Wednesday, March 30, 2011 - 7:04 PM

By Michael Singh
More so than the conflicts in Tunisia, Libya, and Bahrain, and perhaps even more than the fall of Hosni Mubarak in Egypt, the recent violence in Syria has posed a challenge to the Obama administration's strategy in the Middle East. The conflicting impulses within the administration can be seen in recent statements made by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton; days ago, she described Syrian President Bashar al-Assad as a "reformer"; in London on March 29, she issued a "strong condemnation of the Syrian government's brutal repression of demonstrators." Which view of Assad prevails, and how the United States responds to events in Syria, will go a long way toward determining how deeply US.. policy in the Middle East is altered by the recent turmoil there.
One of the key departures President Obama made from his predecessor's policy in the Middle East was in his approach toward Syria. Rather than continuing to heap pressure on the Syrian regime, the Obama Administration returned to the policy of engaging Syria practiced by past administrations. The reasons behind this shift were manifold: the pressure policy was perceived as not working and engagement with hostile regimes broadly was seen as holding diplomatic promise.
Perhaps most importantly, however, Syria was seen as key to making progress in Israeli-Palestinian peace. Damascus not only hosted the headquarters of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad, and therefore in theory held leverage over these groups, but its own negotiations with Israel were essential to achieving the "comprehensive peace" that the administration sought.
After two years, this approach to Syria has borne no fruit. Syria has not increased its compliance with the IAEA investigation into its clandestine nuclear activities, decreased its cooperation with Iran and Hizballah, or reduced its interference in Lebanon or increased its cooperation with the Hariri Tribunal. On the domestic front, far from being a reformer, Assad oversees a regime rated worse for political rights than was Hosni Mubarak's Egypt. And there has been no progress on the Syrian-Israeli track, nor has Syria played a role in the frozen Israeli-Palestinian talks (though granted, those talks have faltered for reasons quite independent of Syrian policies).
But the current US policy toward Syria has not only been unsuccessful in its outcomes -- it was flawed in its conception. US interests and values demand that we support freedom and sovereignty for Palestinians; those same values, however, preclude us from trading the liberty of the Syrian and Lebanese people for Palestinian statehood. Likewise, there is little reason to believe that Bashar al-Assad is truly interested in a Syrian-Israeli peace; Syria's state of war with Israel provides his justification for permanent "emergency laws," and the relations with Iran and Hizballah which he would need to sacrifice to make a deal profit his regime greatly. We may foresee a peace dividend, but Assad uses a different accounting.
There are signs that some within the Obama administration recognize the need to change course on Syria. An unnamed U.S. official told the New York Times on March 26 that "Whatever credibility the [Syrian] government had, they shot it today -- literally....it's definitely in our interest to pursue an agreement, but you can't do it with a government that has no credibility with its population." Some will argue that the problem is not Assad, but his father's "old guard" which surrounds him. But Assad's own statements and policies belie such wishful thinking.
Courting Assad in pursuit of regional goals while neglecting what happens inside Syria is not realpolitik; it may satisfy the politik by smoothing bilateral relations, but it falls short on the real by underemphasizing the impact of political and economic stagnation in the region for US interests. A more creative, less one-dimensional, and more promising approach is needed, which should include reinvigorated economic and political pressure using sanctions and support for Syrian democracy activists. The Assad regime is economically vulnerable -- it lacks its neighbors' natural resources, and there are signs that previous rounds of economic pressure were beginning to stress the regime. It is also politically vulnerable, with a restive population, the urge for reform sweeping the region, and the loss of a Western ally in France, whose foreign minister Alain Juppe recently signaled a major change in French policy toward Syria. In his speech Monday night regarding Libya, President Obama said that "wherever people long to be free, they will find a friend in the United States." He can follow through on this pledge by galvanizing an international coalition to exert pressure on the Assad regime.
One can't help but see shades of St. Paul in the Obama Administration's struggle to decide on its approach toward Assad. It was on the road to Damascus that Paul saw the light and changed his ways; perhaps it will be on the diplomatic road to Damascus that President Obama realizes the need to reorient US policy toward Syria and the region beyond.
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Washington Post Editorial Opinion Mar 29 2011
"We don’t believe that Mr. Assad could deliver on promises of reform even if he wished to. His minority Alawite sect, which represents only 6 percent of Syria’s population, would quickly lose power in a more democratic system. Most likely the dictator, like Mr. Mubarak before him, is seeking to deflect the demands for change with a mixture of violence and false promises. If that proves to be the case, the Obama administration, Mr. Kerry and others who have reached out to Mr. Assad should be ready to respond — by siding decisively with those in Syria seeking genuine change."
Syrian president orders study on emergency laws(?)
By ZEINA KARAM, Associated Press Mar 31
"Facing a massive protest movement demanding reform, Syria's president set up committees Thursday to look into the deaths of civilians during nearly two weeks of unrest and replacing decades-old emergency laws. The moves appear to be a carefully designed attempt by President Bashar Assad to head off massive protests planned for Friday while showing he will not be pressured to implement reform — instead, he will make changes at his own pace. On Wednesday, he dashed expectations that he would announce sweeping changes, instead blaming two weeks of popular fury on a foreign conspiracy during his first comments since the protests began. It was not immediately clear whether Thursday's overtures would succeed in pacifying a growing protest movement in one of Mideast's most autocratic regimes."
Violence against protests in Syria: Why the mild US response?
By the Christian Science Monitor's Editorial Board – Fri Apr 1
"The violent crackdown by Syria's regime is not the only reason for a strong US response to help protect the lives of protesters. Syria, as a potential democratic state in the heart of the region with 22 million people, is far more important to American interests than is Libya. It is now the Grand Central Station for a number of conflicts, from Lebanon to Iraq to Gaza, and all done with Iran as an ally. Stability in Syria – which Obama desires – can’t be achieved by US silence toward a government that has used live ammunition on young protesters chanting 'peaceful, peaceful, freedom freedom.”
You don’t buy broken glass because you can’t fix it and put it back the way it was. Young Assad is too chattered between all type of domestic, regional and international disputes... Therefore it is a waste of time and too risky... he has to be replaced by someone who meets the aspiration of young Syrians seeking democracy, freedom & reform since this is the only spoken language of our time.
better not get involved america with syria! its better to stay away of the arabic countries!why should always get involved in others, they must learn from irak!
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I support freedom and sovereignty for the Palestinians, and I am a Zionist. Really, what Israel and the Palestinians are haggling about are the terms of peace and whether "international justice" will require that Israel cease its exsitence as a Jewish state in order to satisfy the Palestinians.
As far as disconnected "Bantustans", remember that the West Bank and Gaza strip are completely disconnected by the fac tthat they don't border each other, so any Palestinian state that includes both is going to be disconnected.
The war against the Jews that Arvay supports is one of the devices used by dictators like Assad to justify the militarization of his society. Real progress for Syria and Syrians, like for Palestinians, requires that they abandon the war against the Jews and Israel, but you'll neer hear this from him or the other antis who dominate Foreign Policy's blogs. He would rather have Syrians oppressed by Assad and war against the Jews than peace and freedom for Syrians.
Syria and Syrians have much to gain by ending the occupation of Lebanon and allowing that country to live in peace with both of its neighbors. Syria prevented that back in the 1980s and continues to do so to this day.
Syria and Syrian have much to gain from making peace with israel. Peace between Syria, Lebanon, and Israel would set the proper example for other Middle Eastern peoples and should lead to reconciliation between Shi'ites, Sunnis, and Kurds in Iraq. Peace between Muslim sects in Iraq may lead to the same in Bahrein and Saudi Arabia and just possibly might spread throughout the region.
If Obama is anywhere near as smart as he likes to tell us, what he will learn from the situation in Syria is that he has had the dynamics of the region exactly backwards. If he has any integrity, he will then reverse course and put getting the various factions in each of the conflicts to focus on the attitudinal changes necessary to achieving a region-wide peace.
If he succeeds there, just maybe the Palestinians will finally figure it out and undertake to living in peace with the Jews as well.
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Can you imagine that there would be a discussion in the French or Chinese parliament that Obama is a bad president so we should get rid of him and to achieve that we should take measures that hurt the US economically and we should encourage Tea Party protesters and arm anyone who wants to fight? Yet this about the kind of reasoning this article represents.
As a recent study discussed here in Foreign Policy showed foreign interventions aimed at regime change seldom produce democracy. It is much better to aim for gradual change - no matter how much that may test your patience.
As for economic sanctions: We have seen it time and again that it only strengthens authoritarian regimes as it hampers the rise of independent entrepreneurs and helps the creation of a clique of smugglers around the dictator. It is also harmful long after the dictator has left. In Serbia for example one can still see the effects as many of the business men are former smugglers/cronies of Milosevic.
Interest is directing our actions to god
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Shadow Government is a blog about U.S. foreign policy under the Obama administration, written by experienced policy makers from the loyal opposition and curated by Peter D. Feaver and William Inboden.
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