Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Intervention in Syria Won’t Work, So How Do We Stop Assad?
How do we stop the ongoing killings in Syria? It is an urgent and important question but one that defies a simple or easy answer.
Syrian refugees and residents living in Jordan chant slogans during a demonstration against President Bashar al-Assad outside the Syrian embassy in Amman. (Photograph: Getty Images)
Let's be clear: Syria is a human rights disaster. The revolution's death toll now exceeds 6,000 and thousands of others have been "disappeared" into the country's mini-gulags, to be tortured and starved. Syria's third-biggest city, Homs, is under daily bombardment from shells, mortars and machine-gun fire.
The images of the dead and maimed on our television screens are appalling. So what should be done to stop Bashar al-Assad's killing machine? Is it time to despatch the B-52s? Arm the opposition? Impose a no-fly zone? That's where the discussion in western capitals and on our newspaper comment pages seems to be increasingly heading.
If only such military options were of any use. I abhor the cynicism and despotism of the Ba'athist regime in Damascus; I want Assad out - as all democrats and internationalists should. But foreign intervention isn't the way. Syria isn't Libya. The latter is a nation of six and a half million people, while the former consists of more than 20 million. Unlike Libya, Syria's densely populated cities and towns are a mix of ethnic and religious communities; the country cannot be spliced into pro-rebel east and pro-dictator west. Dropping bombs from 5,000 feet would guarantee civilian casualties and rally some anti-Assad Syrians behind the regime.
Western military action against Syria could prove to be a moral and political catastrophe. Marc Lynch, director of George Washington University's Institute for Middle East Studies and one of America's sharpest analysts of Arab politics, has warned on his blog of how even the most limited military intervention in Syria could transform the country into "a regional vortex, 1980s Lebanon on steroids: a protracted and violent civil war, fuelled by arms shipments and covert, proxy interventions by all parties".
Across the great divideLynch, who supported Nato's air assault on Libya, points out how "controlling Syrian airspace alone" would do little to affect Assad's "ability to act". Military intervention, he says, "appeals to the soul but does not make sense".
Nor, unlike Libya, is there a clear demand for foreign military intervention from Syria's opposition, which, like the country, is fractured and split. There are three main opposition groups leading the resistance to Assad: the Syrian National Council (SNC), itself a conglomeration of diverse factions, ranging from the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood to the Kurdish Future Movement Party; the Free Syrian Army, consisting of defectors from the regime's armed forces; and the National Co-ordinating Committee (NCC), formed from an alliance of 13 mostly left-leaning, secular political parties, including three Kurdish groups.
Guess what? The various opposition groups and their constituent factions have different views on foreign intervention, with two Paris-based Syrians - Burhan Ghalioun and Haytham al-Manna - reflecting and representing the key divide. Ghalioun, a former professor of political sociology at the Sorbonne, is the chair of the SNC. He has called for the international community to impose a partial no-fly zone over Syria, as well as a "humanitarian corridor", and has assiduously courted the US government: in December, he pledged that a post-Assad Syria would break its alliance with Iran and drop its support for Hamas and Hezbollah.
Al-Manna, a veteran human rights activist whose brother was killed in August by Syrian security forces, is the spokesman for the NCC, which rejects foreign intervention and is willing to consider dialogue and negotiations with the Assad regime. Al-Manna has described those Syrians demanding intervention as "traitors" - though he isn't opposed to "peacekeepers", or "green helmets", from the Arab League.
“As for the NCC, I am the only member living outside Syria," said al-Manna in an interview last month, adding: "The SNC's members are all outside. They are, in a way, the council of exiles." The NCC's resistance to Assad revolves around three nos: no to sectarianism, no to foreign intervention and no to violence.
Up in the airNow, you could argue that the NCC position is naive; that without violence, without foreign intervention, there is no chance of toppling the entrenched and murderous Assad regime. Perhaps. But the bigger point is this: Syrians , as the Egyptian blogger and revolutionary Wael Ghonim reminded me at a recent New Statesman event in London, should decide their own future. Yes, some are calling for foreign military intervention. But others don't want a rerun of Libya - or, dare I say it, Iraq. It is irresponsible, not to mention disingenuous, for western commentators - for example, Nick Cohen in the Observer last month - to gloss over this division of opinion among opponents of Assad and pretend that a unified Syrian opposition "now wants Nato planes in the skies".
Yet the killings must stop. Whether we like it or not, it is incumbent upon those of us who are instinctively opposed to western military interventions in the Middle East to answer the question: what would you do to stop Assad?
My honest response is that there is no simple solution. The diplomatic options include exerting further pressure on the Chinese and (especially) the Russians to back a Security Council resolution isolating and condemning the Syrian regime; threatening Assad and his cronies with International Criminal Court indictments; and widening the range of targeted, multilateral sanctions on the regime.
Will this halt the violence overnight? No - but neither would an attack from the air. Military action might appeal to the soul but it isn't a viable option. It won't stop the violence and it isn't what most Syrians want.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


26 Comments so far
Show AllHasan finally reveals himself as a tool for Imperialism. I say to him: Go to hell.
"Finally?" You must have missed this gem:
"A State of Palestine Would Backfire on Its Own People" by Mehdi Hasan*
_________________
* http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/09/02-4
I'll have to see if I commented to that. Ah, yes, a classic: "Hasan is full of contaminated bacteria as this diarrhea proves." So it does seem that I already passed judgement on this reactionary who for some reason gets republished by CD. Perhaps Hasan is part of CD's Progressive Hypocrisy Program.
For other perspectives on Syria there's Pepe Escobar's article posted here @ CD last week & then there's these recent articles posted @ GlobalResearch.ca :
'How the Arab League Has Become a Tool of Western Imperialism' {http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=29174} -
'SYRIA: PREVENTING WAR: NATO’s Objective is to turn Syria into Another Iraq, a Quagmire of Ethnic and Sectarian Violence' {http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=29199} -
'SYRIA: CIA-MI6 Intel Ops and Sabotage' [outlines the 1957 CIA-MI6 plan for Regime-change in Syria - thus this really AIN'T about 'Assad the Tyrant'] {http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=29126}
'Syria Regime Change PR in High Gear: More ‘Newborn Baby Slaughter’ Propaganda [IE: Gulf War-1's 'Saddam's Troops are throwing babies out of incubators' LIE- Redux] {http://globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=29186}
'Most Syrians back President Assad, but you'd never know from western media -
Assad's popularity, Arab League observers, US military involvement: all distorted in the west's propaganda war' {http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=28722}
Etc, etc, etc....
Really must agree with AngryArab's assessment of the propaganda blitz:
"Western media (of course you can add Saudi and Qatari media) are involved in the biggest propaganda spectacle that I have ever seen. It is bigger than the propaganda blitz that preceded the American invasion of Iraq. There are very few Western journalists who are dissenting: it is all the same narrative and daily barrage of propaganda comes from the highly non-credible, pro-Saudi outfit, known as Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. Western media continue to interview "Rami Abdur-Rahman" after it was revealed that the person does not even exist and that there are in fact two Syrian Observatories for Human Rights and both are vying for the propaganda role, and presumably for Saudi and Qatari money. Only after the Iraq invasion, did people later pose and consider the propaganda role that Western media played in preparation for the invasion. There are basic facts that are lacking, beyond the general story of Syrian regime repression--which is real. I mean, have you read in any Western newspaper a report on the Arab League monitors' report? One article? Was any of the monitors interviewed besides the one who "defected" before the mission even started? Has the commander of the mission been interviewed by one Western reporter? Don't get me wrong. I never thought the Arab League mission would end bloodshed in Syria, but Western governments and GCC countries pushed for the mission--clearly expecting the Syrian government would reject it. Syrian regime acceptance derailed Western plan and the dismissal of the report became expected. Have you read one report in the Western press about the political orientations of the rebels and the Free Syrian Army? (I am sure that Nir Rosen would soon tell you that they are not really Salafites but that they are all Marxist-Leninists with deep feminist principles). Beyond propaganda against the regime, there is very little credible reporting. I mean, yesterday, Arab media were reporting that "missiles" were being used for the "first time" by the Syrian regime. Go back to those same media, they have been reporting about missiles being used by the regime for months. Aljazeera reported numerous times that planes and helicopters were being used against protesters and "witnesses" never failed in reporting that but there wast not one video footage of that happening. Somebody need to stand up and insist on knowing the truth, beyond the lies of the Syrian regime and its opponents (the ones who are run by GCC countries, which in turn are run from a small office in Washington, DC)." http://angryarab.net/2012/02/08/the-biggest-propaganda-spectacle-on-syria-ever/
You stop supporting imperialists' UN resolutions that are aimed at exploiting "interventions" for bombing, deposing uncooperative governments, occupations, and resource grabbing.
You drop the pretense of caring about Syrians or anything else except serving your neoliberal globalist masters.
You stop trying to dupe people on websites . . . because many of us are not as weak and corrupt as you.
!
I really don't know much about Syrias current troubles. Having said that I know how simple it'd be to target him with a drone some quiet night.. and bang! gone!
Since this hasn't happened I'd assume he's not our problem!!! most of the world hates due to our endless meddling in their affairs, We don't need to be the world-police!
>^^<
I'm baffled by what the Western media feeds us as supposed truth about Syria. I'm also somewhat puzzled by attacks on the Arab League since their report in no way agrees with the Western media bullshit. For anyone interested in reading the final report from the League of Arab States Observer Mission to Syria, it is available here: http://www.innercitypress.com/LASomSyria.pdf
I'd like to quote the most relevant parts:
26. In Homs and Dera‘a, the Mission observed armed groups committing acts of violence against Government forces, resulting in death and injury among their ranks. In certain situations, Government forces responded to attacks against their personnel with force. The observers noted that some of the armed groups
were using flares and armour-piercing projectiles.
27. In Homs, Idlib and Hama, the Observer Mission witnessed acts of violence being committed against Government forces and civilians that resulted in several deaths and injuries. Examples of those acts include the bombing of a civilian bus, killing eight persons and injuring others, including women and children, and the bombing of a train carrying diesel oil. In another incident in Homs, a police bus was blown up, killing two police officers. A fuel pipeline and some small bridges were also bombed.
28. The Mission noted that many parties falsely reported that explosions or violence had occurred in several locations. When the observers went to those locations, they found that those reports were unfounded.
29. The Mission also noted that, according to its teams in the field, the media exaggerated the nature of the incidents and the number of persons killed in incidents and protests in certain towns.
This article tries to give itself credibility by reciting western media lies. Lies throughout this article regarding Libya undermine the articles credibility so much that I do not want to listen to whatever else the author has to say. What a smelly piece from the new statesman by Mehdi Hasan.
This article wrongly asserts in more than one place that the disastrous 8 month destruction of Libya is somehow justified by all the lies about imminent imaginary massacres. It does not talk about the state of social justice in that country before and after. It fails to mention British and CIA involvement in creating the rebellion. It fails to mention the death and destruction (actual massacres) dealt out by NATO planes and the very real massacres by the regime installed by NATO.
Look at the positive side: the lies by Mad Hasan are so obvious that it's questionable he would continue to be of much use to his imperialist masters. His future would be like all running dogs - ignored, discarded, or, even liquidated.
>It fails to mention the death and destruction (actual massacres) dealt out by NATO planes and the very real massacres by the regime installed by NATO.<
Someone should add up all the killings committed by NATO in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and other places in the ME within the last decade alone. And contrast that with the West's protestations about wanting "peace" or "democracy" or even "stability."
"We" (meaning the US) don't need to do a damned thing, but stay out. The Syrian opposition and regional allies will do what they have to do in their country and their region.
Yes, it is bloody and horrible. Overthrowing dictatorships always is. The more "we" get involved will only increase the violence and horror and assure that something as bad, or worse, will take its place.
See Iran, Afghanistan, Iraq and almost any other site of post-WWII US.Western "interventions."
How to stop the killing in Syria? The West must stop backing the opposition "Free Syrian Army" terrorists that keep killing so many people! Then legitimate negotiations on reforms can be held.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZQoxigZW4Q
Yes, it's "urgent" that the U.S. take a side in a sectarian civil war on the other side of the globe. Then we can put Assad in front of an international court the inside of which no Israeli or American, regardless of what crimes the commit, will ever see. Absurd article. There sure is a simple solution: stay the hell out of Syria.
"Guess what? The various opposition groups and their constituent factions have different views on foreign intervention"
It's great that the author shares insights, from personal connections in the Arab world. But his own politics seem to be rather militant, imperialistic, and dead-end liberal. It should come as no surprise. When people want to be included in activities they are strongly tempted to adopt conventional thoughts.
But we on the far left see the release of conventional thoughts as our ticket to nirvana. The author should not be for foreign intervention himself. That is 100% bogus, because it cultivates a preference for hierarchy, concentrated power/control. In contrast to that, localism requires local solutions. The author obviously doesn't see the light yet.
Further, his argument that different factions have different views is a rather glaring clue of his liberal politics, and liberalism is fresh roadkill rotting in the sun at this point in time. To believe that different people with different views can get along is the greatest of liberal lunacy. We all have to have the holistic view if we are to get along. Not a grotesque assortment of myopias. The author obviously does not get that these myopias, created by various elites for the enslavement of various groups, is the root cause of all serious social, class, and geopolitical problems. Didn't he study human nature just a wee bit?
There is a holistic view, where all the good dots connect, and where all the bad dots connect, and where very few good and bads dots interconnect. There is no need, let alone want, in a sane world, for people to adopt diverging views, when there is one holistic view that illustrates how everything works, that ends all confusion, that shows us what is important and what is not important. Liberal lunacy. Thus his point is moot about the Syrians. They are lost puppies like most people who are either stoned on petro-opiates, or enslaved to mythical deities, or both, or something similar.
The news today is people are gaining awareness and finding enlightenment. Articles such as this one are a terrible distraction. The answer to Syria's problems is for the people everywhere to embrace the holistic view. This won't happen fast enough to save many Syrians in the next few months but it is nevertheless the answer, because there is nothing else, whatsoever, that will solve these problems. You have to see before you can walk. This is the big news of today. Recognize it and you will be free from elite oppression, and ready to contribute to the solution.
Finally CD has disclosed its position. Good to know.
Further reading: http://mato48.wordpress.com/2012/01/29/1083/
"Intervention in Syria Won’t Work, So How Do We Stop Assad?"
I'd say the real Q is "How do we stop NATO-USA/CIA?" - from fomenting civil unrest and war in Syria and all over the place.
The NED/CIA-paid "insurgents" in Syria - and elsewhere - are factions in a civil discourse that could've been handled peacefully through negotiations, had not NATO encouraged the "Syrian opposition" not to negotiate with Assad. As NATO did in Libya.
The tragedy is that NATO probably want civil war - not only the hard-to-achieve regime-change - in Syria, to disable Syria as a player in the Middle East.
The roots of this conflict are in the usual human fuckery, religious sectarianism, mainly Sunni-Shia. Until humans stop believing in such fairy tales we're always going to be at each others throats. But, of course, this author would never acknowledge that, staunch Islamist that he is:
http://hurryupharry.org/2009/07/24/medhi-hasan-exposed-part-i-%E2%80%93-atheists-and-disbelievers-are-%E2%80%9Ccattle%E2%80%9D-and-%E2%80%9Cof-no-intelligence%E2%80%9D/
Do we have an accurate count on how many civilians have been killed by the "armed rebels"? I am thinking doing something about them would lead to more saved lives than forcing regime change. Let's ask the people of Libya how well regime change and arming thugs has worked for them...
Endless daily coverage about Syria is just another sad example of the bias in
the news media, ramping up public indignation against the Syrian government's
policies while completely ignoring the oppression and agression experienced by the Palestian people on a daily basis over a period of 60 years. While Isreali attacks are either unpublished by our daily press or excused as responses to
'terrorists' the Syrian government, which also claims that it is reacting to 'terrorists' must be condemned for its ruthless, brutal behavior. If we support the Syrian people who, like the Egyptians, want 'freedom' we should also support the desire of the Palestians who only desire their freedom from policies not very different from ethnic cleansing.
Basically a good article, but a little addition and clarification might be in order.
"Killings must stop!" Yeah, at least the ones the Syrian government forces are committing to make sure the West can do like it did in the Balkans by turning the whole area into a free fire zone. Can you say "humanitarian intervention"? That's the Western power elites' right answer for you. You can't. "Manufacture consent now media." Do as the West has told you and no one vill get hurt. Stop "the killings by those barbaric Syrians" so the West can go in to do that. Western civlization anybody!
I thought all problems in the world would be solved if Israel ceded it's land? I'm in shock that this is not offered as a remedy for the violence in Syria. There's no such thing as Muslim-on-Muslim violence...only Jews kills Muslims.
The solution to the trouble in Syria will only be solved if Israel cedes its land - all of it, not only the Golan heights, occupied in 1967. - Plus of course when foreign countries stop meddling in Syria. But first Israel has to go - to e.g. the Falkland islands. Isn't that a good idea? - Should stop Brits and Argentinians quarreling over the islands. And Britain could swop to get back its "mandate" in Palestine, to give it to the Palestinians to erect a secular, non-racist state. - Where all the Israelis who want to could remain. Such a great idea. There, now all the world's problems are solved. Happy now? - What would you like to talk about next? Life on Mars?
Syria's Death Squads and Islamist "Freedom Fighters"
"The reinstatement of a US ambassador in Damascus, but more specifically the choice of Robert S. Ford as US ambassador, bears a direct relationship to the onset of the protest movement in mid-March against the government of Bashar al Assad.
Robert S. Ford was the man for the job. As "Number Two" at the US embassy in Baghdad (2004-2005) under the helm of Ambassador John D. Negroponte, he played a key role in implementing the Pentagon's "Iraq Salvador Option". The latter consisted in supporting Iraqi death squadrons and paramilitary forces modelled on the experience of Central America.
The Western media has misled public opinion on the nature of the Arab protest movement by failing to address the support provided by the US State Department as well as US foundations (including the National Endowment for Democracy (NED)) to selected pro-US opposition groups. Known and documented, the U.S. State Department "has been been funding opponents of Syrian President Bashar Assad, since 2006. (U.S. admits funding Syrian opposition - World - CBC News April 18, 2011)
The protest movement in Syria was upheld by the media as part of the "Arab Spring", presented to public opinion as a pro-democracy protest movement which spread spontaneously from Egypt and the Maghreb to the Mashriq. The fact of the matter is that these various country initiatives were closely timed and coordinated. Michel Chossudovsky, The Protest Movement in Egypt: "Dictators" do not Dictate, They Obey Orders, Global Research, January 29, 2011)
There is reason to believe that events in Syria, however, were planned well in advance in coordination with the process of regime change in other Arab countries including Egypt and Tunisia.
The outbreak of the protest movement in the southern border city of Daraa was carefully timed to follow the events in Tunisia and Egypt.
It is worth noting that the US Embassy in various countries has played a central role in supporting opposition groups. In Egypt, for instance, the April 6 Youth Movement was supported directly by the US embassy in Cairo." http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=26043
Yes, Mr. Mehdi Hassan, thanks for exposing your true colors!!! Why dont you discuss the consistent and long on-going oppression that has been taking place in places like Bahrain and Saudi Arabia?? Is it bcs they are with the so called western civilization, like you are...
The recent killings that have been taking place in Syria has been ochestraded by the the Mossad and CIA and you should know that. If not, you should chooses another career that will keep u in line with the truth!!!
Now even Aljazeera has become the mouth piece of the Zionist!!! Shame on you, you Arabs. How easily you sell your souls for $$$!!!
.