Syrian President Al-Assad plays a strong hand in diplomatic poker.
By James M.
Dorsey
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Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has put restoration of
control of all of Syria at the core of efforts to manage multiple Middle
Eastern rivalries that often play out in his war-ravaged country.
Mr.
Al-Assad’s demand means different things to different parties.
For a group
of Arab countries led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, it means
returning Syria to the Arab fold as part of a bid to dial back Iranian
influence, reduce drug smuggling, and return Syrian refugees and internally
displaced persons to their homes.
At least
seven million people have fled Syria or been internally displaced since Mr.
Al-Assad sparked a civil war with his brutal crackdown in 2011 on
anti-government protesters.
In response,
the 22-member Arab League suspended Syrian membership.
Mr. Al-Assad's unwillingness to compromise on restoring
his control has convinced some Arab countries that treating him as a pariah has
failed to produce the desired results.
As a result,
countries like Jordan, Egypt, and Iraq joined the UAE and Saudi Arabia in
engaging with Mr. Al-Assad without holding him accountable for his conduct in
the civil war.
Meeting in
Amman this week, the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, and Iraq
joined their Syrian counterpart in demanding the restoration of the
Al-Assad government's sovereignty in all of Syria, strengthening Syrian government
institutions, and ending operations by armed groups and militant organizations
on Syrian soil.
The
ministers also called for an end to foreign interference in Syria.
For Mr.
Al-Assad, that means US-backed armed Kurdish groups, jihadists, Turkish-backed militants
in northern Syria, and Turkish and US forces.
The Gulf
states would also include Iranian forces and aligned groups, which Mr. Al-Assad
views, alongside the Russian military, as invited by the government.
Russian-mediated
talks between senior Turkish and Syrian officials that also involve Iranian
representatives have so far failed to lead to a meeting between Mr. Al-Assad
and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
The deputy
foreign ministers of the four countries met in Moscow last week to draft a roadmap for a meeting between the Syrian and
Turkish leaders.
A Turkish-Syrian
summit figure prominently during Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi’s visit to
Damascus this week even though economic
cooperation dominated his discussions with Mr. Al-Assad.
Until
recently, Mr. Erdogan demanded the removal of Mr. Al-Assad, supported Syrian
opposition groups, and sought to prevent Syrian Kurds from carving out an
autonomous region on Turkey’s border.
Mr. Al-Assad
has made a meeting with the Turkish leader conditional on Turkey’s willingness
to withdraw its military from northern Syria and restore the situation that prevailed before the
Syrian war.
Turkey has
deployed thousands of troops in northern Syria, preventing the Russia-backed
Syrian army from retaking the region.
Progress in
Turkish-Syrian talks could depend on the outcome of hard-fought presidential
and parliamentary elections in Turkey on May 14 that, according to opinion
polls, promise to be a close race.
Also
complicating Syria’s stabilization is Israel, the joker in the pack. Israel is
unlikely to halt its attacks on Iranian positions and operations of Hezbollah,
the Iranian-backed Lebanese Shiite militia in Syria.
As a result,
the Arab states’ caving into Mr. Al-Assad’s demand is likely to produce, at the
most, a limited quid pro quo.
Expressing
opposition to Mr. Al-Assad’s return to the Arab fold, Qatari Prime Minister
Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani noted that “there were reasons for the
suspension of Syria from the Arab League and the boycott of the Syrian regime
in that time, and these reasons still exist. The war has stopped, but Syrian
people are still displaced, there are innocent people in prisons, there are
many things."
Breaking a
taboo that frowns on television series lampooning Arab rulers, Qatar-based
Al-Araby TV broadcast during the recent month of Ramadan Ebtasem Ayoha Al
General or
Smile General, a Syrian-exile production about a corrupt ruling family modelled
on the Al-Assads.
Even so, with
Arab leaders concerned that pressing Mr. Al-Assad to hold officials accountable
for wartime abuses, loosen the political reins, genuinely engage with
opposition groups, and release thousands from prison would focus attention on
their own autocracies and tarnished human rights records, addressing the
refugee crisis is unlikely to produce results any time soon.
Moreover,
encouraging refugees to return and persuading Mr. Al-Assad to distance himself
from Iran would require significant investment in Syria’s reconstruction. That
is likely to be hampered by US sanctions that will remain in place, even if the
Syrian leader returns to the Arab fold.
Without
significant investment, few refugees will likely return to a country where an
estimated 90 percent of the population lives under the poverty line, the local currency has devalued by
75 percent, and inflation is running at an estimated 55 percent.
As a result,
drug smuggling may be one area where substantial results are achievable.
This week,
Jordan's foreign ministry said that Syria had agreed at the meeting in Amman to
take steps “to end drug smuggling,” a reference to Captagon, a highly addictive
amphetamine.
Saudi
Arabia, the UAE, Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon, and Greece have intercepted large
amounts of Captagon manufactured in Syria. The production and illegal export of
the drug worth an estimated US$50 billion a year has become an economic lifeline for Mr. Al-Assad’s regime.
US Assistant
Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Barbara Leaf acknowledged that drug smuggling might be the major
concession Arab states can wrest from Mr. Al-Assad.
“Our approach…is
to say… make sure that you get something for that engagement. And I would put
ending the Captagon trade right at the top alongside ... providing relief to
the Syrian people from the terrible decade of oppression that they've suffered,”
Ms. Leaf said.
Responsible
Statecraft published an earlier version of this story.
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Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning
journalist and scholar, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang Technological
University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, and the author of
the syndicated column and podcast, The
Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
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