Syrian Civil War: Russia Forges Risky Ties with Islamists




RSIS presents the following commentary Syrian Civil War: Russia Forges Risky
Ties with Islamists by James M. Dorsey. It is also available online at this link.
(To print it, click on this link.). Kindly forward any comments or feedback to the
Editor RSIS Commentaries, at  RSISPublication@ntu.edu.sg


No. 100/2013 dated 27 May 2013

Syrian Civil War: Russia Forges
Risky Ties with Islamists

By James M. Dorsey

Synopsis

In a strategy fraught with risk, Russian President Vladimir Putin is exploiting deep-
seated domestic anger at the United States and fundamentalist Russian Orthodoxy
to justify his support for embattled Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and forge an
alliance with Islamist forces.

Commentary
RUSSIAN PRESIDENT Vladimir Putin is countering foreign criticism of his pro-Assad
policy and Russia’s declining credibility in sections of Arab public opinion by forging
ties with Islamist detractors.

In a move that serves both Putin’s domestic and Russia’s foreign interests, a cross
section of Islamist and secular political opinion in the Middle East and North Africa
recently attended a Vaidal Discussion Club conference organised by the Institute of
Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, the RIA Novosti news agency
and Council on Foreign and Defence Policy, Moscow, with the backing of the Russian
Foreign Ministry.

Forging commonalities

Officially intended as a brainstorming on rising Islamist political forces in the region
stretching from the Atlantic coast of Africa to the Gulf  that is  wracked by popular
protest and discontent, the conference offered Russian officials, academics and
journalists an opportunity to drive home the notion that conservative Russian
Orthodox Christians and Islamists share a common value system.

Reduced international credibility for backing Al-Assad is a small price to pay,
particularly at a time when Putin has been travelling inside the country to regain
some of his lost popularity. If all foreign policy is domestic, President Putin should be
a popular man. He is standing up to the United States and the West, which in the
eyes of many Russians were the reasons for their country’s decline as a super power
and economic hardship. A significant slice of Russian public opinion believes that
Russia’s current problems stem from the US imposing neo-liberal policies on it in the
1990s.

Catching several flies in one swoop

In reaching out to the Islamists, Russia hopes to catch several flies in one fell swoop.
It aligns itself, despite differences over Syria, with a political force that is on the rise
and demonstrates that it can still wield influence in the Middle East and North Africa.
Islamists have won post-revolt elections in Egypt and Tunisia and are a major force in
Libya and Yemen – the four countries that witnessed the toppling of their autocratic
leaders in the last two years – and are an important segment in the armed resistance
to the Al-Assad regime in Syria. It also serves Russia in its confrontation with Islamist
insurgents in the Caucasus.

To achieve its goal, Russia deliberately included arch conservative Russian Orthodox
officials and journalists among the participants in Marrakech who represent an
important segment of Russian society. According to a prominent Russian analyst: “The
Soviet era is over. The post-Soviet era is over. There is nothing to fill the vacuum.
Logically something pre-Soviet will fill the vacuum. It is likely to fail, but for now that is
an ultra-conservative streak of Russian Orthodoxy”.

In exchanges with Islamists from Egypt, Iran, Lebanese group Hezbollah and Palestine’s 
Hamas, among others, Russian Orthodox conservatives left more liberal Arabs and
Westerners aghast at the length to which they were willing to go in their wooing of the
Islamists. Conservative Russian Orthodox journalists and officials asserted that Western
culture was in decline while Oriental culture was on the rise, that gays and gender
equality threaten a woman’s right to remain at home and serve her family and that Iran
should be the model for women’s rights.

A senior Russian official told the conference that people understood the manipulation
employed by Western democracies. However, he said, religious values offered a moral and 
ethical guideline that guarded against speculation and economic bubbles while traditional 
Islamic concepts coincided with their guidelines.

A strategy that could backfire

Russia’s deployment of conservative Russian Orthodoxy could well help Putin and Moscow
further their interests, but it is also a strategy that could backfire. It could associate Russia
with a force that ultimately proves incapable of leading reform. Egyptian President
Mohammed Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood are under fire for failing to make good on
the goals of the popular revolt that overthrew President Hosni Mubarak, including greater
freedom, dismantling of the Mubarak-era repressive machinery, corruption and economic
reform. Similarly, Tunisia’s Islamist-led government has yet to demonstrate that it can
manage the country’s post-revolt transition.

The difficulties Egyptian and Tunisian Islamists are experiencing in  making the move from
clandestine groups to inclusive administrations has prompted Islamists elsewhere to rethink
a too early acceptance of responsibility and power. Jordanian Muslim Brothers boycotted
elections earlier this year officially in protest against gerrymandering, but also with an eye
on what was happening elsewhere in the region.

Similarly, Russia’s position on Syria is likely to become ever more unpalatable as the
violence in Syria on both sides of the divide becomes ever more brutal. If and when
Al-Assad is forced out of office, Russia’s alliance with the Islamists could identify it with
one faction rather than as an independent player in what is likely to be a prolonged, ugly
and bloody struggle for power.

Finally, Islamists are likely to maintain their support for their brethren in the Caucasus
irrespective of their relations with Moscow. That would render Russian foreign policy in
the perceptions of many as purely opportunistic and undermine Moscow’s claim that
its policies, including its support of Al-Assad, are based on principles such as non-
interference in the domestic affairs of others.

Said a prominent Russian analyst: “It’s a brilliant strategy if it works. The problem is
that if we end up with egg in our face, we will be further from home than we are now”.

 James M. Dorsey is a Senior Fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. He is the author of the
 blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer.


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