Syria is melting down. The ruling regime’s attempt to shoot its way out of the
largest uprising it has ever faced has killed over 80,000 people and displaced
roughly half of Syria’s population of 22 million. If the current monthly death
tolls of around 6,000 keep up, Syria will by August hit a grim milestone:
100,000 killed, a number that it took almost twice as long to reach in Bosnia
in the early 1990s. This a full two years after U.S. President Barack Obama
pronounced that President Bashar al-Assad needed to “step aside.”
Comparisons to the
Balkans do not suffice to describe the crisis in Syria, however. The real
danger is that the country could soon end up looking more like Somalia, where a
bloody two-decade-long civil war has torn apart the state and created a
sanctuary for criminals and terrorists. Syria has already effectively fractured
into three barely contiguous areas. In each, U.S.-designated terrorist
organizations are now ascendant. The regime still holds sway in western Syria,
the part of the country dominated by the Alawite minority, to which the Assad
family belongs; and fighters from Hezbollah, a Shiite Islamist group backed by
Iran, regularly cross the increasingly meaningless Lebanese border to join
Assad’s forces there. Meanwhile, a heavily Sunni Arab north-central region has
come under the control of a diverse assortment of armed opposition groups.
These include Jabhat al-Nusra (also known as the al-Nusra Front), an al Qaeda affiliate, which recently hoisted its black flag over Syria’s largest dam on the Euphrates. In the Kurdish north, a local offshoot of the militant Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, which has fought a long guerrilla war against the Turkish government, operates freely.
These include Jabhat al-Nusra (also known as the al-Nusra Front), an al Qaeda affiliate, which recently hoisted its black flag over Syria’s largest dam on the Euphrates. In the Kurdish north, a local offshoot of the militant Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, which has fought a long guerrilla war against the Turkish government, operates freely.
Look closer, and
the picture gets worse. The conflict, whose daily death toll is now above those
at the height of the Iraq war, in 2007, is rapidly spilling over into
neighboring countries. The Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan has become that
country’s fourth-largest city (population: 180,000), stretching the Hashemite
kingdom’s resources and threatening the stability of its northern provinces.
Lebanese Sunnis and Shiites, no strangers to sectarian tensions, are fighting
each other across the Bekaa Valley in Syria, and Syria-related altercations
occasionally break out within Lebanon. The fact that Lebanon, a country where
Palestinian refugee camps are synonymous with misery and militancy, is even
contemplating building camps for Syrian refugees is itself a sign of how bad
things have gotten. And lest it be unclear how this affects the United States,
al Qaeda in Iraq, a terrorist organization that Washington sacrificed an
enormous amount of blood and money trying to defeat, has found a welcome home
in Syria, announcing in April that it was joining forces with Jabhat al-Nusra
to form the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
The fact that the
Assad regime has reportedly dipped into its stockpile of chemical weapons --
the region’s largest -- has moved the crisis up several spots on the White
House’s list of urgent problems. Although public opinion polls suggest that
Americans are wary of intervention, avoiding the problem looks less and less
feasible, as the situation in Syria shifts from a mostly contained humanitarian
catastrophe to a strategic disaster for the United States and its regional
allies. A country in a region that is home to 65 percent of the world’s proven
oil reserves and 40 percent of its natural gas is on the verge of becoming a
lawless haven for terrorists where dangerous weapons are on the loose.
Like it or not,
the question the Obama administration now faces is not whether to do more to
help resolve the conflict but when, how, and at what cost. Las Vegas rules do
not apply to Syria: what happens there will not stay there. The massive refugee
crisis and the threat that dangerous weapons could fall into the hands of
terrorists -- jihadists and Kurdish separatists alike -- directly threaten the
security of Washington’s allies in Iraq, Israel, Jordan, and Turkey. The
meltdown of the Syrian state is empowering terrorist groups and could
ultimately give them the freedom to plan international attacks, as the chaos of
Afghanistan in the 1990s did for al Qaeda. As complex as the Syrian crisis has
become, one thing is clear: the longer it lasts, the greater the threat it
poses and the harder it becomes for the United States to do anything about it.
To stop Syria’s
meltdown and contain its mushrooming threats, the United States needs a new
approach, one that starts with a partial military intervention aimed at pushing
all sides to the negotiating table. The only way Washington can resolve the
crisis is by working with the people “within Syria,” as the Obama
administration refers to the domestic opposition, instead of without them, that
is, at the UN Security Council.
THE COST OF
INACTION
The White House’s
approach to the Syrian crisis so far has been top-down, relying on diplomacy to
get Assad out of the way and create the space for a peaceful transition to
democracy. But simply pushing the sides to reach a viable political settlement
has become less and less likely to succeed. International diplomatic mediation
has failed mostly because Washington and Moscow disagree about what the
transition should look like. Whereas the Americans demand that Assad and his
cronies must leave Syria, Russia insists that he, or at least the regime, stay
in place. To this end, Moscow has vetoed three Security Council resolutions on
Syria that were sponsored by the United States or its allies and watered down
or stymied countless others. Although the two countries recently announced
plans to hold an international conference to deal with the crisis, the chances
that it will bear fruit are exceeding low given the ambiguity over what the end
result of any negotiations among the warring parties would be, the lack of
urgency on the part of both the regime and the opposition to come to a
power-sharing agreement, and Moscow’s and Washington’s inability to bring the
sides to the table.
In the meantime,
Washington has sought Damascus’ diplomatic isolation; imposed a raft of oil,
trade, and financial sanctions targeting the regime; helped organize a number
of hopelessly divided and exiled political opposition groups into the National
Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces; reached out to
civilian activists in Syria; and offered $760 million in humanitarian
assistance to Syrian civilians. Fearing that American weapons could find their way
into the hands of extremists, the United States has more or less ignored the
armed opposition, which effectively replaced the civilian activists at the
vanguard of the effort to topple Assad more than a year and a half ago and
already controls large swaths of territory in the country. Washington’s
hesitation has led many armed groups to seek support elsewhere -- including
from private Salafi and jihadist funders in Kuwait, Libya, Qatar, and Saudi
Arabia.
The Obama
administration has sent a trickle of nonlethal assistance, such as medicine and
nearly expired ready-to-eat meals, to the rebel Supreme Military Council, an
armed partner of the National Coalition. But this paltry aid will neither force
the downfall of the regime nor earn Washington the loyalty of the opposition.
Although the White House announced in April, with great fanfare, that it would
send bulletproof vests and night-vision goggles to certain vetted armed groups,
it appears that this will be too little, too late to win over most of those fighting
to oust Assad. Each week, protesters in certain areas regularly berate the
United States, and Obama in particular, for doing little for the Syrians in
their hour of need. One such demonstration, in Kafr Nabl last April, featured a
protest banner asking Obama whether he needed a third term to decide what to do
about Syria, and if so, if any Syrians would still be alive then. Since those
now aiming shots at the regime will soon call the shots where regime forces
give way, Washington should take their growing resentment seriously.
The one thing that
Obama has indicated might lead the United States to step in militarily, of
course, is Assad’s use of chemical weapons. But even here, Washington has
vacillated, betraying a deep aversion to getting involved. Obama’s redline on
chemical weapons has shifted over time. At first, it included any “movement or
use” of such weapons. Then, last November, it narrowed to include only their
use, after U.S. intelligence detected that the regime had loaded sarin gas into
bombs. Then, in late April, the administration seemed to suggest it would act
only to stop the “systematic use” of chemical weapons and only when their use
could be verified beyond a shadow of a doubt (a tall order, given that
Washington cannot itself directly gather the samples needed for such
certainty).
The U.S.
government says it wants to force Assad from power and check the rise of the
extremists in the opposition. But its current approach is furthering neither
objective. If Washington keeps pursuing a UN-mediated settlement with Russia
while allowing the conflict to deteriorate, Moscow will lose its ability to
bring the regime to the table for talks on a real transition of power. As the
bitter sectarian war continues, the regime’s supporters and the Alawites will
have more reasons to fear one day living under Sunni rule and will see a
carved-out ministate as preferable to a political settlement -- and thus resist
any negotiations. Meanwhile, the United States will have lost whatever
diplomatic leverage it might once have had over the opposition forces, who
increasingly feel that the Americans abandoned them in their hour of need.
A BETTER WAY
FORWARD
Neither the
war-weary American public nor the Syrian opposition wants to see a full-scale
U.S. land invasion to topple Assad and install a U.S.-backed government; both
fear that a massive intervention would mean a repeat of Iraq. But that doesn’t
mean the United States lacks options. Washington should pursue a measured but
assertive course, one aimed at preventing Assad from freely using his most
lethal weapons, establishing safe areas for civilians on Syria’s borders, and
supporting vetted elements of the armed and civilian opposition with weapons,
intelligence, humanitarian aid, and reconstruction assistance. The end goal (as
opposed to the starting point, as the Obama administration now favors) should
be negotiations, led by the UN or another party, that lead to the departure of
Assad and his entourage and the reunification of the country. If the United States
wants a Syria that is united, stable, and eventually more democratic -- and
perhaps no longer allied with Iran -- this is the least bad way to get there.
The United States
should start by deterring the regime from using its most lethal tools, namely
surface-to-surface missiles and chemical weapons. Such deterrence will require
taking out the bombs filled with sarin gas that, according to The New
York Times, were placed last year “near or on” Syrian air bases. Destroying
those bombs would allow Washington to signal to Assad that preparing to use his
advanced weapons will carry a cost. This would likely reduce the death toll and
give Syrian civilians caught up in the fighting fewer reasons to flee their
homes, thus helping stem the refugee crisis. If Assad nonetheless decided to up
the ante, Washington should launch pinpoint air, missile, or, possibly, drone
strikes to destroy or render useless his remaining stockpiles of chemical
weapons and the missiles that could deliver them. (Of course, the U.S. military
would have to take extra care to avoid harming civilians with nearby chemical
explosions.) Should the U.S. military fail to locate or destroy Assad’s most
dangerous weapons, or deem it too risky to try, it could instead hit Syrian
command-and-control facilities.
Second, to protect
Syrians in opposition-controlled territory from attacks by the regime’s Scud
missiles and fixed-wing aircraft, the United States should establish 50- to
80-mile-deep safe areas within Syria along its borders with Jordan and Turkey.
Critics of intervention often cast the idea of creating a no-fly zone in Syria
as too risky for the U.S. pilots and planes that would be involved. But a
limited approach focused on border regions would be less perilous, since the
regime’s planes and missiles could be shot down using Patriot missile batteries
based in Jordan and Turkey or by aircraft flying there. And the safe areas
would still allow civilians to take shelter from Assad’s onslaught, keep
refugees from flooding into neighboring countries, and enable the international
community to funnel in humanitarian aid on a scale that local nongovernmental
organizations cannot match.
Carving out these safe areas would also necessitate U.S. air or missile strikes on nearby artillery -- Assad’s tool of choice for killing civilians and a possible method of delivering chemical weapons -- and air defense systems. But these, too, could be conducted from over the border.
Carving out these safe areas would also necessitate U.S. air or missile strikes on nearby artillery -- Assad’s tool of choice for killing civilians and a possible method of delivering chemical weapons -- and air defense systems. But these, too, could be conducted from over the border.
To be sure, the
United States could not protect the safe areas from ground assaults by Assad’s
forces. But by eliminating the threat of death from above, whether from
missiles or aircraft, a remote no-fly zone could give the rebels in these areas
a fighting chance and the space they needed to safeguard civilians on the
ground. Similarly, this over-the-border approach would not be as effective in
preventing civilian casualties as sending U.S. aircraft over Syria, but it
would carry substantially fewer risks of U.S. planes being shot down by Syrian
antiaircraft batteries. If the conflict markedly worsened or the regime began
using its chemical weapons wholesale against the opposition, Washington would
also be able to expand the safe areas toward the center of the country and
create a larger no-fly zone. But both the limited, remote option and an expanded
no-fly zone could be constrained by the introduction of sophisticated Russian
S-300 antiaircraft missile systems, which reportedly could be operational in
Syria as early as August -- another reminder of the costs of waiting.
Third, Washington
needs to work directly with opposition forces on the ground in Syria (as
opposed to just those outside it) to push back the government’s forces, deliver
humanitarian assistance, and, most important, check the growing influence of
Islamic extremists. This should include the provision of arms to vetted armed
groups on a trial-and-error basis, with Washington monitoring how the
battalions use the intelligence, supplies, and arms they receive. The initial
aid should be funneled through non-Salafi figures in the Supreme Military
Council, such as Colonel Abdul-Jabbar Akidi, head of Aleppo’s Revolutionary
Military Council and of the armaments committee of the Supreme Military
Council’s Northern Front. (It was through Akidi that the United States recently
channeled its nonlethal assistance, including the bulletproof vests.) At the
same time, Washington should encourage members of the National Coalition to
enter liberated areas and work together with the armed groups and local
councils to build a new viable political leadership on the ground based on
local elections.
None of this work
would require American boots on the ground in an offensive capacity, but it
could involve Americans wearing other types of footwear. The United States
should immediately establish secure offices in southern Turkey and northern
Jordan as centers devoted to working with the Syrian opposition, adding to the
discussions that are currently taking place between Washington and some rebels
via Skype and through periodic visits of U.S. officials to the border. As soon
as their safety can be reasonably well assured, U.S. diplomats and intelligence
officers should be sent into the safe areas that the United States has
established in Syria, with protection, to meet directly with civilian and armed
opposition members, activists, and relief workers. Establishing close
relationships with players in Syria would free the United States from having to
work through Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey, which have in the past directed
assistance into the wrong hands; Saudi-purchased Croatian arms, for example,
were seen earlier this year in the possession of Jabhat al-Nusra. A more direct
approach would, admittedly, put some American lives at risk, so every possible
security precaution would need to be taken to avoid an attack along the lines
of the 2012 assault in Benghazi that killed Christopher Stevens, the U.S.
ambassador to Libya.
Still,
establishing a presence on the ground would be worth the risks, allowing the
United States to work directly with Syrian armed groups to contain the Assad
regime and ultimately influence the character of the opposition. One way to
exert such influence would be to condition assistance on the opposition groups’
political orientations and their respect for civilian leadership and human rights.
The United States should also try to influence Syrian politics on the local
level to prevent the total collapse of governance in rebel-held territories.
Once the opposition fully liberates an area, Washington should require
elections to select a civilian leadership. This process would help avoid chaos
as the regime crumbles and expose local attitudes and sympathies, allowing U.S.
officials to assess the influence of various extremist groups.
Those who oppose
increasing U.S. aid to the opposition tend to point to its uglier elements,
particularly to fighters affiliated with al Qaeda. But only by getting involved
can the United States shape the opposition and support its moderate forces.
Although anti-Americanism is growing among the rebels, there is still time for
a ground-up strategy to win back their trust. This could be achieved through
backing the more liberal, secular, and nationalist battalions and isolating --
and possibly launching drone strikes against -- those extremist forces that
refuse to accept civilian authority during the transition.
With U.S. help,
there are good reasons to believe that moderates within the opposition can
prevail. At its core, the Syrian revolution is a nationalist one. Of the three
main currents in the opposition -- secularists, moderate Islamists (including
those in the Muslim Brotherhood), and Salafists -- the first two are more
nationalist in orientation; their goals are more political than religious, and
their agendas do not extend beyond Syria. Several Salafi and extremist groups,
such as Jabhat al-Nusra, have transnational goals, such as the creation of an
Islamic state or caliphate beyond Syria’s current borders. The main reason such
groups have come to play such a big role in the opposition is that the
anti-Assad forces have had to turn to the Gulf states for weapons and money --
and the sources there have favored the Salafists, which according to some
estimates account for up to a quarter of all the opposition fighters. The
United States could earn the influence it seeks by providing intelligence,
military training, and weapons of its own.
Another factor
that will likely check the influence of radicals in the opposition is the
diversity of Syria’s Sunni community and the country’s historic tolerance of
minorities. Syria’s Sunnis, who make up the majority of the opposition, have
long identified with their region or tribe rather than their religion. Whereas
Salafists have been able to win some support in the religiously conservative
northwest, Damascene Sunnis are more moderate, in keeping with their city’s
mercantile culture. In the south and the east, affiliations with large families
and tribes, even those that stretch into Iraq, tend to matter the most. What
this means is that religiously motivated atrocities against minorities
throughout Syria are not inevitable and that the Sunnis will need to learn to
work with one another as much as with non-Sunnis. To be sure, the prominent
role of the Alawites in the regime’s campaign could lead to retribution in
areas where Assad’s forces retreat. But so far, there have been remarkably few
cases of opposition forces killing minority civilians en masse. A more active
United States could help keep it this way, including by insisting that the
opposition follow certain rules of conduct in order to receive U.S. assistance.
Finally, after
stepping up its involvement, Washington should seek talks between the regime
and moderate opposition forces, sponsored by either the UN or, given the UN’s
poor track record, another party, such as Switzerland or Norway. The timing of
such talks, which would need to come on the heels of a cease-fire, would
largely be dependent on the course of the war and on when Russia and the United
States could arrive at a common vision for the transition and an understanding
of how to get to that point. Only by raising the costs of diplomatic
intransigence for both the Syrian government and Russia, with a clear show of
U.S. support for the opposition, is Washington likely to persuade the Kremlin
to play a constructive role in the conflict’s endgame. By tipping the balance
on the ground toward the opposition, Washington could convince the regime -- or
at least its patrons in Moscow -- that the conflict will not end by force
alone. What is more, such increased U.S. support for the opposition would give
the Americans more leverage to bring the rebels to the negotiating table.
At first, any
talks would have to focus on getting Assad, his security chiefs, and his top
generals to step down and leave the country. The ultimate goal would be the
reunification of the country within a democratic and decentralized structure
that recognized regional differences. Ideally, Syria’s current division into 14
provinces would be maintained. But in areas of the country that are less
ethnically homogeneous, such as the province of Homs, the provinces might have
to be split along the lines of manatiq (counties) or nahawi (townships).
Despite such changes, maintaining the provinces as the building blocks of a
democratic system would emphasize regionalism over sectarian identities,
encouraging all Syrians to work together toward regional and, eventually,
national reconciliation.
Solidifying this
order would require Washington to get Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey to cut
off support to their clients in Syria, such as the Muslim Brotherhood and
Salafi groups, in favor of local and regional elected representatives. These
countries will no doubt be tempted to continue backing their preferred
political fronts in Syria, but Washington should push them to recognize that
this approach has failed to bring about Assad’s downfall and has allowed for
the proliferation of dangerous nonstate actors. The United States now has an
opportunity to play the role that these countries have asked it to play from
day one of the crisis: to lead a coalition to get rid of the Assad regime and
take Syria out of Iran’s orbit. In return, Washington should make clear that it
expects their cooperation.
STOPPING THE
BLEEDING
Taking these steps
would help Washington constrain Assad’s behavior, address a pressing
humanitarian crisis, shape the fragmented Syrian opposition, and keep the
conflict from spilling out of Syria’s borders. It would also give the United
States an opportunity to prevent the division of Syria -- a short-term inevitability
-- from becoming a permanent reality. Keeping Syria whole is necessary to
prevent its dangerous weapons and its problems, which will no doubt persist for
some time, from affecting neighboring countries. A prolonged sectarian civil
war risks becoming a broader proxy fight between Iran and the Sunni powers,
which would devastate the region as a whole.
Much of what
Washington envisages in Syria may not go according to plan. American bullets
could find their way into Salafi Kalashnikovs, and American radios could fall
into the hands of those preaching hatred. Violence and massacres could delay or
prevent elections in some areas. And the conflict could remain a stalemate for
years to come, with no side gaining the decisive upper hand. The United States’
commitment to any one facet of this plan should not be open ended, and
Washington will need to continually evaluate how well it is meeting its
objectives.
Despite the many
risks, it is important that the United States continue to help parts of the
Syrian opposition on the ground take power -- and not attempt to give power to
those in exile who promise much but can in fact deliver little. Given the
degree of Syria’s meltdown and the country’s strategic importance, standing
idly by is the worst option. Establishing a stronger relationship with the
opposition is what will best allow the United States to shape an outcome among
the warring parties that suits its interests and those of its allies and
provides a better future for the Syrian people.
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