Tuesday, April 26, 2011

"The Assad regime the Middle Eastern equivalent of the banks that were too big to allow to collapse..."

(Khouri)- "... We are unlikely to see a Tunisian or Egyptian model of the security agencies abandoning the president to drift and be thrown out of power, while they remain in place. In Syria, either the entire system asserts itself and remains in control – with or without real reforms – or it is changed in its entirety.
Here is where the Assad government and power structure play on some of their assets. The two most significant ones are that: 1) most Syrians do not want to risk internal chaos or sectarian strife (a la Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen or Somalia) and might opt to remain with the Assad-dominated system that has brought them stability without democracy; and, 2) any changes in regime incumbency or policies in Syria will have enormous impact across the entire region and beyond, given Syria’s structural links or ongoing political ties with every major conflict and actor in the region, especially Lebanon and Hizbullah, Iraq, Iran, Turkey, Israel, Palestine and Hamas, the U.S. and Saudi Arabia. Regime overthrow in Syria will trigger significant, cumulative and long-lasting repercussions in the realms of Arab-Israeli, Arab-Iranian, inter-Arab and Arab-Western relations, with winners and losers all around.
For some, this makes the Assad regime the Middle Eastern equivalent of the banks that were too big to allow to collapse during the American economic crisis three years ago, because the spillover effect would be too horrible to contemplate. The specter of sectarian-based chaos within a post-Assad Syria that could spread to other parts of the Middle East is frightening to many people. Yet many, perhaps most, Syrians indicate with their growing public protests that they see their current reality as more frightening – especially the lack of democracy, widespread corruption, human rights abuses, one-party rule, economic and environmental stress, excessive security dominance and burgeoning youth unemployment.
The epic battle between regime security and citizen rights that has characterized the modern Arab world for three long and weary generations enters its most important phase in Syria in the coming few weeks, with current Arab regional trends suggesting that citizens who collectively and peacefully demand their human and civil rights cannot be denied."

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Khoury....Sighhh, here we go again...with his wild conjecturing...
The only protection afforded to the Assad Regime for decades comes from CIA/MOSSAD and the proximity of the Assad Mafia to the Infamous White House Murder INC, and their Shenanigans in the Levant for decades...

Cautious Founding Senior Member of the FLC said...

Khoury's analysis is correct up to a point. It is not clear where he draws the info that Syrians fear more their reality then the chaos to come if the regime is toppled. Most of the info is coming from media outlets that have an ax to grind with Syria. Syria's official media is so inept that there is no counterveiling media to propose an alternative narrative to what is happening. Most analysis, when real info is lacking, and sometimes when it is there, is made up of wishful thinking.
If one is to summarize the situation, the regime in Syria is too strong to fall, yet not strong enough to assert itself. From this equation one can try to see how things could play out.