  president Bashar el Assad, whose face, as that of his deceased father, smiles benignly from building walls everywhere. The ruling family represents the minority Alawi sect of Shiite Islam. Through careful appointments it controls the army and the police, the feared mukhabarat. However, 75% of the population are Sunnis and in 1982 the Assads felt they had no choice but to massacre the (Sunni) muslim brotherhood opposition at Hamaa.

The Syrian government is secular, in accordance with the theory of the Baath party, founded by Michel Aflak (a Christian) and Zaki Al Arsuzi (a Sunni) in 1947. The Baath government abolished reserved seats for  religious sects in the national assembly ( a last relic of the old French mandate ). It was a modernising government, until it fell under the control of Hafez el Assad in 1970. The same scenario played in Iraq, where Saddam Hussein usurped the Baath party. But the two countries are no friends. In the eighties war of Iraq against Iran, the Syrian government (with US encouragement) supported Iran.

In spite of its active help against El Qaida, Syria now stands condemned by the US for assisting the Sunni resistance in Iraq. An improbable unproven accusation, but not impossible seen the hundreds of miles of common border through sparsely populated terrain. It is likely that the Sunni resistance groups (of which there are many) can cross the border almost at will, like they do the Jordanian and Saudi borders, mixed amongst genuine refugees. On the other hand Syria has a vested interest in a stable Iraq on its borders and would be an important ally of the US in promoting peace.

A more realistic accusation by the US concerns Syria’s active involvement in Lebanon, supporting the (Shiite) Hezbollah armed resistance against Israel and their political opposition to the Lebanese Sunni-led government. According to the US, Iranian finance and military assistance flows through Syria to spread a “Shiite Crescent” across the whole of the Middle East. But “moderate Arab Nations” like Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt have downplayed such accusations. In spite of possible misgivings, Saudi king Abdallah has invited Syria as a principal nation to attend his regional peace conference.

In addition to its difficult relations with the US, Syria has of course a long-standing feud with Israel over the Israeli occupation of the Syrian Golan Heights since the 1967 war. But at an April hearing of the Knesset, Israeli/American businessman, Ibrahim Suleiman, explained details of an informal peace accord  worked out by Syrian and Israeli officials which could be the basis for real peace. Such peace initiatives at high level are not unusual: a negotiated blueprint exists even for the most fundamental of all Mid-East conflicts: that between the Palestinians and Israel. Based on the UN security council resolution 242 and on President Clinton’s “bridging proposal”, Ami Ayalon, a leader of the Israeli labour party and Nusseibeh, a Palestinian politician have fleshed out a comprehensive settlement proposal and published it. .

All these burning regional issues could now be addressed and pushed forward at a conference  to negotiate the end of the Iraq war.

However, American diplomacy is shallow and short term. It lacks the stature of a  Kissinger, who recently wrote a masterly review of Iran’s historical role in the region. Without such understanding of Iran’s and Syria’s legitimate concerns by the US administration, negotiations cannot succeed.  The US is a principal actor but it seems totally absorbed by military means, the “surge” in Iraq and by covert military support to Salafists and other armed extremist opposition groups throughout Syria, Lebanon and Iran.

Although Syria’s army and economy are described as poor, they may not always remain so. The army is learning from Hezbollah how to fight a superior Israeli army if it comes forward to attack. It also regularly test-fires medium distance rockets in Northerly direction (not to provoke Israel).

Syria’s economic future could be brightened by new oil discoveries. The industry was hit by American sanctions and the consequent departure of Exxon (who also had to surrender their interests in Iran to the unintended benefit of the Chinese). But Shell is still hanging on. Since decades it has been producing diminishing quantities of oil and total Syrian production of 400.000 bls. per day is on the decline. However change maybe on the horizon. Syria, like Iraq, is under-explored, partly because of an old distrust of Western oil companies and partly because of Washington’s animosity. On the back of a renewed interest in oil prospects on the Iraqi border Shell has recently obtained the first new exploration licence in decades.

 

Lebanon

The trip from Damascus to Beirut over the excellent road takes only a few hours by taxi, but if you are a lorry driver, you must be prepared to camp under your vehicle for days on end in a miles-long queue because of the deliberately slow inspections by Lebanese customs officers. Perhaps they are looking for weapons, which are not found. But they demonstrate clearly the distrust and resentment felt by the Lebanese Sunni, Christians and Druze communities against Syria, which only recently, after the murder of the Sunni president Hariri, was forced to evacuate its armed forces from the country. (Having being invited in by the head of the Lebanese army during the 1975-1990 civil war).

Lebanon was split off from the body of Syria during the French mandate to create a Christian dominated country. An artificial small foothold accessible from the sea, in a Muslim Middle East: even today its constitution, updated at the 1989 Taif accord which ended the civil war, allocates the presidency arbitrarily to a Maronite Christian and the prime ministership to a Sunni Muslim. Today of course the Christians are a minority and split amongst themselves. If you are a follower of Christian general Midul Aoun, for instance, you  support a special relationship with Syria and the Shiites, but other Christians support the Sunni Prime minister. The hundreds of thousands of Palestinian refugees, living in atrocious camps, have severely limited civil rights and no vote at all in the political process. Neither have the miserable Arab immigrants I saw living under plastic tents along the roads and who, my driver informed me, were working on one fifth of the  pay of “real Lebanese” on the harvests and the building sites. A population census is avoided like the plague by the current government because it might show that the Shiites (followers of Hezbollah) outnumber the Sunnis. Like most Middle East countries, Lebanon is no democracy therefore. All Lebanese politics have to be taken with a pinch of salt. The US, by its unconditional support for the Sunni government, may be backing the wrong horse.

Most notable in this beautiful unhappy country, between the snows of its  mountains and the blue  Mediterranean, are the billions of Sunni Arab money (from Saudi Arabia and Gulf states) poured in to restore the buildings destroyed or pockmarked by bullets from the civil war- and by the Israeli bombardments in their latest war against Hezbollah. With new luxurious buildings sprouting everywhere, from the new city centre of Beirut to the luscious green flanks of the foothills, frenetic construction is changing the landscape

We found the well known Lebanese entrepreneurship in rude health. Our bijoux hotel was very expensive, full of impeccably dressed staff but empty of guests. Tourism has taken a knock, but there is no need to reduce the exorbitant prices to the few fools who still insist on visiting. The unrecognisable but imposing new city centre is empty because of hundreds of Hezbollah adherents camping in tents around the prime ministers office in protest. Local businessmen drink their espresso’s in more congenial places elsewhere.  Around the protestors stands another ring of tanks manned by plenty of idle soldiers from the Lebanese army. For anybody with eyes it is obvious that this army from the boots and uniforms of the soldiers up to their new arms and equipment is supplied wholesale by the US. But who will this national army, consisting of all the old religious factions, obey in a future civil war?

Meanwhile, of the Hezbollah and their formidable Shiite army there is no sign. Gone are the advertisements of bearded imams in black and only a few yellow flags remain. Sheikh Nasrallah has declared that his forces will not fight the Lebanese army nor any other Lebanese and they have simply gone underground, reinforcing their defences against Israel. The UN troops guarding the border circulate with their permission.

The Lebanese freewheeling economy still provides excellent restaurants and constructs stylish new sea side resorts for sale at European prices, but it all has an artificial feel, like Dubai, and a sense of doom. Local people love to retail more complicated conspiracy theories then the human mind can follow.

I for one was happy to return to the simpler realities of Syria.

 

LW
June 2007