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Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!

Signs of instability in Syria
Damascus’ old guard ruling elite at odds with Assad?

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Editor's note: DEBKAfile's electronic news publication is a news-cum-analysis
live wire, online round the clock seven days a week. A weekly edition,
DEBKA-Net-Weekly, is now available through WorldNetDaily.com. Drawing on
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it is presented as a compact, intelligence-angled weekly package. It is
available as a direct e-mail feed or via the Internet.

© 2001 WorldNetDaily.com

Syrian President Bashar Assad's visit to Berlin this week as the guest of
German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder represented some fateful days for the
Middle East.

DEBKA-Net-Weekly's sources report Israel is carefully observing signs of
conflict between Assad and Syria's old guard ruling elite – a conflict that
might mean there is potential for a breakthrough in establishing peace talks
with Damascus.

Israel's two air strikes against Syrian radar stations – on the
Beirut-Damascus road in April and in central Lebanon last month – fit in the
framework of these observations, reports DEBKA.

By sending the planes into action after Hezbollah guerrilla attacks on
Israeli army positions on the Lebanese border, Israeli Prime Minister Sharon
tried to deliver two messages. The first was a heavy hint to Assad of the
kind of damage the Syrian army could expect to suffer in Lebanon and back
home if Israel began to attack Syrian military targets. The second was an
attempt to weaken the position of the veteran Syrian leadership circle held
over from Hafez Assad, who died 13 months ago, when his son Bashar took over.

Sharon thought he spotted differences between the behavior and response of
the Syrian president and those of the Damascus old guard. He believed there
was a chance that Assad would try to break free from the clutches of Defense
Minister Mustafa Tlas, Chief of Staff Hikmat Shihabi, Vice President Abdel
Halim Khadam and Foreign Minister Farouq a-Shara.

The road sign Sharon thought he saw flashing was not political or military,
but economic.

Sharon read the intelligence reports that landed on his desk from Damascus
which said that in the past few months, this select group of Syria leaders,
fearing they would lose their positions of influence, had blocked every
attempt by Assad to carry out economic reforms and modernization. The reports
spoke of extremely tense relations between the president and the old
leadership.

A breakthrough to the diplomatic track became a central pillar of Sharon's
policy in the past several weeks. Getting political circles in the United
States and Europe talking about an imminent resumption of Israeli-Syrian
peace negotiations would relieve some of the pressure on Sharon to start
discussions with the Americans and Palestinians on implementing the Mitchell
report in the face of ongoing Palestinian terrorism.

It also would enable him to continue his policy of military restraint toward
the Palestinians, which cuts several percentage points off his popularity
rating each week and puts them in the basket of his strongest political
rival, former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is constantly breathing
down his neck.

Moreover, foreign focus on the Syrian track would relieve Sharon of the yoke
of his political dependence on Shimon Peres, who has opposed the Syrian
option since the 1993 Oslo accords, believing, quiet rightly, that it shunts
aside the Arafat-Palestinian option.

Rebuilding the Syrian channel was so important to Sharon that he requested
and received U.S. approval for the move, first in his White House talks with
President George W. Bush in June and then during U.S. Secretary of State
Colin Powell's visit to the Middle East.

Sharon's hopes were bolstered by Assad's visit to Paris in mid-June.
DEBKA-Net-Weekly's sources in Paris say that although Assad presented a
tough, uncompromising line in his one-on-one talks with French President
Jacques Chirac – refusing to listen to a word about resuming negotiations
with Israel – he took a completely different tack in his meeting with French
Prime Minister Lionel Jospin, emphasizing the need for Syria to rebuild its
economy.

A country that builds a new economy, Assad told Jospin, has no time for
useless wars. Assad did not tell Jospin that renewed talks with Israel would
be the next step down the line, but even without that commitment, he sounded
upbeat.

After meeting Jospin, Assad took another unconventional step. He made a point
of responding to questions from Israel Radio's correspondent in Paris. In his
answers, he included the phrase that Syria was always interested in resuming
political negotiations with Israel.

In assessing the differences between what Assad told Chirac and what he said
to Jospin, U.S. and Israeli analysis point out that Assad – who is trying to
get his late father's cronies off his back – is aware of their long-standing
political and business ties with the French president and the French power
elite that supports him.

Assad knows that every word he uttered to Chirac gets back to his leadership
rivals in Damascus.

Conversely, Assad apparently studied carefully intelligence reports from the
Syrian embassy in Paris on the eve of his visit and learned that many of
those who pull the political strings in Paris believe that recent financial
scandals, and the legal moves accompanying them, have taken a big bite out of
Chirac's political power. Hardly anyone in Paris now thinks he will win
re-election.

Despite this, many in the know in Paris believe that Jospin will be France's
next president.

Since Jospin has no connection with the veteran political establishment in
Syria, and even fewer ties with Arab leaders in the Middle East, Assad felt
free to express his real opinions to him and send signals via the prime
minister to the Americans and Sharon.

That was why Sharon, who came to Paris a week earlier on July 5 for a short
visit that lasted just a few hours, spoke at more length with Jospin than
with Chirac.

But the Syrian old guard cannot be written off.

DEBKA-Net-Weekly's sources in Damascus say that these moves have not escaped
the attention of a veteran group of politicians and senior officers. They
have taken two opposing, but cynical and effective, routes to block their
president's moves. The old guard has turned to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
and Iran's spiritual leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

DEBKA-Net-Weekly's sources in the Persian Gulf report that the Syrian
leadership asked Saddam Hussein to take military steps that would force Assad
to implement the secret agreements he signed last September with the Iraqi
president. In addition the Syrians requested and received permission from
Saddam to open, on the eve of Assad's departure for Berlin, a Syrian bureau
of economic cooperation with Iraq in Baghdad.

That was the real reason behind the sudden movement of Iraqi military forces,
starting from mid-June, in the Syrian desert in northern Iraq. At first the
Americans and Israelis assumed the forces aimed to attack strongholds of
pro-Western Kurds. When the assault never came, it became clear the Iraqi
troops movements were linked to joint maneuvers with the Syrians and acting
jointly with him in the event of the outbreak of a new Middle Eastern war.

DEBKA-Net-Weekly's military sources say that after the Iraqi troop movements
began, Saddam called Assad and told him the time was ripe for him to fulfill
his part in the military agreements. The Iraqi ruler said Syrian headquarters
and communications systems should begin to cooperate with their Iraqi
counterparts, otherwise he would be forced to consider stopping the transfer
of Iraqi oil through Syria (in essence, the smuggling of Iraqi oil above the
amounts permitted under the U.N. oil-for-food provisions).

These transfers recently reached a record 250,000 barrels per day, pouring
$1.75 million into Syrian coffers daily. Assad had no choice, and gave
permission for Syrian army chiefs to begin the joint exercise. The Syrian old
guard, meanwhile, also asked Iran's spiritual leader and strongman, Khamenei,
for initiatives in Lebanon to offset some of Iraq's steps in the east.

They were not talking about big steps, such as the movements of Iraqi armored
divisions and fighter plane and bomber wings. All the Iranians had to do was
send a small number – no more than 25 – of intelligence and explosives
instructors to south Lebanon to spend the summer training Hezbollah units
deployed along the Israel-Lebanon border.

They were to join several dozen Iranian instructors who arrived in south
Lebanon in June 2000, several weeks after the Israeli army pulled out.

Lebanese sources connected with European media leaked the arrival of the
Iranians in south Lebanon. Top headlines then spoke of the presence of elite
Iranian units in south Lebanon, equipped with short-range Frogger
surface-to-surface missiles, who were prepared to attack Israeli targets.

The Syrian old guard was aware Assad is very sensitive to the question of the
Iranian presence in south Lebanon. He is convinced their real aim is not to
support Hezbollah and the Shi'ites, but to follow a hidden agenda to
establish a Shi'ite state in Lebanon that would give Iran free access to the
Mediterranean. Such access would represent a very important change in Iran's
strategic position in the region, transforming the Islamic republic from a
Persian Gulf power to one with a presence in the Mediterranean. That would
reduce Syria's importance in the eastern Mediterranean.

The veteran leadership in Syria estimates that the Iranian military movements
in Lebanon and the effect they will have internationally will push Assad back
into Saddam's arms. That was their cold and cynical tactical assessment – one
that was also sophisticated, effective and accurate.

When Assad left this week for his trip to Berlin, he was accompanied by
Syrian Foreign Minister Farouq a-Shara. DEBKA-Net-Weekly 's sources in
Damascus report that Assad did not want to take the foreign minister with
him, but was forced to do so by the old guard. In Berlin, unlike in Paris,
Assad refused to answer any questions from the Israeli press.

On Tuesday, July 7, Sharon tried to salvage something of the crumbling Syrian
option. A few hours before Assad arrived in Berlin, he traveled to the Golan
Heights and declared before a smattering of people who came out to hear him
that he was prepared to negotiate with Syria with no pre-conditions. But he
said in the same breath that there could be no peace with Syria if Israel had
to evacuate all its settlements on the Golan.

But there was no one left in Damascus or Berlin to hear Sharon's message. His
Syrian move failed and the Middle East moved one step closer to regional war.




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