http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?
edition_id=10&categ_id=5&article_id=14031

Gadhafi and Gorbachev are lessons for Assad

By Rami G. Khouri 
Daily Star staff
Wednesday, April 06, 2005


Syria is being driven, and is driving itself, into a very difficult 
corner, with fewer and fewer realistic policy options as time 
passes. The status of Syria is all the more urgent and relevant, in 
view of its pullout from Lebanon under intense Lebanese and 
international pressure. Syria cannot leave Lebanon - as it has 
confirmed to the UN it will do by the end of this month - and simply 
watch the process and its aftermath on CNN and Al-Jazeera. Pressures 
will increase against Damascus, which must respond in a more 
constructive and productive way than it has dealt with its 
predicament in the past few years.

 The strong emotional tensions and resentments that now cloud 
Lebanese-Syrian relations will dissipate in time, and a healthier, 
normal bilateral relationship will reassert itself. But the world 
will not care or pay attention, because bilateral Syrian-Lebanese 
ties are not the issue, and never were. The U.S., France, the UN, 
Israel, all the Arabs, and the Federated States of Micronesia 
collectively and consistently accepted Syria's dominant role in 
Lebanon since the mid-1970s, and never raised the matter of the 
quality of Lebanon's democracy.

 Today, though, Paris and Washington ring the bell of Lebanese 
liberty three times a week, and five times a week during religious 
holidays and election seasons. Most Lebanese are pleased, to be 
sure. But many are also concerned that the U.S. is only using 
Lebanon as a means to pressure Syria, and will forget about 
democracy in Beirut and Baalbek once the U.S. gets what it wants 
from Syria.

 The Americans' ultimate aim in pressuring Syria, though, is also 
unclear to many. Is it to change the Assad/Baathist regime in 
Damascus? Change the regime's policies only? Use Syria as a 
surrogate to break up contacts among Iran, Syria and Hizbullah? Use 
Syria as a lesson for all those who dare to oppose, resist, or defy 
American goals, or, in some cases, congruent American and Israeli 
goals? It seems clear that pressure on Syria will intensify, not 
abate, next month after it withdraws from Lebanon, and probably from 
several quarters simultaneously. The triumphalist neoconservative-
driven American administration will keep hitting Damascus on the 
several issues and accusations already on the table; these include 
leaving Lebanon to its own destiny, disarming or marginalizing 
Hizbullah, cutting off support for rejectionist Palestinian groups, 
cooperating on improving security in Iraq, renouncing plans to 
acquire weapons of mass destruction (WMD), and not 
supporting "terrorist" groups.

Europe will continue using the promise of its Association Agreement 
with Syria as leverage to extract concessions. Internal demands on 
the Syrian government will also accelerate, once its exit from 
Lebanon shows it to be susceptible to pressure. The UN will also 
keep monitoring the Syrian government's behavior.

Parallel to this is the chilling reality of Syria's reduced 
political assets, regionally and globally. Its linkages with and 
impact on key regional issues has been drastically reduced or 
totally eliminated in recent years, including Lebanon, Hizbullah, 
Israel, Iran, the Palestinians, the U.S., France, Saudi Arabia, 
Egypt, and the EU, to mention only the most obvious. Its domestic 
economic capacity to sustain itself is also running out of time, as 
Syrian officials themselves now admit, refreshingly.

Syria is targeted, pressured, threatened, and weakened 
diplomatically. Its current strategy of piecemeal compliance with 
international demands, combined with vocal defiance of the Americans 
(and Israelis), seems to be running out of time and relevance. This 
is not 1995, and we are not in the Barcelona Process happy hour 
conversation. This is 2005, the American and Israeli armed forces 
are next door, active and planning, the UN demands and gets regular 
reports on Damascus' conduct, and most Arab countries have made it 
clear they will not support Syria.

What should the Damascus regime do in this situation? It has few 
palatable choices, and probably only one realistic one. It must 
essentially choose from among the fate of three regimes whose 
leaders' recent history should ring instructive wake-up bells in 
Damascus - Mikhael Gorbachev, Moammar Gadhafi, and Saddam Hussein.

 The Saddam Hussein option of blind defiance is suicidal, and not 
recommended. A more realistic - and probably the only remaining - 
option for Damascus would be to forge a policy combining the 
Gorbachev and Gadhafi ways. From Gorbachev, the Syrian leadership 
should borrow the realism of adapting to the facts of a changed 
world, and respond by initiating radical economic and political 
reforms from the top. Gorbachev used the Communist Party Congress in 
1986 to launch extensive reforms that opened up the political system 
and restructured it economically (perestroika and glasnost). Syrian 
President Bashar Assad should consider mobilizing the Baath Party 
Congress scheduled for May or June to do something equally radical 
in Syria.

 As Gorbachev coupled radical domestic reform with a Soviet military 
withdrawal from Afghanistan starting in early 1988, Assad similarly 
should consider following the withdrawal from Lebanon with his own 
radical transformation plan for Syria. He would want obviously to 
avoid Gorbachev's fate of having to resign as Soviet Union president 
in December 1991, six years after his election.

 He could do this by adopting some of the Gadhafi approach to 
continued incumbency in the face of Western pressure. Gadhafi 
renounced his plans to develop WMDs and paid compensation to 
international victims of terror attacks blamed on Libya. He remains 
in power, with no serious pressures on him to make any domestic 
changes - because the U.S. and the West do not care about the 
quality of life of Libyan citizens, or their democratic qualities, 
any more than they really care about democracy in Lebanon, one 
suspects. The parallels and contrasts between the West's focus on 
democracy in Lebanon and its total oblivion on democracy in Libya is 
shockingly instructive, but that's another story for another day.

The lessons for Syria should be obvious. Syria should not have any 
problem complying with the demands from legitimate quarters such as 
the UN Security Council - as it has done, and explicitly 
acknowledged, with Resolution 1559. 

It can use such compliance with legitimate demands as leverage to 
generate a renewed effort for a comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace 
accord. Withdrawal from Lebanon, compliance with UN demands, 
comprehensive peace with Israel, and a radical reform program at 
home would bring Damascus several things that it badly needs and 
that it could use to spark a real renaissance at home - a robust, 
mobilized domestic citizenry-constituency for modernity, democracy 
and dignified prosperity, good amounts of foreign aid, important 
open access to U.S. and EU trade markets, significant repatriation 
of Syrian expatriate funds and managerial and technical know-how, 
and, intangibly but crucially, renewed respect in the region and the 
world.

Somewhere between the Gorbachev and Gadhafi experiences is a 
realistic route for a Syrian renaissance, continued regime 
incumbency, better policies for Syrians as a whole, and affirmation 
of legitimate international legal standards and principles.


Rami G. Khouri is a member of The Daily Star staff.







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