Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Milestones in Syrian History - The Iron Hand Society

When I think of the French mandate period in Syrian history, I usually tend to think either of the doomed defence that the Syrian Defence Minister Yousef al Azmeh mounted at Khan Maysaloon, or the Great Revolt of 1925-27. There were, however, far more attempts at making life uncomfortable for the French High Commission based in Beirut. Apart from the Hanano revolt in Aleppo, there was also an urban resistance that revolved around clandestine organisations which were based in the nationalist urban cities of Syria. One organisation that has captured my imagination is the Iron Hand Society جمعية القبضة الفولاذية which was the brainchild of an amazing Syrian, Dr Abdel Rahman al Shahbandar. Some people called him the Zaghloul of Syria and I'm ashamed to admit I had never heard of the man before, apart from knowing that there is a roundabout named after him in Damascus.


Shahbander was the son of a merchant, born in 1880, and a remarkably intelligent individual. Fortunately for his future ambitions in political agitation and resistance, he married a wealthy wife and this meant he didn't have to worry much about making a living. During Ottoman rule he stirred a bit of trouble, writing a paper which insinuated that the Ottoman presence in Syria was now an occupation, and having some very modern views about the law and personal freedoms. He had to make himself scarce when the Turks, under Jamal Pasha, started hanging Syrian nationalists, and eventually ended up in exile in Cairo. When the French occupied Syria under the guise of the mandate, he was instrumental in agitating and stirring up nationalist sentiment. For that he was sentenced to the island prison of Arwad, which I visited in 2008 and found to be crammed with tourist shops, unremarkable restaurants, and a very quaint and (by modern Syrian standards) non-intimidating prison. There is also a commemorative plaque there which lists his name amongst some of the founding fathers of Syrian republicanism who were also imprisoned there. 

An interesting fact about Shahbandar is his strong friendship with Charles Crane, an American who was sent to find out whether the Syrian people wanted the French mandate or not. His findings, in the King-Crane US Commission of Inquiry report, were conveniently ignored by the great powers, but in terms of political ammunition the report was invaluable for the Arab nationalists. On his second visit to Syria, Charles Crane was hosted by Shahbandar and his presence was used as an excuse by the French to subsequently arrest Shahbandar and several of his Iron Hand co-conspirators. A cheque of $1,000 was found with Shahbandar which was used as 'proof' that he was involved with a foreign conspiracy. It is interesting to contrast US involvement in Syrian affairs before and after the creation of the Israeli state. I dare say it was almost constructive, but that was a long time ago.

The arrest of Shabandar led to protests in Damascus, based around the Ummayad mosque, which numbered in the tens of thousands. One of the protests was led by a line of women who, veiled, approached whilst ullulating towards the Castle of Damascus. The French troops opened fire and about 35 people died that day but from then on the name of the Iron Hand Society was made known and respected. It was now more than just an impressive name. Shahbandar and the other Iron Hand Society members were imprisoned for twenty years on trumped up charges, in spite of the eloquent defence by Syria's eminent lawyer, Faris al-Khuri. In spite of their best efforts, the Iron Hand Society's leadership were forced deeper and deeper underground until they were all either exiled or imprisoned. 

The Society did, however, manage to inspire a spin-off, the Red Hand Society in Aleppo. Sadly, as with most things the Aleppines attempt, it was a poor second best, and they were nowhere near as successful as the Damascene Iron Hand Society.  
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Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Buried unceremoniously in a secret location, the man who was lord of Libya for forty two years makes his exit from this world:

Former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, his son Muatassim and a top aide have been buried at a secret location with a few relatives and officials in attendance, a Misrata military council official said today.
The capture and killing of Gaddafi - let us be truthful and admit what really happened - was the closing chapter in the bloody civil war which toppled him. I think it was very unpleasant to watch and, though he did not deserve it, I also felt pity for the old man. I've read from some people that this bodes ill for the future of Libya, and that revenge and extra-judicial murder will set a worrying trend. Perhaps, and then again perhaps not. De Gaulle gave the resistance forty eight hours to settle old scores and eliminate French people who had collaborated with the Nazi occupation. Whilst we can pontificate about right and wrong, the fact is that Libya went through an extraordinary experience of dictatorship, brutality and a civil war. In such extraordinary times, things we don't find tasteful might be necessary for the people and the country to move on.
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Monday, October 24, 2011

Despondent about Syria

On days like this I feel the least optimistic about Syria. It comes and goes, but a feeling of disenchantment with the existing regime and the awful opposition threaten to overwhelm me at times. Where is this all going? What is to be done to get the country out of this mess? Nobody can give me a satisfactory answer. This regime has to go, but rather than do the honourable thing and reform it has, from the start, embarked on a programme of killing and repression that has shocked me. Many Syrian friends of mine no longer recognise this country they once called home. So many of us thought that the bad old days were behind us, that Syria was genuinely on the road to becoming a real country. It turns out that we were all horribly mistaken. I just hope that our optimism for overthrowing this brutal regime isn't as misguided and doesn't lead the country into an even deeper abyss. 



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The Syrian Update

A lull in coverage from Syria in the past few days, most of the focus has been on the death of Gaddafi and the future of Libya, but of course there are plenty of people who are now looking to Syria to see what happens next. A point to note is how easily, and relatively unnoticed, a UN Security Council resolution against Yemen's Ali Abdullah Saleh was passed. Unlike with Syria, it seems that nobody cares whether he leaves, and in all likelihood we'll see him leave before the faintest inkling of change begins in Damascus. But that's speculation.

From Jordan, the American Senator John McCain warns about military options against the Syrian regime:

"Now that military operations in Libya are ending, there will be renewed focus on what practical military operations might be considered to protect civilian lives in Syria," McCain said at the World Economic Forum in Jordan. "The Assad regime should not consider that it can get away with mass murder. Gadhafi made that mistake and it cost him everything," he added, referring to ousted Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi who was captured and killed last week by fighters loyal to the new government.
This kind of talk surfaces every now and then, and it's been around since 2008, when it became clear to the United States government that they have lost Iraq to Iran and this was in no small part due to Syria's allowing supplies and Islamic fundamentalists to cross the enormous border that the two countries share. Frankly, unless this senator knows something that everybody else does not, NATO intervention in Syria is about as likely as Gaddafi becoming the next pope.

Ahmedinejad's interview with Fareed Zakaria shed some interesting light on his views regarding Syria. In line with the Russian position regarding Syria in the Security Council, there seems to be a consensus reached between the West and the Rest that Syria is to be a zone of non-interference. The Syrian people are alone, and the problem must be mediated, preferably with Arab League assistance. There are the first hints that a genuine round of talks between the Syrian regime and the Syrian Opposition will be brokered, probably a few months from now. At the moment the Syrian regime isn't hinting at anything, but it is interesting to see that they haven't ruled such talks out. Let's see what happens. Ahmedinejad's comments about Syria, a tad hypocritical, but then again I don't think 2009 was anywhere near as bad for the Iranian people as it was for the Syrians (with the greatest respect, of course):
 "We say that governments must be responsible for the requirements and desires of their own people, the security of the people and their rights. And this is general for Iran, for Libya, for Syria, for Europe, United States, Africa, everywhere. And this is a general rule for all. We have announced that many times."
In other news, Syria appears to be strengthening her ties with Iran's Iraq with the possibility of establishing two joint Free Trade Zones. This is according to SANA, so the news must be taken with caution, as the Syrian regime is keen to boost investor and merchant's confidence in the Syrian economy. This story could just be a morale boosting exercise because the rest of the Syrian economy is in tatters.

A very interesting development is that UN nuclear inspectors are to visit Syria in the next few days. It's worth recalling that Israel bombed an alleged Syrian nuclear facility (built with North Korean help) in 2007. Syria's regime famously retorted that they will respond, "in a time and place of their choosing", and most Syrians today use that famous phrase to ridicule the Syrian regime's impotence against foreign foes which is in stark contrast to the brutal repression of the eight month old uprising that has engulfed most of Syria's cities and towns.

The timing of the visit raises several questions. Was there a deal struck? Did Assad offer this as a concession to the West in order that they ease their political pressure on Syria? We can dismiss such questions as conjecture, but when it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and walks like a duck, then in all probability it is a duck. For the Syrian regime this could be an excellent opportunity to buy time, along with their attendance of the Arab League meeting which set a two week deadline (a week ago) to end the killing in Syria. Watch this space.

In other news, the African Union has insisted that Syria must yield on democracy. This is a far bolder position than they took with regards to the Libyan civil war. But Gaddafi is dead, I suppose, so the old Syrian saying, "feed the mouth and the eye will be ashamed" no longer applies. Wonders!

Finally, it seems that the US ambassador to Syria has "temporarily" left the country and gone back to Washington DC. Hmm...sounds suspicious.
That's it for today folks.
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Friday, October 21, 2011

Twilight of the Arab Dictators - A Brief Examination of Failed Ideologies

We are living in an age of extraordinary change, perhaps even more so than when we witnessed the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Bloc. This is because whilst the ideological component of the Cold War might have died with the end of the Soviet Union, much still remained the same behind the scenes. The game might have ended, but the players were still on the field, so to speak. Ten years after the end of the Cold War, Russia was still a key component in a bloc that found its interests directly opposed to those of the West, and a complicated dance took place across the world's international organisations as they frustrated the new Western unilateralism that tried to impose its order on the post-cold war landscape. From Serbia to Syria, across two decades and a war on terror, this bloc of countries continued to operate as they did during the Cold War.

What is remarkable about the Arab Spring is that all the dictators who have fallen so far belong to that old, Cold War era ideological mould of radical socialism and leftist politics. Each of these dictators took power at a time when such ideas genuinely threatened to change the conservative, liberal economic world order. Here I want to show that the dream which promised to liberate the poor and the downtrodden, itself became a nightmare orchestrated by the former champions who believed ardently, almost religiously, in the inevitability of historic change that they were embarking upon. By 2011 each of those champions, now ruling their own individual fiefdom's, became selfish, tyrannical, and anti-thetical to everything that they once claimed to stand for. The radical leftist politics of intellectual and academic circles in Western Europe. At the root of this politics was a radical vision of liberating the human being from the shackles of tradition, tyranny and oppression, and those who adhered to this vision found the strangest of champions to cheer for, whether that was Slobodan Milosovic, Saddam Hussein, or the Assad Regime in Syria.

Each of these unlikely heroes of the left found that they were able to maintain an iron grip on their respective countries whilst championing a liberation ideology and proclaiming that they were defending their people against imperialism and exploitation. Each of these figures appear to have genuinely believed that the choices they were making were justified with regards to their ultimate goals. But these goals became something vague and unreachable, and like the religions that many of them scoffed at, they ended up selling a dream to their people of a blessed utopia that none of them would see in their lifetimes, a dream that was meant to distract them from the totalitarian reality that was being imposed on them. In the West, an unlikely network of prominent public personalities continued to adhere to the strange liberation ideology which, in a way, plays the devil's advocate for these dictators. One need only look at the likes of Jacques Verges or John Laughland to see a trend of intellectual and legal protection provided for those former rulers who fall from grace. With Jacques Verges in particular, I am reminded of a truly existential individual who rises above the conventional morality expected by the average person in every sense of Nietzsche or Sartre's philosophy. Verges rose to fame when he volunteered to defend Klaus Barbie, a former Nazi in court. Asked in an interview whether he would have defended Adolf Hitler in court, he famously replied that he would have even defended George Bush. At the heart of their slightly leftist, mostly existential, view of the world is a harsh, unforgiving perspective in which life is seen as a constant struggle against a ruthless capitalist enemy that has alienated humanity, and in which necessary and painful sacrifices must be made in order to achieve victory.

The story begins with a philosopher in France, Jean-Paul  Aymard Sartre, who, during the second world war, was briefly imprisoned by the Germans before resuming teaching again. Sartre was an existentialist philosopher who was heavily influenced by a German philosopher, Husserl, and his ideas of consciousness and imagination. For Sartre, the imagination was one of the foundations of a truly free consciousness and an expression of free choice. As such, it was this imagination which could be used to construct an ideal world unrelated to the actual world. Politically, Sartre had a rather odd relationship with Communism, joining the party during the Korean War, but leaving it after the brutal Soviet repression of the Hungarian Revolution in 1956. Unable to digest him, the Communists could never quite decide what to make of his ideas, and ultimately rejected him, as he did them. But Sartre was to have a lasting influence on the liberation ideology that was forming in the post-war and post-colonial era of Western Europe. Strongly supportive of the Algerian Revolution, Sartre once said that every single French citizen was collectively responsible for the crimes that were taking place in that country. In 1960 he went to Cuba to meet Che Guevara, whom he described as the world's most complete human being. Here is a picture of them together, along with Sartre's wife, Simone de Beauvoir:


It was Sartre's political activities, and his concern with liberating the third world countries from what he saw as the oppressive capitalist system of the West which form an ideal starting point for understanding the ideological underpinnings of the bloc we see today. Sartre held quite interesting philosophical views about the way in which an exploited and oppressed people could react to their oppression, and this was based on the 'existentialist' idea of bad faith, "human reality is what it is not, and it is not what it is". His most famous example illustrating this was of a waiter in a cafe. That waiter was eager to please his customers, submissive and helpful, and flattering in his mannerisms and words. The very fact that he was play-acting at being a waiter, for no person could possibly behave in such a contrived and artificial manner without realising it, was proof that he was aware that he was not simply a waiter, or object. In essence, he was ultimately free to do whatever it was that he wished, and he freely chose to objectify himself as a waiter, thus applying bad faith. But he was still a free being, and free to define himself whichever way he chose to be. His reality was that he was not a waiter, and though he was a waiter, he was not. This confusing idea of negative reality was to have far reaching consequences with regards to how occupied peoples were to view themselves, and it was to have a strong influence on the liberation ideologies that were spinning into existence in the radical political climate of the nineteen sixties. More importantly, his early thoughts on individual freedoms opened up a vista of radical reinterpretation of the traditional moral systems by which human beings normally judged their actions against. In a truly changing human consciousness that exercises its fundamental freedoms, says Sartre, there is no need to constantly refer back to constitutions, laws and religious or moral codes to justify one's actions, and each individual action was to be judged based on its own merits and justifications at the time. In a sense, this was a morality beyond morality, a demolition and existentialist rejection of the hitherto existing models of morality and behaviour that mirrored Nietzsche's writings in the previous century.

In the Paris of the nineteen sixties, these ideas were to have a profound impact on a strange collection of thinkers and future political leaders who would come to define third world politics for decades to come. Like many philosophers, Sartre analysed and was influenced to a certain extent by the thought of Martin Heidegger, whose horrendously complicated thought and in particular his theory of being we will, thankfully, not relate here. Of marginal note is that Martin Heidegger was a member of the Nazi Party during the war, and is alleged never to have apologised or renounced his support for the party, or things that he had said about Adolf Hitler. Ideologically motivated commentators of the radical left and the existentialists would be quick to try and draw a line between Nazism and Iranian Islamic political philosophy or the radical leftist, and socialist -style third world countries that were particularly opposed to Israel. I think that is intellectually dishonest although I cannot discount it entirely. Regardless, Sartre was in fact very enthusiastic about the creation of the state of Israel, calling it the crowning of the Jews' sufferings and their 'heroic struggle' and a step towards a humanity where "the future of man is man". I would, therefore, hardly call Sartre a closet Nazi.


One person who was heavily influenced by Sartre was the psychiatrist and physician Frantz Fanon. Fanon had fought for the French in the second world war and was profoundly affected by the racism he saw and experienced both before and during that period. As a member of the FLN he was actively involved with the Algerian Revolution and was exiled for his activities. His most important work, the "Wretched of the Earth", was widely distributed and originally banned in France. In it, he advocated the use of violence by peoples who were suffering under colonialism, arguing that violence as a means to an end was justified completely in the struggle against an oppressor and occupier who was inherently violent and relied on military might to maintain their occupation. It was this ruthless approach of meeting fire with fire that charged the FLN's struggle for independence, portrayed critically in the famous film, "The Battle of Algiers", which depicts a bomb exploding in a packed cafe, and numerous attacks upon civilians. Fanon was honoured by being buried in Algeria, where his family continued to live. Today, Algeria is dominated by the same generals who were central in the FLN's struggle against French colonial rule, however, their iron-fisted control of the country and corrupt rule are typical of everything that Sartre had also found wrong with the Soviet Union. In a sense, the same structures which were intended to liberate the peoples became themselves an instrument of their oppression, and often in crueller and more intolerable ways. In the nineties of the last century, Algeria was subjected to a vicious civil war in which the government forces applied a brutal policy of extermination and terror in order to stamp out the Islamists who had won the elections. In Algeria today, an Orwellian 1984-esque regime exists, where the 'disappeared' are not just taken away forever, but their official records, from school attendance to their identity cards and birth certificates, are purged completely. The 'country of a million martyrs' lives under a system that is as brutal and inhuman as anything its people had experienced under French rule. It was almost as if, unsure of what to do after acquiring independence, the new rulers of Algeria gave up on the idea of liberation and instead sought to exist simply to maintain power and accumulate wealth.

The Palestinian cause as it came to be expressed through the Palestinian Liberation Organisation and other radical leftist spin-offs could all directly be traced back to the radical, Fanonite thought, which helped the Palestinian people put the occupation of their land in perspective, and also inspired them to carry out numerous attacks and bombings throughout the world against targets that they deemed to be legitimate in their final struggle to liberate Palestine. Ironically, the Palestinian cause resulted in some very strange bedfellows for the Palestinians, from Saddam Hussein's Iraq, to Assad's Syria, to Saddam Hussein's Iraq, and, most recently, Iran and its patronage of Hamas. This brings us to the next point of interest in the chain of thought that began, or more accurately, was influenced heavily, by Sartre's philosophy.



Another person who was influenced by the Third World Socialist movement that had its heart in nineteen sixties France was a fascinating, and little mentioned, professor and intellectual by the name of Ali Shariati. The son of an Islamic scholar and exposed during his time at university in Iran to Western philosophical ideas, Shariati was profoundly affected by existentialist and Sartrian ideas of a liberated personality, free from the shackles of oppression and control, which would redefine itself in a brave new world. Shariati, coming from a Shia Islamic perspective, excitedly applied these ideas to Islam itself, arguing that Muslims who awaited the arrival of the Islamic "Mahdi" a saviour of sorts who would right the wrongs of the world along with the returned Messiah, were mistaken, and that they were actively supposed to fight oppression and injustice throughout the world. He called his brand of Islam, "Red Shiism", as opposed to the clerical, conservative and stagnant "Black Shiism" that was predominant in his time. Shariati believed that, "every day was Ashoura; every day was Karbbalah" and a Muslim was obligated to actively fight against oppression. Building on the existing idea of "Occidentosis" (Gharbzadigeh) he sought to purge his fellow Iranian Muslims from the cultural and mental oppression that he believed had afflicted them from the West. Most profoundly he would translate Fanon's the "Wretched of the Earth" into Persian where it would go on to have an enormous affect on Iranian revolutionaries who were struggling to overthrow the Shah, a staunch Western ally and enormously corrupt ruler of Iran.


Amongst these revolutionaries was a religious scholar and leader by the name of Ayatollah Khomeini, who not only absorbed the ideas of the oppressors and the oppressed into an Islamic discourse, but also applied the same vicious methods to ensure that the revolution which overthrew the Shah was to be an "Islamic" revolution, and not an atheist, leftist one. His former leftist allies were, one by one, arrested, imprisoned, and forced to "confess" their betrayals on television, before they were duly hung or shot. Shariati died before the revolution could materialise, and was buried in the Sayideh Zeinab cemetary in Damascus, Syria. Today, Syria under the Alawite Assad regime has been a staunch ally of the Islamic Republic of Iran almost from its inception, and at the time of writing, this regime is reported to have killed or imprisoned thousands of Syrians who have been protesting for greater political freedoms.

The Syrian Baathist ideology, though not related to the Sartre school of thought, did have its ideological beginnings in Western European positivist thinking, and interestingly both Salah al Din Bitar and Michel Aflaq both studied philosophy at the Sorbonne, like Shariati. The central premise of Baathism was that a resurrection of the Arab nation was long over due, and needed to be strived for in order for the Arabs to take their rightful place back in history. It was a strange mix of socialism and Arab nationalism, and it was based on the fundamental belief that in order for the Arab nation to be resurrected from the ashes, a new kind of Arab consciousness needed to be created that transcended the tribal, ethnic and religious baggage of the Arab regions. Being the radical challenge to conservatism that it was, it found its most enthusiastic support in the villages and rural areas of Syria and, later, Iraq. As a result of the peculiarities of the post-colonial Middle East, the Baathists eventually found themselves first in control of the military and then, almost inevitably, in control of the government. What happened next was a radical transformation of society and education along lines that were similar to Eastern bloc communist countries, and with whom the Baathists found much affinity, though they would repress communist parties in their own country. As a result, Syria found itself in the same political current, albeit via a slightly different route, and found that there was already an international political system to which it could integrate without being dominated by the West.

But Shariati's influence was not just limited to Iran, as another prominent Iranian cleric was also heavily influenced by his liberation ideology imbued into Shia Islam. This cleric was Moussa al Sadr, an Iranian who settled in the predominantly Shiite south of Lebanon, and who would electrify those who came into contact with him into organisation and action. In 1974 he formed the "Movement of the Deprived" which, as the country descended into civil war, developed an armed movement that is today referred to as Amal. It was from Amal that a disaffected and more fundamentally Islamic organisation was formed, in order to fight against the Israeli army which invaded Lebanon in 1982. This organisation was called Hezbullah, and the reason that many of the former Amal members, including its present Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah, decided to defect was because the leadership of the group had passed on from Mousa al Sadr to the more secular and pragmatic Nabih Berri. Sadr, in 1978, disappeared whilst on a trip to Libya - widely accepted today as having been murdered by Gaddafi's regime. The founders of Hezbullah believed that Amal had moved away from the original Islamic, but also revolutionary, spirit intended by Musa Sadr. One need only read Naim Qassem's, "Hezbullah: The Story Within" to see the enormous influence of Shariati and Sartre, filtered through the thought of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, upon the newly formed movement. Today the discourse of the "Party of God" can only truly be understood from an ahistorical, existentialist perspective that has rejected entirely all manifestations of Western political and cultural influence and has reinterpreted modern life through the lense of Shiite Islam. All of this, of course, was still far into the future when Colonel Gaddafi ordered the execution of Musa Sadr and his two journalist companions in Libya.

One would think that this act would have put Gaddafi out of this unique bloc of socialist inspired countries. He was certainly eccentric and unpredictable, but the bizarre Third Universal Theory, a bizarre mish-mash of socialist, Arab nationalist and Islamic ideology that he expounded in his "Green Book", was - apart from incoherent - a perverse and amateurish attempt to express the very ideas of self actualisation and liberation that Sartre was talking about. This was imbued with Gaddafi's own, schizophrenic twist, but it was a stillborn ideology from the same womb as the revolutionary politics of violent resistance advocated by Fanon, or the revolutionary "red Shiism" of Shariati. In all likelihood his ideology has already died with him, if ever it had inspired anybody, though heaven knows what kind of person could have taken it seriously. Still, the network of contacts and affinity, if one could describe relationships between such individuals and countries as such, shows a remarkable web of solidarity that was only slightly exposed as the NATO campaign against Libya progressed. A post-Soviet Russia, capitalist China, and most African countries, themselves run by dictators, did everything in their power to delay the fall of Gaddafi, and to shelter him from a concerted Western effort to have him removed. Ultimately that failed and his capture and death will, like that of Saddam Hussein, earn him the title of martyr amongst the left-wing acolytes who have provided the intellectual justification for his actions, justifications that can be traced all the way back to the existentialist and radical ideologies of post-war Western Europe at a time when colonialism was still alive and real.


The philosophical and political climate that resulted from the radical politics of the sixties produced the classic template for what would become the future archetype of the Arab dictator. Young, idealistic and ideologically motivated men would seize the opportunities to escape their impoverished backgrounds and attempt to level the playing field for future generations. The death of Gaddafi has motivated and united this bloc of 'radical' countries in a way that their hostility with the West never could. When the seat of their power was itself at threat, the ruthlessness that they had achieved power with was used once again in order to maintain it. But it seems that they are only fighting off the inevitable. This is because as they and their revolutions grew older, more jaded, and as corrupt and oppressive as the systems they once sought to replace, they transformed their countries into personal ranches, and unwittingly became the dry straw that would ignite as the frustration of their people sparked. Granted, an unprecedented economic recession proved the catalyst, but a long simmering resentment of their failed promises and now empty slogans meant that a revolution was long overdue.


What is remarkable about the Arab Spring is that, for the first time in that region's history, the people themselves have taken to the street in revolutions that can be called neither capitalist nor communist, and are 'Islamic' only by an enormous stretch of the imagination. The radical politics of the nineteen sixties can be said to truly be running their course today, and these exhausted ideologies of a previous age are now being rejected by the disillusioned people who believed that its champions could free them and improve their lives. From the streets of Paris to the various Arab capitals, this radical liberation ideology has been adapted, twisted and manipulated into the present regimes we see today. The gradual fall of each marks the twilight of the Arab dictators and the failure of the radical politics which have defined the Middle East for over half a century. The real question is that if conservatism and radicalism have each, in turn, failed to deliver for the region, then what next?
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Thursday, October 20, 2011

The End of an Era - Spaghetti Dictatorships?

I'm in a good mood tonight, so I'll post something a little bit light-hearted for a change.

Whether it's Ali Abdullah Saleh, Muammar al Gaddafi or Saddam Hussein, the Arab world's dictators are like something out of a Spaghetti Western. They lived fast, took what they could, and were merciless to their enemies and friends alike. Their time is ending, but spare a thought to these hapless heroes as they blasted and plundered their way across the twentieth century, mixing ideology with religion, philosophy and revolutionary spirit. They believed in nothing but power and money, yet at times their villainous visages and buffoonish defiance in the face of history made them almost endearing, and possibly even martyrs for some people. For that, I suggest we call them the "Spaghetti Dictators". From golden handguns and Kalashnikovs to pet tigers and chemical weapons, I have to say that the Arab world has created some of the most colourful and interesting dictators in history. I mean if you want to be a tyrant there's no reason why you can't have fun along the way, right?

Here is a short soundtrack to that thought, and if you watch the video below closely, you could almost imagine our Arab dictators fitting in perfectly with these big screen villains.


The Good


The Bad


The Ugly


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The Death of a Villain


He was the archetype of the Middle Eastern dictator. Festooned with medals, dashing in his fashions, and eccentric in his behaviour, who else in the world had an entourage of Amazons to protect him? And what other Arab "leader" enlivened the utterly boring Arab League meetings with the colourful denunciations and insults that Colonel Muammar al Gadaffi used? There is something of the endearing fool about Gaddafi that made us all (apart from the Libyan people) like him. But he was murderous as well as buffoonish, though not a stupid man. He also knew what human nature was and how best to manipulate and bring out the worst in it. Unfortunately for him that was also his downfall, because he thought he could crush his people like rats, that by using overwhelming force he could stamp his people back into submission using terror, torture and fear.  

Tonight, I think far more people will be happy that he is dead than not, and whilst I'm a bit old fashioned and don't like talking ill of the dead, I will say that seeing his body dragged like a dog's over the earth was poetic justice for forty two years of oppression, tyranny and untold cruelty.
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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Why Mirrors Might be Banned in Syria One Day

So let me get this straight. First the Assad loyalists insisted that nothing unusual was happening in Syria and that this was all a conspiracy by the international media to manufacture a revolution. Then they insisted that there are armed salafist groups running around destroying, pillaging and looting. Then they said that Syria's two biggest allies in the region (after Iran, Hezbullah and Hamas), Qatar and Turkey, were fomenting a revolution. Then they ransacked the Qatari embassy. Then they said sorry to Qatar but Qatar wasn't interested. Then all of a sudden they remembered the Alexandretta province, ceded during the time of the French Mandate in Syria, but conveniently forgotten for the past ten years as they cuddled up to Erdogan, watched Turkish drama series and took their cheap holidays to Istanbul. Oh, and at first they blamed the Saudis and Bandar bin Sultan, but now they don't mention that anymore. They also remembered the Golan Heights after it has been occupied by the Israelis for forty years, and decided to stage a 'spontaneous' demonstration at the borders, but then they decided that was a bad idea after the Israelis shot over twenty of them dead, and the Syrian army didn't fire a single shot to protect them.

Now they believe that the Arab League is also part of this conspiracy, and condemn the Arab League for trying to promote internal dialogue between the regime and the opposition. Finally, they say that the West is conspiring against Syria. But they neglect to mention that the West, in all fairness, has always been conspiring against Syria. So instead they say that the entire Arab Spring was planned all the way back in 2001. These are the same people who will tell their friends knowingly about a Masonic, Zionist, Imperialist conspiracy to rule the world, and that the Protocols of the Elders of Zion are real, and that the Youtube video, "The Arrivals" is a serious exposé, nay, that it is even a documentary. They will also tell you that all Jewish office workers were told not to show up to work at the World Trade Centre on 9/11, and they will say that Bin Laden doesn't exist and is an American agent. Now, we're supposed to believe them about what is happening in Syria because they say so.

The Assadists always ask," so who is killing all the members of the security services that have died", but they never ask, "who killed Hamza al Khatib, or Ibrahim al Qashoosh", or thousands of others like them. They also never ask why thousands of Syrians have been arrested, and they never ask why torture is routine in Syrian prisons, and they never ask why peaceful demonstrators in the heart of Damascus or Aleppo get attacked by thugs with sticks, knives and electric batons.

I find myself wondering, what is wrong with these people? That they refuse to see what is before their very eyes. It is not an excuse to say we were ordered to do so, and it is no excuse to say that we were forced to support the murderers. I know of people who were not ordered, were not forced, and are not intimidated, yet they are blindly cheering for a regime that kills and murders its citizens. The only refuge their lie now has is the fiction that there are armed gangs wreaking havoc in the country, and of course this fiction is conveniently protected by the regime banning international media, and impartial observers, to the parts of Syria where the army and the regime's gangs are being deployed. These twin pillars keep the apologists' fragile worlds from crumbling, and from their facing the reality that they are apologists for murder and oppression in its ugliest forms. As prisoners are released from Israeli prisoners in a dodgy deal by Hamas, Syria's ally, at a time when it is politically expedient to do so (to detract from plans to have a Palestinian state recognised) some of them will be exiled to Syria, and so they will leave a small prison cell for a bigger prison cell. It pains me to say this, but an Israeli prison cell is probably the Four Seasons Presidential suite compare to Assad's torture chambers. The supporters of Assad will not allow themselves to utter such facts. Hell, I wouldn't be able to look myself in the mirror if I did what they do. Maybe they will ban mirrors in all of Syria one day as well.

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Friday, October 14, 2011

Gaddafi is almost, just about, nearly, and shortly and soon to be defeated. Saleh has, unsurprisingly, refused to step down even though he said he will do so. In Syria, three thousand people have been killed since the start of the uprising there. These dictators just don't want to take a hint.

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There is a "Great Game" that continues across the Middle East, regardless of the wave of Arab revolutions that are altering the region's makeup. It's a bit like two people sword fighting whilst a massive car pile-up is taking place. It would be ridiculous to say that they caused the pile-up.

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Wednesday, October 12, 2011

News Roundup about Syria


In an interview with The Associated Press, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the United States would continue to pressure long-time leaders to leave power in Syria and Yemen, and ensure chaos is averted in Egypt, where demonstrators have succeeded in ousting an autocrat. But she cautioned against overly optimistic forecasts for how quickly each country could make its break with the past.
Clinton then had some interesting things to say about the protest movement that is building up in Syria:
“It is not yet accepted by many groups within Syria that their life will be better without Assad than with Assad,” Clinton said. “There are a lot of minority groups that are very concerned.”
Speaking about the Kurdish minority in Syria, Clinton said:
“seems to have been just a spark to the tinder because that goes right at one of those groups that up until now had been kind of on the sidelines,” she said. “As this goes on, I really believe there will be more support for change.”

Qatar Emir calls for dialogue in Syria
Specifically, he seems to be saying that the Syrian regime should sit down with the Syrian National Council and discuss a new constitution for the country. Judging by the tone coming out of Damascus, the response is no, to put it politely. It’s interesting how quickly the regime’s relationship has soured with both Turkey and Qatar. A year ago things seemed to be remarkably cosy, but Qatar seems to have taken a particular offence to the regime’s knee jerk reactions at the start of the protests:
Despite apologies from Syria, Qatar did not re-open its embassy. In August, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bahrain recalled their ambassadors in the Syrian capital “for consultations.”
Finally, speaking from Kuala Lampur, Boutheina Shaaban said that “Each Reform Step was Faced by more Pressures on Syria
What is remarkable is that Dr. Shaaban finds time in this crisis to go abroad and lecture at the “Institute for Diplomacy and Foreign Relations”. According to DP News, Dr Shaaban:
clarified that the main goal of the USA and the foreign powers is not carrying out reform rather they seek pretexts for spreading chaos to achieve their benefits through controlling the region and its resources, pointing out that the USA has used the veto more than fifty times at the Security Council against the rights of the Palestinian people.
This could just be a pre-planned talk, then again, it could be a way to explore possible new markets for Syrian oil. Of course that is just conjecture, but, as the DP news article points out, both Indonesia and Malaysia have strong ties with Syria, and Malaysia has been strongly opposed to any pressure being put on Syria. Watch this space.
In Paris, a Foreign Office Minister has met with members of the Syrian National Council.
“I call on the Syrian regime which continues to divide communities and brutally repress its citizens to meet the legitimate aspirations of the Syrian people who are yearning for reform and democratic change.“

At the same time, the UK Foreign Office warns its citizens against all but essential travel within 5km of Syria’s borders.
From al Jazeera’s Nir Rosen, a very good article about Syria’s Alawite community. He points out that Assad’s cult of personality also suppressed Alawite religious identity, and that the regime is interested in maintaining power only for itself, regardless of its Alawite origins. In this second part, Rosen gives invaluable insight from the perspective of average Alawites about the regime, corruption and the protests.
I don’t know how this guy managed to pull of staying in Syria for so long undetected, but well done to him.
Finally, there are reports from the US that a Syrian agent, Mohammad Soueid, of Leesburg, Virginia, has been arrested on charges of spying on and intimidating Syrian activists in the United States.

[This post has also been published on the Syrian Pulse site]
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The Gilad Shalit Deal - Something Stinks

I don't believe that Gilad Shalit has only now, after five years, been released simply because of the so-called Arab spring and because of improved relations between Egypt and Hamas. I think that Shalit has been released because Hamas are unhappy with Mahmoud Abbas' attempt to push for UN recognition of a Palestinian state, and this is an attempt to boost Hamas' popularity and relevance. Israel, similarly unhappy with Abbas, isn't really troubled with the release of over a thousand Palestinians held in its prisons, especially when it can round them all back within 48 hours if it so wished.

Am I expected to believe that Shalit, after spending five years as a captive in Gaza, is now to be released simply because of some 'breakthrough' in negotiations? And so soon after Abbas tried to get a Palestinian state recognised? Perhaps we can compare this to the Syrian regime's allowing a 'spontaneous' demonstration on the borders with the Golan Heights to cross the dividing line at the same time that Syria is facing unprecedented wide spread revolt against Assad's rule. Like Assad, Meshaal can announce from Damascus that the deal is a massive 'victory' for the Palestinian people, and that they have obtained most of their demands. We are then supposed to accept that this is all just a happy coincidence.

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Tuesday, October 11, 2011

This Iranian 'plot' to assassinate the Saudi ambassador to the United States is odd, but not unlikely. There is, I think, an entire network of individuals and groups throughout the world that are ready to act should they receive instructions from Tehran.

Two men, one an an American-Iranian, Manssor Arbabsiar, 56, and Gholam Shakuri, an Iranian, have been charged in New York with the alleged "murder-for-hire" plot to pay a Mexican drug cartel to help assassinate Adel al-Jubeir, the Saudi ambassador and close confidante of the Saudi king.
Over the past few years there have been many allegations that Iran, and Hezbullah, have connections with drug gangs and extensive networks in Latin America. This is the first time that something this substantial and is brought to the surface. Only Arbabsiar is in US custody, and Shakuri is thought to be in Iran. Still, I will be keeping my eyes open for 'arrests' or 'kidnappings' of Western citizens, but then again I doubt this man is very important for Tehran. Arbabsiar might not be released in a few years, when some exchange is arranged.

But what really interested me was the timing of all this, an assassination of a Saudi diplomat in Washington is a big deal. Doing so in an Arab country is possible and easy, but it will never be as public as Tehran would like it to be. Hitting the emissary of a key ally of the United States, in the heart of its capital, is a very direct, and provocative message. I think for that reason it's possible that this story is true. But what, really, can the United States do to Iran? More sanctions, more talk, and that's about it.
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"At Home with the Assads: Syria's Ruthless Ruling Family"

On Asma al Assad:

She remembers her friend as funny, kind and "very friendly" – as one who did not take school that seriously, but did not cause a lot of trouble. There was, however, "a sharp side to her, and she didn't like being told off by the teachers", says the friend, recalling her walking out of more than one lesson, and on one occasion getting involved in a "huge catfight" with another girl – "proper scratching and knocking over lockers".
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Saturday, October 08, 2011

On Russia's Foreign Policy Towards Syria

So Medvedev has finally asked Bashar to lead reforms or step aside. Only days ago the Russians slapped the West in the face when the vetoed a resolution that would have condemned the Syrian regime for its brutal repression of protests, so why is there this sudden contradiction in tone?

If somebody disrespects you, and you expect that respect for your strength or political position, then you will try to respond to them in a similar way at the earliest opportunity. The Russians felt insulted and slightly cheated with the way NATO escalated its campaign against Gaddafi's forces, and they have always made clear that NATO exceeded its mandate. Clearly they did not expect, nor desire, the result we've seen in Libya. But that didn't mean that they were prepared to defend Gaddafi to the hilt. There are no permanent alliances or interests in this world, and Gaddafi was useful up to a certain extent. The same applies with Syria, and whilst the Russians licked their lips in delight as the UN Security Council resolution was vetoed, that doesn't mean that they will back Assad unconditionally.

Some people have made the mistaken assumption that Russia wishes to protect its naval base in Tartous, or its arms trade with the Syrian regime. But that is a silly assumption to make. Whilst these factors contribute to Russia's interest in supporting Assad, they are not essential. If, and when, Assad's position looks shaky, they will have no problems withdrawing their support. I had said this previously and will continue to say so. Russia is motivated by a desire to keep NATO and Western influence limited in the Middle East, whilst also being keen to prevent a conflagration that could cause far more damage to their interests than good. Only recently, Assad warned of a conflagration in Tel Aviv if NATO tries anything against Syria, and of course that is very unlikely, but this is not a reaction that Moscow would be interested in backing. Assad is supposed to be a reasonable, sobre leader whose main selling point is his ability to guarantee stability in the region and act as the go-between for Iran and the West. He's certainly an embarrassment when his security services have killed over three thousand Syrian citizens under some flimsy story of a foreign conspiracy. Medvedev said:

“But this decision should be taken not in NATO or certain European countries. It should be taken by the Syrian people and the Syrian leadership.”
So in theory, Moscow is in agreement with the West that perhaps Assad should go, but they differ on the means for this to occur. In line with their goal of maintaining their balance viz. the West in the Middle East, they seem to be telling America that they don't have a problem with Assad going, as long as it is his people who get rid of him, and not NATO war planes. This might be a convergence of Moscow and Washington's interests and, if so, Washington has probably gotten over the cold shower it got at the Security Council a few days ago. Russia is now saying what the United States said months ago, which could mean that in a few more months, perhaps by the end of the year, Moscow could be telling Assad outright that it is best he step down. If, that is, he doesn't succeed in crushing the revolt first.
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Friday, October 07, 2011

Syria's Sectarian Curse

Much of what is written about Syria is pretty dull and useless, but sometimes I read an article like this and it pricks my ears up instantly. In effect, Theo Padnos is trying to understand what the Assad regime really is. Is it an Alawite regime? Is it a regime that happens to be Alawite? Or is it now something far more sinister. His contention is that Assad's regime has become a cult in itself, independent of his ethnicity or religious background:


Walk into almost any restaurant in any neighborhood in Damascus and there they are, in pastel, against a black background, with faint evening clouds in the distance: the dead Basil, the dead father, and the surviving brother Bashar. These are Syria’s patron saints. They are often depicted in aviator glasses (Hafez was a pilot), and always Hafez and Basil appear to hover over the shoulders of Bashar, like angels from beyond the grave. The effect is meant to be a little spiritual and a little spooky. It does add a jarring note to the dining experience, I’ve found.
 There's a lot more to the article, but noteworthy is the author's bringing up a subject which is often overlooked by foreign correspondents in Syria:

Actually the student of Islam in Syria is in a strange position. Every day his teachers ask him to meditate on the power of almighty Allah, the king of all the worlds, and every day his teachers tremble before the mightier, more fearsome power of the Alawi. The teachers are positively transfixed. Nor will they explain the situation. Either they are too worried or they work for the secret police or some combination of these circumstances is at work.
I had some question marks about his use of the word "Alawi" but I don't believe he is using sectarian language, or generalising about a sect. Rather, he is trying to grasp a reality about Syria, her sectarian curse. Anybody who tries to govern Syria, whilst wilfully ignoring the ethnic and religious background of her peoples is a person who will not rule for long. Where the Baath party, and the Assad regime, have been most skilful, is in traversing the minefield of sectarianism and maintaining a grip on power by knowing exactly how to react with each of the country's elements, ensuring that no group becomes powerful enough to challenge them. Here, the author notes the irony of a religious school which, in one breath, tells people that heaven's laws take precedence to man's laws, yet in reality they live in and under man's laws. And not just any man, but one man. Syria needs to be understood further before people naively pretend that removing Assad will sort out all our problems. He's just the beginning...
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Wednesday, October 05, 2011

Syrian Roundup and Analysis: UN Resolutions, Rastan and Zainab al Hosni

A lot has happened in the last 24 hours, most notably the veto by Russia and China of a UN Security Council resolution that would have condemned the Syrian regime's violent crackdown against protests. India abstained from voting, saying that the wording of the resolution did not place enough emphasis on the violent nature of the protesters in Syria.

"It does not condemn the violence perpetrated by the Syrian opposition. Nor does it place any responsibility on the opposition to abjure violence and engage with the Syrian authorities for redressal of their grievances through a peaceful political process," he said, explaining India's decision to keep away from the vote.
The US and British representatives walked out when the Syrian representative began speaking last night, and it is clear that those two countries are greatly displeased with the Russians especially for scuppering the resolution. The new draft resolution had been greatly watered down to appease the Russians, so this was, in every sense of the word, a diplomatic slap in the face.

Russia Today has an article headlined, "Syria hotbed of major geopolitical game". The article mentions one observer:

­The West could have used the resolution on Syria as a legal cover for it actions in the Middle East, John Laughland from the Paris-based Institute for Democracy and Co-operation told RT.

I've never heard of the "Institute for Democracy and Co-operation before, but here is their website. The homepage is in Russian, which is a bit odd if they are based in Paris, as RT say. Here is some information about David Laughland that I found on Wikipedia. He appears to be a very intelligent, and very well educated man, but I recognise a lot of similarities between his position and that of well known devil's advocates such as Jacques Verges - himself a very colourful and controversial character. The RT article concludes with the opinion of a Dr Chandra Muzaffar, who believes that the majority of the Syrian people supports Assad and that Assad is genuine in his desire to effect real change in Syria.

So what happens from here? Well Turkey has announced that it will place sanctions of its own on Syria, in addition to those that are in place by the EU. Prime Minister Erdogan said:
"We will now inevitably apply our sanction package … We have a 910-kilometer long border. Moreover, we have cross-border family ties, which increase our responsibility,"
It seems Turkey is furious with the way things are playing out in Syria, and if it is true that its military is planning exercises near the border, then we might be seeing the Turk's supporting a nascent "Free Syrian Army" as it begins to cross into Syria and create a safe haven of sorts from the Syrian regime's security forces. The UN Security Council veto was Syria removing its gloves off and forcing the hands of country's that it says are conspiring against it. In effect, the ball is now in the court of the "international community" (for want of a better word).

The defected Syrian Colonel, Riad Asaad, was alleged to have been captured by Syrian regime media outlets, but he quickly appeared in Turkey to say that he is alive and well. This isn't just media outlets being sloppy, or silly, but rather it is a calculated move to flush out the person being hunted and force them to make a statement. Those who remember the confusing reports by the Libyan NTC earlier this year about the capture or killing of members of Gaddafi's family will note the similarity, whereby the target then has to make an announcement to prove they are alive and well.

Col. As'ad, who defected and fled to Turkey about three months ago, leads Syria's main military defectors group, the Free Syrian Army, after merging it with another dissident army group last month, said Omar Idlibi, a spokesperson for the Local Coordination Committees, an activist network.
Expect more smoke and mirrors...

In other news, "Syria Will Emerge Stronger from Unrest", reports the pro-regime site, Day Press - News. This is according to the Syrian ambassador to Lebanon Karim Ali, after his meeting with the Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati.
Ali said assassinations targeting civilians, particularly Sunday’s assassination of Sariya Hassoun, the son of Syria’s Mufti Ahmad Hassoun in the town of Idlib, have united the Syrians in rejecting “this conspiracy and those standing behind it.”
Now I am sure that Mr Ali did not meet the Lebanese Prime Minister simply to 'discuss' the situation in Syria. There are very likely to be high level discussions between them about ways to bypass the sanctions that are probably starting to affect Syria. Syrian oil must be sold, especially since there have been very few takers - even at discounted prices. Lebanon could be - if it is not already - a useful outlet for the regime to sidestep the sanctions and get itself some breathing space. How, where and with whom are probably some of the things the discussions could be about, but I'm only speculating.

Finally, the town of Rastan appears to now be firmly under the control of government forces. TIME reports that the security forces have detained 3,000 people in the town over the past three days:

In the rebellious central town of Rastan, which the government retook on Saturday, an activist told The AP by telephone that security forces have detained more than 3,000 residents since Saturday. He said the detainees were being held at a cement factory, as well as some schools and the Sports Club, a massive four-story compound. "Ten of my relatives have been detained," said the activist, who asked that he be identified by his first name, Hassan. He said was he speaking from hiding in Rastan. "The situation in the town is miserable," he said, adding that the town of some 70,000 people was heavily bombed for five days starting Tuesday when the army launched an offensive.

Firstly, I'd like to say that I have little time for people who dismiss such accounts, especially misguided leftists who insist on the highest standards of journalistic accuracy for a country where foreign media are banned and who, in usual circumstances, would never insist on such accuracy from places under siege such as Gaza (rightly so). There is no doubt that some exaggerations can occur from both sides, but I don't think a reasonable and sensible individual would doubt that anything but the most horrific repression is taking place in Syria today.

Speaking of exaggerations, the story of Zeinab al Hosni shocked many people when her family received the decapitated and mutilated body of a female said to be her. So it is with some shock that Syrian television paraded her, alive and well, on air to say that she had not been killed and was doing fine. Here is a video of somebody they claim is her:



Again, many who do find the Syrian uprising to be an inconvenience were quick to use this as yet another demonstration of how inaccurate the picture from within the country is, and that somehow this was just another aspect of 'the plot' that Syria was experiencing. Two things make me very sceptical about this whole affair, and suggest to me that this might have been a media coup plotted by the Syrian regime to undermine the legitimacy of the Syrian opposition: Firstly, the body her family received is still  person who has been viciously murdered, or at least her body has, and she must have a family somewhere; Secondly, the date on which she was paraded on television was the day the UN security council draft resolution was to be voted on. Like Iran, the Syrian regime is remarkably sensitive to the political calendar. If you recall, the release of the American hikers was timed to be around the same time that Ahmedinejad made his UN speech last month. So wherever, and whoever, Zainab al Hosni is, many things don't add up about the way this whole story developed.
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Tuesday, October 04, 2011

The Syria Roundup

The United Nations Security Council will be meeting today to *possibly* pass a weakened and much watered down version of a resolution against Syria. It's a step forward but it will not stop the regime killing people. Politically it will be a major blow, however.

**UPDATE**
Russia has rejected the United Nations Security Council draft resolution even though it has been watered down.

"France Warns Syria Not to Intimidate Activists" - a recurring theme over the past few months. Pro-regime demonstrators in Western capitals relish threatening anti-regime protesters and coming to take pictures of them. Implicit in the threat or action is the understanding that they will never be able to return to Syria, or that their families will be endangered. Hardly surprising that this regime resorts to such underhanded tactics. The real question is how long they will be able to speak reform to foreign observers and blackmail to Syrian nationals without this policy of doublespeak backfiring.

"Assassinations Sow Discord in Syria" - I think some Syrians have had enough with being killed by the Syrian regime and have decided to take matters into their own hands:

Syria's government said an armed terrorist group shot the 22-year-old Mr. Hassoun in the back while he drove to his university between Aleppo and Idlib with a professor. Mr. Hassoun later died of his injuries, while the professor, Mohammad al-Omar, died on the spot, state media said.
I don't know what the young Mr. Hassoun's politics were, but it is sad that the sons are paying the price for the sins of their fathers. This series of tit-for-tat killings does bring to mind the period of 1979-1982 when such assassinations were common in Syria. But, we must be very careful of drawing analogies. History is repeated only in the minds of those who do not learn from it.

Day Press, a pro-Syrian regime news site, reports on the funerals of those assassinated. Amusingly, they also report that:

Also on Monday, The competent authorities seized amounts of different weapons near the Syrian-Turkish borders were smuggled to Syria. 

I'd hardly call the Syrian security forces, "competent", but then again what should I expect from a website that fully expects its readers to believe that Syria is the victim of a massive conspiracy involving the United States, the Mossad, Qatar, Turkey, the Muslim Brotherhood, and al Qaeda? That doesn't mean that the story is in any sense untrue, rather, it is very likely. Syria has a very large and porous border with Turkey and the Turkish hinterland is by no means under the full control of the Turkish security services (just ask the Kurds). There are probably many people who would be interested in supporting the so-called "Free Syrian Army" and it is not difficult to get weapons across the border.

Ramzy Baroud, writes an angry article in the "Asia Times Online" criticising the "feisty" US ambassador to Syria for sticking his nose in other people's business. His article is a denunciation of US policy in the region, but he rightly places US politicking as the "second greatest danger" facing the Syrian people, the first being the "cruelty of the Syrian regime". I do agree with him, but I'm extremely wary of transforming my anger at US policy in the region with supporting the Syrian regime as a resistance to those policies. He treads a careful line.

Speaking of US policies, the American propaganda organisation Voice of America also reports that the Syrian security forces have "seized smuggled weapons" allegedly coming in from Turkey. As I said before, this is probably true, as the country is now on the verge of civil war and, frankly, the regime can't crush the protests as hard as it tries to right now. The people who have lost loved ones so far will not be satisfied by anything other than the Syrian president and those responsible hanging from their necks. Syria has entered a long dark tunnel and it is not certain if any of us here today will see the country when it comes out.

Mikati denies secretly meeting Moallem in Syria - according to the "Daily Star". I have heard that Mikati's brother, who is richer and far smarter, is very good friends with Bashar al Assad. The fact that this comes so soon after the US has warned Mikati of his links with the Syrian regime suggests that he could be playing some role as a go-between and possible mediator.

In other news, it seems that "almost all Filipinos in Syria" are undocumented, according to this site. So getting them out safely will be even more difficult than at first imagined.

Also, revoking a recently passed 'law' banning the import of non-essential items appears to be a clear sign that the Syrian merchant classes can still exert some pressure on the regime if need be. Either that, or the idea of a trade war with Turkey would have been a step too far.
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Sunday, October 02, 2011

A Historic Moment in Modern Syrian History?

Burhan Ghalioun reading the Syrian National Council's Declaratory Statement

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Propaganda and Lies: A Collector's Guide


One of my pro-regime relatives has recently joined a group on Facebook called the "Algerian-Syrian Electronic Alliance". Apparently the group is there to coordinate the online efforts of the supporters of two fascist regimes, the generals of Algeria with the Assad regime in Syria. Apparently they warn other members of the dangerous channels (Al Jazeera and Al Arabiyah) on the air that spread "lies about their countries". Apart from the worry I have that I'm related to such morons, I despair that there are enough people out there who are stupid enough to think that dictatorship and corrupt authoritarianism are acceptable ways to govern a country.

Propaganda pictures for the Syrian regime are rife these days, and there are some choice and tasteful selections out there for the propaganda enthusiast. Here are some good ones I have collected so far:


This one is supposed to show the immortal leader as good with children (his future subjects). The message is that he's nice, friendly, approachable and a father figure. 


I call this one the philosopher/king photo-op. The translation to the phrase is "God, Syria, My People and that's it". His thoughtful pose in the background shows that he is a wise ruler, with a great burden on his shoulders. The waving, smiling face at the front is important to maintain the approachability of this great man.


The slogan here is "And have you asked why they call him the Lion of the Arabs?" It's supposed to show that whilst Mubarak is selling out to the Zionist enemy, Assad is turning his back to them. Conveniently ignored is the fact that the Syrian regime believes that stability in Israel depends on stability in Syria, or that Assad looks like he is searching for the lavatories.


This one is a bit simplistic, and it looks like it was designed by a twelve year old boy. A sword with the Syrian flag as an emblem is embedded into a zionist skull. Oooh, beware, enemies of Syria...from the twelve year old boy and his photoshop skills.



This is one of the photos that a retarded pro-regime cousin of mine allegedly paid two hundred dollars to obtain. Original and authentic photos of the glorious leader's brother, Maher, on some military exercise. I don't think it's the Golan Heights that he's looking at.


Here is the Generalissimo himself. My Latin American readers would find such pictures very familiar. As long as they were alive long enough to remember the fifties and sixties.


This one aims at showing the family man. It says "We are with you. We are all Bashar and Asma al Assad. We are all for you oh nation." These pictures are from the famous visit that Syria's royal family had to Paris a few years back. The designer clothes, the expensive restaurants. Perfect photo-opportunities. Lovely.


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Saturday, October 01, 2011

I've often criticised the Syrian opposition but I have to say that this article is still very, very good. Nadim Shehadi makes a good point:

We do not do justice to the Syrian people when we use the term "opposition" to describe those who are in revolt against the Assad regime. What is now being called the opposition is in reality Syrian political society that has been hijacked for decades – and it is from this society with all its rich diversity that a new government and its opposition will emerge after the fall of the regime.
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