http://www.juancole.com/2012/07/top-ten-implications-of-the-damascus-bombing.html


Top Ten Implications of the Damascus Bombing
Posted on 07/19/2012 by Juan

The bombing of the Security Headquarters of the Baath government of Syria on 
Wednesday killed the Minister of Defense, the deputy Minister of Defense, and 
the Assistant to the vice-president and head of crisis management office 
Gen Hassan Turkomani.  It wounded the Minister of the Interior (i.e. 
head of the secret police) and a member of the national security 
council.  Some reports said that also wounded was Hafez al-Makhlouf, a 
cousin of the president on his mother’s side of the family and a key 
security figure.  The Makhloufs, especially Ramy, are the business wing 
of the al-Assad cartel, and their billionaire ways were among the 
sources of discontent that provoked the uprising.
What does this bombing mean for Syria and the Middle East?
1.  It demonstrates that the rebels have sympathizers in high 
positions within the regime.  The bomb had to have been planted by an 
insider. This situation reminds me of the American dilemma in Vietnam, 
where we now know that many high-ranking Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) 
officers were in fact sympathizers with the Communists and 
basically double agents.
2.  It follows upon this conclusion that the al-Assad regime is 
unlikely to be able to emulate the Algerian military, which crushed the 
Islamic Salvation Front in a brutal civil war from 1992 through the 
early zeroes of the present century.  Some 150,000 Algerians are said to have 
died in the dirty war, with atrocities on both sides.  But when 
the smoke cleared, the junta was still in control, and its favored 
secular civilians were in office.  In all that time, the Muslim 
fundamentalist opposition never laid a glove on any of the high 
officials or officers.  But the Algerian elite closed ranks against the 
Islamic Salvation Front, having a cultural set of affinities and a 
common source of patronage in the state-owned oil and gas sector. 
If the rebels in Syria can reach into the Security HQ this way, and 
assassinate the highest security officials of the regime, that ability 
does not augur well for Bashar al-Assad’s ability to win the long game, 
as his counterparts did in Algeria.
3.  The targets of the bombing were likely intended to send a message to 
Syria’s minorities.  The minister of defense, Daoud Rajha, was a 
Christian.  The Christian minority, which could be as large as 14% of 
the population, has been on the fence during the revolution, and some 
actively support the secular nationalist regime because they fear Muslim 
fundamentalists will come to power.  Rajha’s assassination was intended to warn 
them to join the revolution or at least get out of its way.  
Likewise, Assef Shawkat, the deputy minister of defense, was an Allawite Shiite 
and was married to Bushra, the sister of Bashar al-Assad.  If it is true that 
Hafez Makhlouf was wounded, he was another prominent 
Allawite.  The rebels are largely (with significant exceptions) Sunni 
Muslims, from the majority community that has not typically held its 
fair proportion of high office.
4.  The rein of terror unleashed by the Allawites on the Sunni 
rebels, using Ghost Brigade death squads, has backfired big time.  Many 
Sunnis formerly allied with the regime have turned on it, including at 
the highest levels.  The defection of the Sunni Tlass family, who had 
dominated the ministry of defense and regime business interests for 
decades, is a straw in the wind here.
5.  The rocket-propelled grenades smuggled to the opposition by Saudi Arabia 
and Qatar, as part of their proxy war against Iran, are allowing the rebels 
occasionally to kill tanks and take down helicopter 
gunships.  The more such weapons they have, and the more sophisticated 
they are, the more they help level the playing field for the rebels.
6.  Defections and desertions of Sunni enlisted men and low-level 
officers could accelerate in the wake of the bombings, as soldiers 
become convinced that the regime will eventually fall.  They won’t want 
to risk their lives fighting for a ship that is anyway sinking, and 
won’t want to risk being seen as war criminals in the aftermath.
7.  The economic disruptions in the capital could be decisive.  With 
the rebels now fighting in districts like Midan and Tadamun, the Syrian 
business classes are not going to be making any money for a while.  
Since for them, the purpose of the Baath Party is to throw them licenses and 
government contracts, they will turn on it if it is unable to 
satisfy their needs.
8.  The fall of the Baath regime in Syria would leave Hizbullah high 
and dry.  Its rockets and other weapons, and some of its communications 
and code-breaking abilities, depended on Syrian help.  The leader of the 
Hizbullah Shiites of south Lebanon (a neighbor of Syria), Hassan 
Nasrullah, gave a speech Wednesday unapologetically supporting the Baath regime 
and sending condolences to the families of those killed.   If 
the regime does fall, the new government is likely to have a grudge with 
Hizbullah for a while.  The downside of any weakening of Hizbullah is 
that it could encourage Israeli expansionism in South Lebanon, as in the 1980s 
and 1990s (Israel’s leaders have long wanted to steal the water 
in south Lebanon’s rivers).
9.  On the other hand, the Muslim Brotherhood is a significant force 
among the rebels, and it likely will play an outsized role in a 
post-Baath Syria.  It has ties to the Muslim fundamentalist party, 
Hamas, which dominates the Gaza Strip.  Hamas could therefore become and more 
formidable adversary for Israel, if it is supported by both the 
Egyptian and Syrian branches of the Muslim Brotherhood.
10.  Given the proliferation of medium weapons among the rebels, the 
longer the civil war goes on, the more likely these arms are to flow 
into Jordan, Israel, Lebanon, Turkey and Iraq, enabling small guerrilla 
groups in those countries to challenge the status quo.  If the Baath 
hangs on for years rather than months, the whole region could see more 
decades of instability. That is why Jordan just declared martial law and has 
begun turning back refugees at the Syrian border That is why Israel’s security 
establishment had an urgent meeting 
Wednesday, and why Syria’s other neighbors are watching developments 
there with anxiety and suspicion.


This seems like a pretty good article.  Juan Cole is a fairly reliable 
source on the Middle East IMHO.  He is a Professor of History at 
UMichigan, is fluent in Arabic, Urdu and Farsi, and has testified before 
Congress on Middle Eastern issues.

Hajja Romi/Blue


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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