Abandoning Resistance: Syria is Now Openly Collaborating with Israel
Last weekend, reports emerged that Syrian Foreign
Minister Asaad Shibani was set to meet up with Israeli official Ron Dermer as
part of ongoing US-brokered direct talks between Tel Aviv and Damascus. The
goal of these discussions, which are a continuation of talks held earlier this
July, is to reach a “security agreement”.
While Syrian media and outlets sympathetic to the new
rulers in Damascus spent months denying their ties to Israel, over the course
of recent weeks, these ties have become open and publicly announced.
There has been much speculation about what the planned
agreement, which was originally scheduled to be announced sometime this
September, will constitute. All of the most reputable reports suggest it will
be some kind of a “security” related agreement, with many suggesting that Syria
will demilitarize the south completely, allow Israel to remain an occupation
force in the country and it appears that Tel Aviv is demanding a so-called
“humanitarian land bridge” to the Sweida Province, which will allow for them to
bolster the Druze separatist movement there.
Under the previous Syrian governments, direct
communication with Israeli officials was considered treason and punishable by
death. Now, Israelis are allowed to enter Damascus and are even taken around by
soldiers belonging to the government’s armed forces. Meanwhile, Syria’s current
foreign minister is engaging in ongoing direct talks with Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s top aide, Ron Dermer.
Israeli journalist Ehud Yaari even told the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP) think-tank, back in July, that Israel
had established contact with the new Hayat Tahrir al-Sham leadership “less than
three days” after Ahmed al-Shara’a “walked into Damascus”.
From the very first day of the Syrian government’s
collapse, Israel had also launched a military operation to permanently occupy
strategic territory in southern Syria, while carrying out what was the air
force’s largest ever bombing campaign across the country. Since the fall of the
Syrian Arab Army and former President Bashar al-Assad, conservative estimates
show that hundreds of Syrians have been murdered by Israeli airstrikes, while
others have been shot dead in the south of Syria.
The response of Syria’s new President, Ahmed
al-Shara’a, has been to grant Israel gifts and concessions. Not only has the
new Syrian government not fired a single bullet towards the occupying regime in
the south of its country, despite mobilizing its men to carry out campaigns in
locations like Deir Ezzor, Damascus, and Aleppo, it has worked alongside US
forces in Idlib. This is not to mention the two largest military campaigns
along the Syrian coast and in the Sweida province, resulting in the slaughter
of thousands of civilians.
What is perhaps even more telling is that the new
Syrian government has expelled Palestinian resistance groups, arrested their
leaders, and seized their weapons. In addition to this, they have actively
bragged about blocking weapons transfers to Hezbollah in Lebanon, while handing
over the remains of an Israeli soldier’s body seized during the 1982 Israeli
invasion of Lebanon and even the belongings of the infamous Israeli spy Eli
Cohen.
At this stage, the Syrian leadership has proven to be
more pro-Israeli than Saudi Arabia. Which, considering Israel’s historic
support for al-Qaeda linked groups in Syria since 2013, like Ahmed al-Shara’a’s
Jabhat al-Nusra (now known as Hayat Tahrir al-Sham), comes as little surprise
to many. Syrian State media outlet, SANA, has even opened up a Hebrew-language
website.
As for the alleged economic benefits for the Syrian
people, which were supposed to come as a result of its open collaboration with
the United States and Israel? According to all reputable reports from on the
ground, the corruption that plagued the former Syrian leadership has all
returned despite there being a brief hiatus for this kind of behavior.
Economic projects have been promised across the
country, complete with AI-generated imagery of what the new Syria’s
infrastructure will look like, yet there has been little progress on most of
the announced projects, some of which have been debunked as false promises.
Then, if we look at other important markers that can
predict a country’s success, like security and social cohesion, sectarian
bloodshed and general crime are rampant throughout the nation. The minority
groups like the Shia, Alawites, Druze, Kurds, and Christians have all become
disenfranchised, and the majority of Syria’s Sunni population has been made to
feel uncomfortable with the government’s policies.
The Kurdish-led SDF will not hand over their weapons,
and it appears they are being pushed towards pursuing separatism. The Druze of
Sweida have been rapidly pushed towards separatism, as have the Alawites along
the coast, although they are not armed and will require support from the likes
of Russia to achieve this goal.
This is not to mention countless reports of armed
robberies, vengeance killings that are unrelated to politics or sectarianism
and other acts of violence across the country. Some days will see the murder of
over 100 people, which will not even reach the international media.
According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
(SOHR), the total death toll during the new government’s reign in power is
creeping up towards 11,000. Keep in mind that it hasn’t even been a year since
Ahmed al-Shara’a seized power. These figures, as has been the case throughout
the Syrian war since 2011, are also accused of being incomplete, and many
groups argue that the death toll is three to four times higher, although there
is an absence of evidence to support this notion as of now.
The death toll statistics in Syria reflect a starkly
different reality from the one broadcast on many international media channels
and represented by government officials; it is indicative of an ongoing civil
war, not one that has ended. Daily local protests are also rampant, take for
example a sit-in protest in Damascus this Monday, organized by Civil Servants
who have experienced delays in payments or in some cases were unable to return
to work, despite not being given notification of their firing.
As much as some propagandists seek to portray the
situation differently, the war in Syria never truly ended; it only entered a
new phase with a different regime at its helm. Except, in this case, the
repressive regime now openly works with the United States and opposes the
Palestinian resistance.
While Hayat Tahrir al-Sham had self-styled itself as
defenders of Sunni Muslims, immediately upon assuming power in Damascus, they
began collaborating with the Israeli regime that is committing a genocide
against an almost all Sunni Muslim population in the Gaza Strip. As soon as
Ahmed al-Shara’a took over, he immediately dropped his former rhetoric about
the Palestinian cause.
In the end, even the sectarian language and policies,
which resulted in countless civilian massacres, have proven to be nothing more
than tools to achieve political goals. In fact, this is very similar to the way
the Saudi State came into existence, using the ideology espoused by Muhammad
Ibn Abd al-Wahhab as a religious basis for pursuing political agendas,
committing mass Takfir against anyone who stood in the way of attaining power.
Evidently, the Saudis also worked with the West to acquire power, too.
If these Takfiri groups in Syria truly cared about
Muslims, specifically the Sunnis, as they claim, then Gaza would be their red
line. On the contrary, they work against those who have actually fought for the
people of Gaza.
Currently, the only hope that Palestine has of
defeating Israel comes from Lebanese Hezbollah. Even if Iran were to launch an
all-out war against Israel, Hezbollah would need to play the role of a ground
force and would be the only one capable. Syria is actively working with Israel
to stop the weapons transfers to Hezbollah.
Simply put, the Syrian leadership is actively playing
a role on the side of Israel against the Palestinian people and to divide Syria
even further. While some compare Ahmed al-Shara’a to Mohammed Bin Zayed
al-Nahyan or King Abdullah II, his role has much greater implications for the
predicament of Palestine. Through Syria’s active collaboration with Israel, it
has robbed the Palestinian resistance of a key hub and is helping to weaken the
Lebanese front, also.
From both a religious and secular perspective, the new
Syrian leadership is collaborating with Israel against the economic, security,
territorial, and ideological interests of their own nation.
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