SAT 23 - 11 - 2024
 
Date: May 13, 2013
Source: The Daily Star
Not a breakthrough on Syria, but at least it’s a start
By David Ignatius 

It shouldn’t have been this hard, but U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry has finally gotten Russia to back the peace plan on Syria that it endorsed in principle last June. This isn’t a breakthrough but at least it’s a beginning. What the U.S. and Russia seem to have realized is that a negotiated transition of power in Syria is better than a fight to the death, which would destabilize the region. That’s a wise judgment, but it’s not clear that it’s shared by either the Alawite clique backing President Bashar Assad or the Sunni jihadists that are the backbone of the opposition.
 
The U.S.-Russian formula, as expressed by one American official, is that Assad will step aside “as part of a political process once a transitional governing body is formed.” The U.S., in other words, is making Assad’s departure an outcome of the process, rather than a precondition. The Russians, in publicly backing the plan, are in effect pledging that they can deliver people in the Syrian government who would be part of a post-Assad transition.
 
Kerry described the common goal this way as he was standing next to Sergey Lavrov, his Russian counterpart: “We’ve ... affirmed our commitment to a negotiated settlement as the essential means of ending the bloodshed.”
 
But what will the U.S. and Russia do to implement this promise? Will the U.S. permit Iran to attend the international peace conference, as Russia likely will urge? The official U.S. position is that Iran shouldn’t attend. My guess is that President Barack Obama would bend if he thought an Iranian role would create a more durable settlement of regional tensions.
 
Will the Russians lean hard on both Assad and the Iranians, to force them to accept the reality that Assad is finished? “We are not interested in the fate of certain persons,” Lavrov said obliquely Tuesday. Lavrov spoke with Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem, a pragmatic figure who might be a transitional player. But it’s doubtful Moallem, or anyone else acceptable to the opposition, could deliver the regime’s hard-liners.
 
This peace plan, like so many others for the Middle East, is a bet that moderates can carry the day. With tragic regularity, this hope has proved to be misplaced. To succeed this time, the U.S. and Russia will have to empower some regional or international force that can step between the combatants after the transition begins and minimize the killing.
 
A moderate rebel faction has finally begun to emerge behind Gen. Salim Idriss, the commander of the Supreme Military Council. He’s taking responsible positions – pulling back his forces from reprisal attacks after last week’s massacres of Sunnis in coastal villages. Idriss had also offered to negotiate with the regime, meet with the Russians, protect the Alawite community – and forswear chemical weapons.
 
The challenge for Idriss is to show that he can back these sensible positions with enough military muscle that his moderate forces, not the jihadists, hold the balance of power among the rebels. Idriss’ ability to deliver this command-and-control structure, in turn, depends on a real commitment by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey to funnel all military assistance to the rebels through Idriss, not the jihadists.
 
Here, American diplomatic pressure will be crucial. To empower Idriss, the U.S. may expand its current training and nonlethal assistance to include supplying weapons – even as its real hopes remain with a negotiated peace deal backed by Russia.
 
For Russia, the Syrian endgame offers a test of President Vladimir Putin’s sincerity, and also of his clout. He regally left the details to Lavrov Tuesday, after keeping Kerry waiting three hours. This lèse-majesté may impress Russians but it won’t get the job done on Syria. If Putin has finally come to understand that Russia would potentially suffer most from the dissolution of the 1916 Sykes-Picot boundaries in the Middle East, then he will have to put his personal political energy behind the deal, rather than making a handoff to Lavrov.
 
The extremists also get a vote in this process, unfortunately.
 
Hard-liners within Assad’s camp could step up their use of chemical weapons, hoping to set off a regional bonfire. Sunni jihadists could slaughter Alawites, in revenge for past attacks but also to torpedo a peace deal. Hezbollah and Iran could decide that their interests would be so harmed by Assad’s removal that they would rather torch Syria and take their chances. And Israel could continue its recent attacks, drawing Arab reprisals.
 
There are many ways this peace initiative could fail. But at least it has begun.
 
David Ignatius is published twice weekly by THE DAILY STAR.


The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the Arab Network for the Study of Democracy
 
Readers Comments (0)
Add your comment

Enter the security code below*

 Can't read this? Try Another.
 
Related News
Syrian army says Israel attacks areas around southern Damascus
Biden says US airstrikes in Syria told Iran: 'Be careful'
Israel and Syria swap prisoners in Russia-mediated deal
Israeli strikes in Syria kill 8 pro-Iran fighters
US to provide additional $720 million for Syria crisis response
Related Articles
Assad losing battle for food security
Seeking justice for Assad’s victims
Betrayal of Kurds sickens U.S. soldiers
Trump on Syria: Knowledge-free foreign policy
Betrayal of Kurds sickens U.S. soldiers
Copyright 2024 . All rights reserved