Bashar
al-Assad has more support than the Western-backed opposition
Suppose a respectable opinion poll found that Bashar al-Assad has
more support than the Western-backed opposition. Would that not be
major news?By Stephen Gowans
In the view of Syrians, the country’s president,
Bashar al Assad, and his ally, Iran, have more support than do the
forces arrayed against him, according to a public opinion poll taken
last summer by a research firm that is working with the US and
British governments. [1]
The poll’s findings challenge the idea that Assad
has lost legitimacy and that the opposition has broad support.
The survey, conducted by ORB International, a
company which specializes in public opinion research in fragile and
conflict environments, [2] found that 47 percent of Syrians believe
that Assad has a positive influence in Syria, compared to only 35
percent for the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and 26 percent for the Syrian
Opposition Coalition.
At the same time, more see Assad’s ally, Iran, as
having a favorable influence (43%) than view the Arab Gulf
States—which back the external opposition, including Al Nusra and
ISIS—as affecting Syria favorably (37%).
The two Arab Gulf State-backed Al-Qaeda linked
organizations command some degree of support in Syria, according to
the poll. One-third believe Al-Nusra is having a positive influence,
compared to one-fifth for ISIS, lower than the proportion of Syrians
who see Assad’s influence in a positive light.
According to the poll, Assad has majority support
in seven of 14 Syrian regions, and has approximately as much support
in one, Aleppo, as do Al-Nusra and the FSA. ISIS has majority
support in only one region, Al Raqua, the capital of its caliphate.
Al-Nusra, the Al-Qaeda franchise in Syria, has majority support in
Idlip and Al Quneitra as well as in Al Raqua. Support for the FSA is
strong in Idlip, Al Quneitra and Daraa.
An in-country face-to-face ORB poll conducted in
May 2014 arrived at similar conclusions. That poll found that more
Syrians believe the Assad government best represents their interests
and aspirations than believe the same about any of the opposition
groups. [3]
The poll found that 35 percent of Syrians saw the
Assad government as best representing them (20% chose the current
government and 15% chose Bashar al-Assad). By comparison, the level
of the support for the opposition forces was substantially weaker:
• Al-Nusra, 9%
• FSA, 9%
• “Genuine” rebels, 6%
• ISIS, 4%
• National Coalition/transitional government, 3%
The sum of support for the opposition forces, 31
percent, was less than the total support for Assad and his
government.
Of significance is the weak support for the FSA
and the “genuine” rebels, the alleged “moderates” of which British
prime minister David Cameron has improbably claimed number as many
70,000 militants. Veteran Middle East correspondent Robert Fisk has
pointed out that if the ranks of the moderates were this large, the
Syrian Arab Army, which has lost 60,000 soldiers, mainly to ISIS and
Al-Nusra, could hardly survive. Fisk estimates generously that
“there are 700 active ‘moderate’ foot soldiers in Syria,” and
concludes that “the figure may be nearer 70,” closer to their low
level of popular support. [4]
Sixteen percent of Syrians polled said that Moaz
Al Khateeb best represented their aspirations and interests, a level
of support on par with that for Assad. Khateeb, a former president
of the National Coalition for Syrian and Revolutionary Forces—which
some Western powers unilaterally designated as the legitimate
government of Syria—called on Western powers to arm the FSA and
opposed the designation of Al-Nusra as a terrorist group. The
so-called “moderate” Islamist, who favors the replacement of secular
rule with Sharia law, is no longer active in the Coalition or a
force in Syrian politics.
Neither is the FSA a significant force in the
country’s politics, despite its inclusion in the ORB survey.
According to veteran Middle East correspondent Patrick Cockburn, the
FSA “largely collapsed at the end of 2013.” [5] Fisk says that the
FSA is “virtually non-existent.” [6]
Assad has repeatedly challenged the notion that he
lacks popular support, pointing to the fact that his government has
survived nearly five years of war against forces backed by the most
powerful states on the planet. It’s impossible to realistically
conceive of the government’s survival under these challenging
circumstances, he argues, without its having the support of a
sizeable part of its population.
In a 11 December 2015 interview with Spanish
media, Assad observed:
[I]f…the majority of…Syrians (oppose me) and
you have…national and regional countries…against me, and the
West, most of the West, the United States, their allies, the
strongest countries and the richest countries in the world
against me, and…the Syrian people (are opposed to me) how can I
be president? It’s not logical. I’m…here after five years—nearly
five years—of war, because I have the support of the majority of
Syrians. [7]
Assad’s view of his level of support appears to be
largely corroborated by the ORB poll.
The persistence of the myth that Assad lacks
support calls to mind an article written by Jonathan Steele in the
British newspaper the Guardian on 17 January 2012, less than one
year into the war. Under a lead titled, “Most Syrians back President
Assad, but you’d never know it from western media,” Steele wrote:
Suppose a respectable opinion poll found that
most Syrians are in favor of Bashar al-Assad remaining as
president, would that not be major news? Especially as the
finding would go against the dominant narrative about the Syrian
crisis, and the media consider the unexpected more newsworthy
than the obvious.
Alas, not in every case. When coverage of an
unfolding drama ceases to be fair and turns into a propaganda
weapon, inconvenient facts get suppressed. So it is with the
results of a recent YouGov Siraj poll…ignored by almost all
media outlets in every western country whose government has
called for Assad to go.
Steele reminds us that Assad has had substantial
popular support from the beginning of the war, but that this truth,
being politically inconvenient, is brushed aside, indeed,
suppressed, in favor of falsehoods from US, British and French
officials about Assad lacking legitimacy.
Steele’s observation that inconvenient facts about
Assad’s level of support have been “ignored by almost all media
outlets in every western country whose government has called for
Assad to go,” raises obvious questions about the independence of the
Western media. Private broadcasters and newspapers are, to be sure,
formally independent of Western governments, but they embrace the
same ideology as espoused by key figures in Western governments, a
state of affairs that arises from the domination of both media and
governments by significant corporate and financial interests. Major
media themselves are major corporations, with a big business point
of view, and Western governments are made up of, if not always
“in-and-outers” from the corporate world, by those who are
sympathetic to big business.
Wall Street and the corporate world manifestly
have substantial interests in the Middle East, from securing
investment opportunities in the region’s vast energy resources
sector, the construction of pipelines to carry natural gas to
European markets (cutting out Russia), access to the region’s
markets, and the sale of military hardware to its governments. Saudi
Arabia, for example, a country of only 31 million, has the world’s
third largest military budget, ahead of Russia [8], much of its
spent buying expensive military equipment from Western arms
manufacturers. Is it any wonder that Western governments indulge the
Riyadh regime, despite its fondness for beheadings and amputations,
official misogyny, intolerance of democracy, propagation of the
violently sectarian Islamist Wahhabi ideology that inspires
Al-Qaeda, Al-Nusra and ISIS, military intervention in Bahrain to
crush a pro-democracy uprising, and a war of aggression on Yemen?
The research firm also conducted a broadly similar
poll in Iraq in July [9]. Of particular interest were the survey’s
findings regarding the view of Iraqis on the possible partitioning
of their country into ethno-sectarian autonomous regions. A number
of US politicians, including in 2006 then US senator and now US
vice-president Joseph Biden, have floated the idea of carving Iraq
into Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish states. Indeed, US foreign policy has
long fostered the deepening of ethno-sectarian cleavages in Iraq,
and US government officials have long labored to shape public
opinion in the West to the view that Iraqis self-identify on tribal,
sectarian, and ethnic grounds, to a far greater degree than they
identify as Iraqis. If US government officials are to be believed,
Iraqis themselves are eager to see their country split into
ethno-sectarian mini-states.
But the ORB poll strongly rejects this view.
According to the survey, three of four Iraqis oppose the partition
of their country into autonomous regions, including majorities in
both Sunni and Shiite communities. Only in the north of Iraq, where
the Kurds already have an autonomous regional government, is there
any degree of support for the proposal, and even there, only a slim
majority (54%) is in favor.
Robert F. Worth, in a 26 June 2014 New York Times
article [10], pointed to earlier public opinion polling that
anticipated these findings. Worth wrote, “For the most part, Iraqis
(with the exception of the Kurds) reject the idea of partition,
according to recent interviews and opinion polls taken several years
ago.”
US foreign policy favors the promotion of
centrifugal forces in the Middle East, to split the Arab world into
ever smaller—and squabbling—mini-states, as a method of preventing
its coalescence into a single powerful Arab union strong enough to
take control of its own resources, markets and destiny. It is in
this goal that the origin of US hostility to the Syrian government,
which is Arab nationalist, and to Iraqi unity, can be found. US
support for Israel—a settler outpost dividing the Asian and African
sections of the Arab nation—is also related to the same US foreign
policy objective of fostering divisions in the Middle East to
facilitate US economic domination of the region.
1.
http://www.opinion.co.uk/perch/resources/syriadata.pdf
2.
http://www.opinion.co.uk/whoweare.php
3.
http://www.opinion.co.uk/perch/resources/syriadatatablesjuly2014.pdf
4. Robert Fisk, “David Cameron, there aren’t
70,000 moderate fighters in Syria—and whosever heard of a moderate
with a Kalashnikov anyway?”, The Independent, November 29, 2015
5. Patrick Cockburn, “Syria and Iraq: Why US
policy is fraught with danger ,“ The Independent, September 9, 2014
6. Robert Fisk, “Saudi Arabia’s unity summit will
only highlight Arab disunity,” The Independent, December 4, 2015
7. “President al-Assad: Russia’s policy towards
Syria is based on values and interests, the West is not serious in
fighting terrorists,” Syrian Arab News Agency, December 11, 2015,
http://sana.sy/en/?p=63857
8. Source is The Military Balance, cited in The
Globe and Mail, Report on Business, November 25, 2015
9.
http://www.opinion.co.uk/perch/resources/iraqdata.pdf
10. Robert F. Worth, “Redrawn lines seen as no
cure in Iraq conflict,” The New York Times, June 26, 2014
Via
https://gowans.wordpress.com/