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Why Syria is America's new target
amatullah
04/21/03 at 11:10:33
Comment from Great Britain's former Ambassador to Syria on American
threats to attack Syria and to possible motives and reprocussions.



Why Syria is America's new target

Israel's last strategic opponent can turn occupied Iraq into a quagmire

Andrew Green
Thursday April 17, 2003
The Guardian

America's sudden onslaught against Syria has taken the world by
surprise. The White House is said to
have blocked the Pentagon's preliminary planning for a military assault
on the country, and earlier this
week the prime minister assured the House of Commons that there were "no
plans for an attack on
Syria" - language eerily reminiscent of that used about Iraq last
autumn. Something must lie behind all
this.

The charges are hardly earth-shattering. Syria is accused of harbouring
Iraqi fugitives. Possibly so.
The Syrians opposed the invasion of Iraq. The Syrian authorities cannot
prevent Iraqis getting
across a 400-mile desert border. It would not be surprising if, rather
than accept the humiliation of
handing them over to the Americans, they ushered unexpected guests
towards an aeroplane.

Second, the Americans allege that the Syrians have tested chemical
weapons. Not a surprise.
Several countries in the Middle East are believed to possess such a
capability, including
Algeria, Egypt, Iran and, notably, Israel. The case for invading Iraq
turned on Saddam being a crazy
dictator who might pass chemical or biological weapons to terrorists. It
would be hard to describe
Bashar al-Assad in such terms. If Syria has chemical weapons, it is for
a good reason - as a
second-strike capability against Israel. It is inconceivable that the
Syrians would strike first,
knowing the Israelis would immediately go for nuclear retaliation.

The third American allegation is an old chestnut - that Syria is a rogue
state supporting
terrorism. The Syrians have long given hospitality to the political wing
of Palestinian rejectionist
movements. They permit the Iranians to channel through Damascus airport
the arms required by
Hizbullah in south Lebanon. These are regarded as potential levers in
negotiations with Israel for return of
the occupied Golan Heights. They also give Syria some measure of
influence over the Palestinian and
Hizbullah resistance. This is tough diplomacy, Middle East style; it
hardly amounts to being a rogue
state.

The most straightforward explanation for the American campaign is that
it is an effort to deter the
Syrians from granting sanctuary to fleeing Iraqis. But there must be
more to it. Perhaps the Americans
have suddenly woken up to the fact that Syrian hostility could destroy
their attempts to stabilise Iraq in
the months to come.

The American invasion of Iraq was intended to "decapitate the regime".
In fact, it has knocked the
stuffing out of the entire system of government. Saddam's reign was one
of terror imposed from above.
All those involved were corrupt and most had blood on their hands. The
families of their victims will be
out to kill them at the first opportunity. They have no alternative but
to run for their lives.

In a further twist, the Sunnis live in fear that the Shia majority who
they have oppressed for decades will
turn against them. That is why the doctors, at least those who were
Sunni, abandoned their hospitals in
the face of gangs of looters, most of them Shia.

The apparent ease of the military victory is extremely deceptive. Iraq
is now on the verge of anarchy. The
first requirement is to impose some measure of order, the second to
re-establish a skeleton
administration that can distribute humanitarian aid effectively.

Then begins the task of assembling some kind of political structure.
This will take months, if not years.
Meanwhile, there is every risk that American and British troops will be
seen as an occupying force, and
become targets for sniping and suicide attacks. If Syria were to turn a
blind eye to a flow of weapons
and volunteers across her border with Iraq, the security situation could
degenerate very quickly. Indeed,
we could find ourselves in a quagmire.

The Syrians could well be in a position to block our efforts to create
what Tony Blair described as "a
peace worth the war". They might be tempted to do so. What Jack Straw
calls "the new reality" looks to
them like an American puppet state in Iraq that might settle with Israel
at the expense of the Syrians
and Palestinians.

Indeed, the Arabs see a deeper plot and they may not be entirely wrong.
Some members of the
Bush administration came into office determined to overthrow Saddam,
occupy Iraq and extend
American control through as much of the region as possible. For these
officials, some of them close
to the Likud party, the invasion of Iraq was only a first step intended
to pave the way for the
removal of Syria as the last strategic opponent of Israel.

These are some of the explanations for the sudden attempt to intimidate
the Syrians. The American
campaign may make President Assad more cautious, but the Syrians are not
easily intimidated. What
is clear is that the rest of the Arab and Muslim world will be deeply
antagonised by such tactics. If our
primary aim is to counter Islamic terrorism by diminishing the mass
support on which it thrives, this is
hardly the best way to go about it.

· Sir Andrew Green was UK ambassador to Syria from 1991-94 and to Saudi
Arabia from 1996-2000


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