War is of its nature an uncertain business. Only in retrospect does Assad’s fall, so improbable last week, now look fated. It is ironic, given the opprobrium with which Arab normalisation with his regime was greeted by pro-rebel advocates, that that same normalisation may have helped spell his doom. Seeking to reintegrate himself into the Arab fold, Assad allowed relations to cool with the Iran-centred Resistance Axis which had ensured his survival a decade ago. Yemen’s Houthis have accused Assad of clamping down on their activities in Syria to win Israeli and Gulf Arab favour; Iran now briefs that Assad was an ungrateful and undependable ally in their conflict with Israel; Hezbollah, smarting at Assad’s standoffish response to their recent setbacks, swiftly abandoned a last-minute attempt to preserve his rule.
For all that the Western advocates of the Resistance Axis worldview lament the downfall of their embattled hero, it was the decisions made by the Iranian and Hezbollah leadership to abandon him to his fate that made Assad’s fall so swift and relatively bloodless. Hamas has congratulated the victorious rebels; Hezbollah has expressed its support for Syria’s territorial integrity and political transition; with Russia apparently negotiating with HTS to preserve its coastal bases in Syria, and Iran and the new regime establishing diplomatic relations, when Assad finally sank, the regional waters closed over him with barely a ripple.
Syria now pauses at a crossroads, where both hope for a better future, and scepticism that it will be achieved, are equally warranted. The essential problem of Syrian politics has always been how to manage the country’s religious and ethnic diversity. The Baathist model, essentially an alliance of minorities and the Sunni elite against the Sunni Arab mass (and east of the Euphrates, of Sunni Arab tribes against the Kurds), in the end failed. Whether or not the new Syrian regime can succeed is an open question. Yet whatever happens now, it is up to Syrians to achieve. Rebel victory was won not by Western intervention but by the West essentially walking away from the Syria question at a loss. Advocates of the Syrian rebels, who spent a decade demanding Western military intervention to place a rebel government on the throne, now possess the end-state they have fought for for so long. Now it is their responsibility to ensure that the system they demanded is an improvement upon that which it replaced. The Assad government’s fall was not the result of the West’s actions, nor will the results be the West’s responsibility.
Indeed, it is for the better that Assad’s fall was not the product of Western bombs. This was a Syrian-led transition, helmed by a group Western powers spurn as terrorists, whose success depended as much upon the sudden decision by Assad’s own former loyalists that the regime was no longer worth fighting for as it did the rebels’ force of arms. Kleptocratic, unwilling to translate seeming victory into necessary political reform, deliver prosperity beyond the regime leadership to its core support base, or in the end ensure their security, the Assad regime simply shredded its own legitimacy. A state is like some local deity in this respect: once enough people cease to believe in it, it suddenly ceases to exist. There is a lesson for Western, particularly British, leaders here; HTS has spent years honing its legitimacy by observing the core competences in statecraft and effective governance — policing, transport, swift and responsive reaction to sudden crises.
Indeed, the extraordinary recent interviews with HTS officials attempting to introduce their own stripped-down, digital governance to Syria’s bureaucratic state suggests that Jolani may be as much a 21st-century state-capacity autocrat like Bukele or the younger Gulf rulers than any narrow analogue in Islamic statecraft. Rather than a retreat to the Middle Ages, for good or ill the new Syrian state will be a 21st-century one, and not built on the old model of 20th-century regimes like its Baathist forebear. Technocratic, results-driven governance is, by its nature, non-liberal, even if not necessarily illiberal: in the new Syria, we may indeed see glimpses of our own near future. But whether or not HTS can expand its effective governance in Idlib – the establishment of which, it should not be forgotten, involved the eradication of some of the most prominent liberal revolutionary voices – to the wider country remains to be proved. When Damascus fell, it was to the forces of the rebel Southern Operations Room, formerly Jordanian assets latterly (and we now see, ineffectively) “reconciled” to Assad’s rule by Russia. The repeated exhortations by HTS for armed rebels to leave the cities to allow security to be established by (its own) police forces highlight one potential tension: how far HTS can exert its authority over its own notional, and generally worse-disciplined allies.
It is one of the ironies of Syria’s rebellion, which does not map onto mainstream pro- or anti-rebel Western discourse, that Salafi jihadist groups such as HTS, through their greater discipline and adherence to stern moral codes, have generally been better at governance than the broadly secular rebel militias the West once backed to varying degrees. Indeed, the Islamic State’s original rise to power across Northern Syria came off the back of quashing predatory rebel militias to the acclaim of Syrian civilians — before then imposing its own brutal and apocalyptic vision of governance. Initial, cautious noises of optimism made on social media by some of the former regime’s most outspoken advocates have been dented in recent days by footage of atrocities carried out, seemingly, by members of the Turkish-backed Syrian National Army (SNA) rebel militias, some of which were once recipients of American military support. Retaliatory rebel excesses — or the sheer banditry for which the SNA is now renowned — will rapidly lose HTS its recent and hard-won domestic and international legitimacy unless Jolani can rein these groups in.
Yet this may not be possible. Whatever Turkey’s role in the HTS offensive, Erdoğan has used the sudden fait accompli in western Syria as the moment to achieve his longstanding aims in the country’s east, of eliminating the Kurdish-led but multiethnic Autonomous Administration of Northeast Syria (AANES) statelet, the West’s chosen partner in the fight to destroy Islamic State. Backed by Turkish airstrikes, SNA militias have forced the AANES’s Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) troops from the city of Manbij, west of the river Euphrates. An apparent American diplomatic push to ensure AANES’s survival east of the river does not seem to be working, with Turkish ground and aerial bombardment of the celebrated border city of Kobani heightening fears of a wider invasion. While the AANES and SDF leadership have made clear their desire to incorporate their statelet in the new Syria, and have already begun pragmatic negotiations with HTS, Jolani may not be strong enough to rein in the SNA or confront its Turkish backer. Indeed, he may not want to: rather than fight the SDF himself, it may be easier for HTS to allow Turkey and the SNA to take the brunt of the fighting and international opprobrium, and reap the spoils at some later date.
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Subscribe“A state is like some local deity in this respect: once enough people cease to believe in it, it suddenly ceases to exist.” – This. If anyone doubts what lies in wait for Britain, if common identity cannot be established, read that statement and reflect. Conrad also knew this well.
“….with Russia apparently negotiating with HTS to preserve its coastal bases in Syria….” If I were HTS, I would tell Russia the first year’s rent for the bases is the head of Bashar al-Assad.
“How Syria will shape Europe’s future: We cannot afford another refugee wave”
It’s clear that we couldn’t afford the last one…
It isn’t clear at all what advantages any nation gains by accepting another country’s least successful groups. Latin America isn’t at all unhappy that the United States allowed in so many of its disadvantaged, similarly, Middle Eastern countries must be delighted that Europe accepts, more or less willingly, large numbers of their poorest.
But, beyond humanitarian reasons, what benefits do they bring, besides dubious ones like cheaper labor, or exotic cuisine? Assuming there are other benefits, do these at all outweigh the costs?
We now have blatantly antisemitic protests in London, and even in NYC and LA, traditionally cities with large Jewish-American populations. We have both socialists and Hezbollah sympathisers sitting in American local and national legislatures. We have very illiberal, far left identitarian movements that just a few years ago burnt down entire city blocks.
Much of this was spurred on by careless immigration policies. This all seems entirely self inflicted, and entirely unnecessary – simply turn them back to their country of origin, and the problems that unlawful entrants bring are turned back as well.
I think Trump is going to give everyone a demonstration of what is possible when you don’t care what university professors, NGO’s, and the legacy media have to say about it.
Israel and Turkey are benefiting from this, for now. It was a huge blow to Iran, and to Russia, for now. However, I think Turkey and Israel have bitten off more than they can chew. They are going to find themselves in a quagmire. To the point about Europe not being able to afford a new wave of Syrian refugees, that’s true. Europe is getting screwed by the NeoCon government overthrows and forever wars yet again.
“Europe”, basically the EU, should look after its own people but it’s sole achievement is to impose further laws and regulations on them, whilst being of no geopolitical consequence whatsoever.
This is probably the best article I’ve read on the subject so far. Most western analysts don’t seem to know who the Southern Operations Room are. They just assume HTS took Damascus alone.