Israel, Not the ‘Liberators’ of Damascus, Will Decide Syria’s Fate
Syria’s future under al-Qaeda spin-off HTS will come
in two flavours only. Either submit and collude like the West Bank, or end up
wrecked like Gaza
Posted on December 20, 2024
There has been a flurry of “What next for Syria?”
articles in the wake of dictator Bashar al-Assad’s hurried exit from Syria and
the takeover of much of the country by al-Qaeda’s rebranded local forces.
Western governments and media have been quick to
celebrate the success of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), even though the group is
designated a terrorist organization in the United States, Britain and much of
Europe.
Back in 2013, the US even placed a £10 million bounty on its leader, Abu Muhammad al-Julani, for his
involvement with al-Qaeda and Islamic State (ISIS) and for carrying out a
series of brutal attacks on civilians.
Once upon a time, he might have expected to end up in
an orange jumpsuit in the notorious, off-the-grid detention and torture
facility run by the Americans at Guantanamo Bay. Now he is positioning himself
as Syria’s heir apparent, seemingly with Washington’s blessing.
Surprisingly, before either HTS or al-Julani can be
tested in their new roles overseeing Syria, the West is hurrying to
rehabilitate them. The US and UK are both moving to overturn HTS’s status as a
proscribed organization.
To put the extraordinary speed of this absolution in
perspective, recall that Nelson Mandela, feted internationally for helping to
liberate South Africa from apartheid rule, was removed from Washington’s terrorist watch list only in
2008 – 18 years after his release from prison.
Similarly, western media are helping al-Julani to
rebrand himself as a statesman-in-the-making, airbrushing his past atrocities,
by transitioning from using his nom de guerre to his birth name, Ahmed
al-Sharaa.
Piling on pressure
Stories of prisoners being freed from Assad’s dungeons
and of families pouring on to the streets in celebration have helped to drive
an upbeat news agenda and obscure a more likely dismal future for newly
“liberated” Syria – as the US, UK, Israel, Turkey and Gulf states jostle for a
share of the pie.
Syria’s status looks sealed as a permanently failed
state.
Israel’s bombing raids – destroying hundreds of
critical infrastructure sites across Syria – are designed precisely towards
that end.
Within days, the Israeli military was boasting it had destroyed 80 per cent of Syria’s military
installations. More have gone since.
On Monday, Israel unleashed 16 strikes on Tartus, a strategically important port where
Russia has a naval fleet. The blasts were so powerful, they registered 3.5 on
the Richter scale.
During Assad’s rule, Israel chiefly rationalized its
attacks on Syria – coordinating them with Russian forces supporting Damascus –
as necessary to prevent the flow of weapons overland from Iran to its Lebanese
ally, Hezbollah.
But that is not the goal currently. HTS’s Sunni
fighters have vowed to keep Iran and Hezbollah – the Shiite “axis of
resistance” against Israel – out of Syrian territory.
Israel has prioritized instead targeting Syria’s
already beleaguered military – its planes, naval ships, radars, anti-aircraft
batteries and missile stockpiles – to strip the country of any offensive or
defensive capability. Any hope of Syria maintaining a semblance of sovereignty
is crumbling before our eyes.
These latest strikes come on top of years of western
efforts to undermine Syria’s integrity and economy. The US military controls
Syria’s oil and wheat production areas, plundering these key resources with the
help of a Kurdish minority. More generally, the West has imposed punitive
sanctions on Syria’s economy.
It was precisely these pressures that hollowed out
Assad’s government and led to its collapse. Now Israel is piling on more
pressure to make sure any newcomer faces an even harder task.
Maps of post-Assad Syria, like those during the latter
part of his beleaguered presidency, are a patchwork of different colors, with
Turkey and its local allies seizing territory in the north, the Kurds clinging
on to the east, US forces in the south, and the Israeli military encroaching
from the west.
This is the proper context for answering the question
of what comes next.
Two possible fates
Syria is now the plaything of a complex of vaguely
aligned state interests. None have Syria’s interests as a strong, unified state
high on their list.
In such circumstances, Israel’s priority will be to
promote sectarian divisions and stop a central authority from emerging to
replace Assad.
This has been Israel’s plan stretching back decades,
and has shaped the thinking of the dominant foreign policy elite in Washington
since the rise of the so-called neoconservatives under President George W Bush
in the early 2000s. The aim has been to Balkanize any state in the Middle East that refuses to
submit to Israeli and US hegemony.
Israel cares only that Syria is riven by internal
feuding and power-plays. Beginning in 2013, Israel ran a covert program to arm
and fund at least 12 different rebel factions, according to a 2018 article in Foreign Policy magazine.
In this regard, Syria’s fate is being modeled on that
of the Palestinians.
There may be a choice but it will come in no more than
two flavors. Syria can become the West Bank, or it can become Gaza.
So far, the indications are that Israel is gunning for
the Gaza option. Washington and Europe appear to prefer the West Bank route,
which is why they have been focusing on the rehabilitation of HTS.
In the Gaza scenario, Israel keeps pounding Syria,
depriving the rebranded al-Qaeda faction or any other group of the ability to
run the country’s affairs. Instability and chaos reign.
With Assad’s legacy of secular rule destroyed, bitter
sectarian rivalries dominate, cementing Syria into separate regions. Feuding
warlords, militias and crime families battle it out for local dominance.
Their attention is directed inwards, towards
strengthening their rule against rivals, not outwards towards Israel.
‘Back to the Stone Age’
There would be nothing new about this outcome for
Syria in the worldview shared by Israel and the neocons. It draws on lessons
Israel believes it learnt in both Gaza and Lebanon.
Israeli generals spoke of returning Gaza “to the Stone
Age” long before they were in a position to realize that goal with the current
genocide there. Those same generals first tested their ideas on a more limited
scale in Lebanon, pummeling the country’s infrastructure under the so-called
“Dahiya” doctrine.
Israel believed such indiscriminate wrecking sprees
offered a double benefit. Overwhelming destruction forced the local population
to concentrate on basic survival rather than organize resistance. And longer
term, the targeted population would understand that, given the severity of the
punishment, any future resistance to Israel should be avoided at all costs.
Back in 2007, four years before the uprising in Syria
erupted, a leading articulator of the neocon agenda, Caroline Glick, a
columnist for the Jerusalem Post, set out Syria’s imminent fate.
She explained that any central authority in Damascus had to be
destroyed. The reasoning: “Centralized governments throughout the Arab world
are the primary fulminators of Arab hatred of Israel.”
She added: “How well would Syria contend with the IDF
[Israeli military] if it were simultaneously trying to put down a popular
rebellion?”
Or, better still, Syria could be turned into another
failed state like Libya after Muammar Gaddafi’s ousting and killing in 2011
with the help of NATO. Libya has been run by warlords ever since.
Notably, both Syria and Libya – along with Iraq,
Somalia, Sudan, Lebanon and Iran – were on a hit list drawn up in Washington in the immediate
aftermath of 9/11 by US officials close to Israel.
All but Iran are now failed or failing states.
Security contractor
The other possible outcome is that Syria becomes a
larger version of the West Bank.
In that scenario, HTS and al-Julani are able to
convince the US and Europe that they are so supine, so ready to do whatever
they are told, that Israel has nothing to fear from them.
Their rule would be modeled on that of Mahmoud Abbas,
leader of the much-reviled Palestinian Authority in the West Bank. His powers
are little greater than those of the head of a municipal council, overseeing
schools and collecting the rubbish.
His security forces are lightly armed – effectively a
police force – used for internal repression and incapable of challenging
Israel’s illegal occupation. Abbas has described as “sacred” his service to
Israel in preventing Palestinians from resisting their decades-long oppression.
The Palestinian Authority’s active collusion was on
show again at the weekend when its security forces killed a resistance leader in Jenin wanted by Israel.
Al-Julani could similarly be cultivated as a security
contractor. Largely thanks to Israel, Syria now has no army, navy or air force.
It has only lightly armed factions such as HTS, other rebel militias like the
misnamed Syrian National Army, and Kurdish groups.
Under CIA and Turkish tutelage, HTS could be
strengthened, but only enough to repress dissent in Syria.
HTS would have powers but on license. Its survival
would depend on keeping things quiet for Israel, both through a reign of
intimidation against other Syrian groups, including the Palestinian refugee
population, who threaten to fight Israel, and by keeping out other regional
actors resisting Israel, such as Iran and Hezbollah.
And as with Abbas, al-Julani’s rule in Syria would be
territorially limited.
The Palestinian leader has to contend with the fact
that large swaths of the West Bank have been carved out as Jewish settlements
under Israeli rule, and that he has no access to critical resources, including
aquifers, agricultural land and quarries.
Off-limits to HTS would likely be Kurdish areas
policed by Turkey and the US, where much of the country’s oil is located, as
well as a swath of territory in Syria’s south-west that Israel has invaded over
the past two weeks.
It is widely assumed Israel will annex these Syrian
lands to extend its illegal occupation of the Golan, which it took from Syria
in 1967.
‘Love’ for Israel
Al-Julani understands only too well the options ahead
of him. Perhaps not surprisingly, he appears far keener to become a Syrian
Abbas than a Syrian Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader killed by Israel in October.
Given his clean-cut military makeover, al-Julani may
imagine that he can eventually upgrade himself to the Syrian equivalent of the
US-backed leader of Ukraine, Volodmyr Zelensky.
However, Zelensky’s role has been to fight a proxy war
against Russia, on behalf of Nato. Israel would never countenance a leader of a
country on its border being given that kind of military muscle.
Al-Julani’s commanders have lost no time explaining
that they have no beef with Israel and do not want to provoke hostilities with
it.
The heady first days of HTS’s rule were marked by its
leaders thanking Israel for helping it to take Syria by neutralizing
Iran and Hezbollah in Lebanon. There were even declarations of “love” for
Israel.
Such sentiments have not been dented by the Israeli
army invading the large demilitarized zone inside Syria next to the Golan, in
violation of the 1974 armistice agreement.
Nor have they been damaged by Israel’s relentless
bombing of Syria’s infrastructure – a violation of sovereignty that the
Nuremberg tribunal at the end of the Second World War decried as the supreme
international crime.
This week al-Julani meekly suggested that Israel had
secured its interests in Syria through air strikes and invasion and could now
leave the country in peace.
“We do not want any conflict, whether with Israel or
anyone else, and we will not let Syria be used as a launchpad for attacks
[against Israel],” he told the London Times.
A Channel 4 reporter who tried last week to press an
HTS spokesman into addressing Israel’s attacks on Syria was startled by the
response.
Obeida Arnaout sounded as though he was following a
carefully rehearsed script, reassuring Washington and Israeli officials that
HTS had no bigger ambitions than emptying the bins regularly.
Asked how HTS viewed the attacks on its sovereignty by
Israel, Arnaout would only reply: “Our priority is to restore security and services,
revive civilian life and institutions and care for newly liberated cities.
There are many urgent parts of day-to-day life to restore: bakeries,
electricity, water, communications, so our priority is to provide those
services to the people.”
It seems HTS is unwilling even to offer rhetorical
opposition to Israeli war crimes on Syrian soil.
Wider ambitions
All of this leaves Israel in a strong position to
entrench its gains and widen its regional ambitions.
Israel has announced plans to double the number of Jewish settlers
living illegally on occupied Syrian territory in the Golan.
Meanwhile, Syrian communities newly under Israeli
military rule – in areas Israel has invaded since Assad’s fall – have appealed to their nominal government in Damascus and
other Arab states to persuade Israel to withdraw. With good reason, they fear
they face permanent occupation.
Predictably, the same western elites so incensed by
Russia’s violations of Ukraine’s territorial integrity that they have spent
three years arming Kyiv in a proxy war against Moscow – risking a potential
nuclear confrontation – have raised not a peep of concern at Israel’s ever
deepening violations of Syria’s territorial integrity.
Once again, it is one rule for Israel, another for
anyone Washington views as an enemy.
With Syria’s air defenses out of the way, Israel now
has a free run to Iran – either by itself or with US assistance – to attack the
last target on the neocons’ seven-country hit list from 2001.
The Israeli media have excitedly reported on preparations for a strike, while the
transition team working for incoming US president Donald Trump are said to
be seriously considering joining such an operation.
And to top it all, Israel looks like it may finally be
in sight of signing off on “normal” relations with Washington’s other major client state in
the region, Saudi Arabia – a drive that had to be put on hold following
Israel’s genocide in Gaza.
Renewed ties between Israel and Riyadh are possible
again in large part because coverage of Syria has further disappeared the Gaza
genocide from the West’s news agenda, despite Palestinians there – starved and
bombed by Israel for 14 months – likely dying in larger numbers than ever.
The narrative of Syria’s “liberation” currently
dominates western coverage. But so far the takeover of Damascus by HTS appears
only to have liberated Israel, leaving it freer to bully and terrorize its
neighbors into submission.
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