July 1, 2011

 

 <http://blogs.cfr.org/abrams/2011/07/01/syria-realpolitik-or-folly/> Syria: 
Realpolitik Or Folly?

 

by Elliott Abrams

 

In the last week the news has brought reports of additional repression in 
Syria, and of the American response: to urge Syrian dissidents to negotiate 
with the Assad regime.

 

This Washington Post account describes typical events on the ground in Syria:

 

“Around 100 peaceful protesters calling for freedom were met with police and 
baton-wielding security forces Thursday at Damascus University.  Students 
gathered outside the faculty of economics in the Baramkeh area of Damascus 
minutes after 3pm today calling for freedom. Dozens more students joined 
together with the small group as the chanting became more forceful. One female 
protester managed to unfurl a flag before police and security forces charged on 
the crowd.”

 

On June 23, The New York Times reported that “Syrian forces backed by snipers 
and tanks stormed into the border town of Khirbet al-Jouz…sending hundreds of 
refugees fleeing to Turkey from the informal camp where they had sought shelter 
from a violent crackdown on protests in the country’s rural northwest.”

 

The Assad regime has adopted a diplomatic and propaganda plan so clear in its 
duplicity that I had assumed no one would fall for it.  While the killing and 
jailing continue, the regime has also allowed one single meeting of dissidents 
in Damascus.  In response, according to the Guardian newspaper in London, “The 
US is pushing the Syrian opposition to maintain dialogue with Bashar al-Assad’s 
regime as details emerge of a controversial ‘roadmap’ for reforms that would 
leave him in power for now despite demands for his overthrow during the 
country’s bloody three-month uprising.”

 

The Guardian account continues: “Quiet US interest in the roadmap dovetails 
with public demands from Washington that Assad reform or step down. Robert 
Ford, the US ambassador, has been urging opposition figures to talk to the 
regime, said Radwan Ziadeh, a leading exile, who insisted the strategy would 
not work. ‘They are asking Bashar to lead the transition and this is not 
acceptable to the protesters,’ he said. ‘It is too late.’”

 

The State Department denies that it is pushing the opposition into compromising 
its objectives and principles, but the Guardian then reports this: “A state 
department spokesman said: ‘We are encouraging genuine dialogue between the 
opposition and the regime but we are not promoting anything. We want to see a 
democratic Syria but this is in the hands of the Syrian people.’”

 

So, it is in the hands of the Syrians—but just in case they don’t get the 
message it is again clarified: the United States wants the regime to talk, not 
to fall.  In recent trips to the Middle East and in conversations with Arab 
democracy activists, I have often been asked why the United States is backing 
Bashar.  After months of denying it, I can only conclude they were right.  How 
else can one read these news reports?

 

It is not possible to have “genuine dialogue” with a regime that has murdered 
roughly 1,400 peaceful protesters, jailed up to 10,000 more, and continues to 
shoot and imprison anyone it pleases.  The American call for such “dialogue” is 
an act of realpolitik that abandons all claim to morality.

 

That is bad enough, but realpolitik must then be judged by its logic and its 
fruits.  There are none, except for undermining the moral position of the 
United States.  To repeat what has been written here before, the Assad regime 
is an enemy of the United States.  It has the blood of tens of thousands of 
Syrians on its hands but also of thousands of Americans, killed in Iraq by 
jihadis it led into Iraq for that purpose.  It is Iran’s only Arab ally, and 
provides Iran with a Mediterranean port, a border with Israel through 
Hizballah, and an arms trafficking route from Iran to Hizballah.  It supports 
and houses Hamas and other Palestinian terrorist groups.  The fall of the Assad 
regime would be the greatest blow we can strike against Iran and its terrorist 
allies today.

 

“Encouraging genuine dialogue” is a pitiful position for the United States to 
take when our interests—and those of our enemies—are so clear, and when 
astonishingly courageous Syrians keep risking their lives to bring down the 
Assad regime.  Our interests and our values coincide in Syria, and both are 
undermined when our policies have the effect of prolonging in power a vicious, 
anti-American regime allied to terrorist groups and to Iran.  This policy is 
folly, not realpolitik.

 

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