Why the US
Pushes an Illusory Syrian Peace Process
By Gareth
Porter
December 19, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "MEE"
- The anti-Assad coalition led by the United States
continues to stagger toward the supposed objective
of beginning peace negotiations between the Syrian
government and what has now been blessed as the
politically acceptable “opposition”. The first such
meeting was scheduled for 1 January, but no one on
either side believes for a moment that any such
negotiations are going to happen any time in the
foreseeable future.
The notion
that negotiations on a ceasefire and political
settlement will take place lacks credibility,
because the political-military realities on the
ground in Syria won’t allow it. Those opposition
groups that are prepared to contemplate some kind of
settlement with the Assad regime do not have the
capacity to make such an agreement a reality. And
those organisations that have the capacity to end
the war against the Damascus regime have no interest
in agreeing to anything short of forcible regime
change.
On top of
those serious contradictions, Russia is openly
contesting the US plan for a negotiated settlement.
The United States is pushing the line that President
Bashar al-Assad must step down, but Russia is
insisting that such a demand is illegitimate.
The
contradiction between the pretensions of the
US-sponsored plan and Syrian political-military
realities was very much in evidence at the Riyadh
conference last week. The conference, which was
supported by the United States and the other
“Friends of Syria,” including Britain, France,
Turkey, Qatar and the UAE, was in theory to bring
together the broadest possible range of opposition
groups – excluding only “terrorist” groups. Belying
that claim, however, the Kurdish Democratic Union
Party (YPD) being armed by the United States in
Syria was excluded from the conference at the
insistence of Turkey.
A key
objective of the conference was apparently to bring
Ahrar al-Sham, the most powerful opposition military
force apart from the Islamic State (IS), into the
putative game of ceasefire negotiations. But
inviting the organisation was bound to backfire
sooner or later. Ahrar al-Sham has been closely
allied with al-Qaeda’s Syrian franchise, al-Nusra
Front, both politically and militarily. Moreover, it
has explicitly denounced the idea of any compromise
with the regime in Damascus.
Ahrar
al-Sham showed up at the conference, but refused to
follow the script. The representative of Ahrar
al-Sham called for “the overthrow of the Assad
regime with all its pillars and symbols, and handing
them over for a fair trial.” That is not exactly the
game plan envisioned in the negotiating process,
which assumes that Assad must leave after a
transitional period, but that the government
security institutions would remain in place. On the
second day of the conference its representative
announced that it was leaving, complaining that the
conference organisers had refused to endorse its
insistence on the “Muslim” identity of the
opposition.
The Ahrar
al-Sham refusal to play ball was the most dramatic
indication of that the entire exercise is caught in
a fundamental contradiction. But it wasn’t the only
case of a major armed organisation whose attendance
at the Riyadh meeting raised the obvious issue of
conflicting interests. Jaysh al-Islam is a coalition
of 60 Salafist armed groups in the Damascus suburbs
whose orientation appears to be indistinguishable
from that of Ahrar al-Sham.
The
coalition is led by Salafist extremist Zahran
Alloush, and has fought alongside Ahrar al-Sham as
well as al-Nusra Front. Last April, Alloush
travelled to Istanbul, where he
met with the leader of Ahrar al-Sham. Like their
close allies, moreover, Alloush and his coalition
reject the idea of a political settlement with a
secular Syrian state authority, with or without
Assad.
If it is so
obvious that the Riyadh conference and the larger
scheme for peace negotiations is not going to come
to fruition, why has the Obama administration been
pushing it? The explanation for what appears to be a
lost cause can be inferred from the basic facts
surrounding the administration’s Syria policy.
First, the
administration adopted the objective of regime
change in Syria in late 2011, at a time when it was
convinced that the regime was on the ropes. And
although it has partially backtracked from that aim
by distinguishing between Assad and the
institutional structure of the regime, it cannot
back off the demand for Assad to step down without a
humiliating admission of failure and major domestic
political damage.
Second in
its pursuit of that regime change policy the
administration allowed its Sunni regional allies –
especially Turkey and Saudi Arabia – to do things
that it wasn’t prepared to do. Obama tolerated
Turkish facilitation of foreign fighters and
Turkish, Qatari and Saudi funnelling of arms to
their favourite Islamist groups. The result was that
IS, al-Nusra Front, Ahrar al-Sham and Jaysh al-Islam
emerged in 2013 and 2014 as the main challengers to
the Assad regime.
But the
White House has officially maintained its distance
from al-Nusra Front and Ahrar al-Sham, while
continuing to collaborate closely with Sunni allies,
as they have provided financial support to the “Army
of Conquest” command dominated by al-Nusra Front
and Ahrar al-Sham to help the forces under their
leadership gain control of Idlib province and pose
the most serious threat to the Assad regime thus
far.
And the
third fact about the policy is that the Obama
administration embarked on its campaign of illusory
peace negotiations with little more than one year
left before Obama leaves the Oval Office.
The obvious
implication of these facts is that the ostensible
push for a ceasefire and peace negotiations is a
useful device for managing the political optics
associated with Syria during the administration’s
final year. If it is not questioned by media and
political elites, the administration will be able to
claim both that it is insisting on getting rid of
Assad and at the same time moving toward a ceasefire
and political settlement.
Never mind
that claim has nothing to do with reality. Being the
dominant power, after all, means never having to say
you’re sorry, because you don’t have to acknowledge
your responsibility for the terrible war and chaos
visited on a country because of your policy.
Gareth Porter is an
independent investigative journalist and winner of
the 2012 Gellhorn Prize for journalism. He is the
author of the newly published Manufactured Crisis:
The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare.
See also
UN endorses Syria peace plan
in rare show of agreement:
The resolution gives a UN blessing to a plan
negotiated previously in Vienna that calls for a
ceasefire, talks between the Syrian government and
opposition, and a roughly two-year timeline to
create a unity government and hold elections.
|