My paraphrasing of a leader comment penned
in Arabic by
editor-in-chief Ghassan Charbel for this morning’s edition of pan-Arab al-Hayat:
Illustration by Syrian artist Wissam al Jazairy |
Syria is paying an exorbitant price for the clash of the “strong-weak”
sides engaged in its conflict,
Over the past two years, the conflict brought about a river of dead and
wounded and a sea of refugees, setting back the country several decades.
Syria is paying the price of equilibrium. If the balance persists, the
country risks disintegrating or splintering.
The equilibrium is between two axes -- each comprising a number of
“strong-weak” sides -- and extends from the UN Security Council to Damascus’
doorstep.
The Syrian regime can claim to be strong, saying it was not swept away
like the regimes of Tunisia, Libya, Egypt and Yemen. It can claim to have
stopped, battered, bloodied, disfigured and cast doubts on the Arab Spring.
The regime can brag that it can devastate any city or village falling out
of its control. It can boast about convincing its hardcore supporters that they
are fighting in tandem a holy war worth all this gruesome and deadly
bloodletting.
The regime can take pride at having kept the backbone of its military and
security machine intact and its supply lines secure and at having maintained
one generous international ally called Russia and one generous regional partner
named Iran.
The regime can contend being strong and continuing to have overwhelming
firepower.
At the same time, the regime is weak. Areas under its control have
shrunk. The opposition rebels’ shells are reaching the icons of regime power in
the heart of Damascus.
The regime can resist and delay falling. It can opt to fight a protracted
and ruinous battle, but it is no more able to recoup its losses. More
importantly, it is unable anymore to end the terrible impasse without paying
the price it hesitated paying through Lakhdar Brahimi.
The regime can shoot down a solution, but it is incapable of initiating
or joining one without making fundamental concessions it considers synonymous
to a resounding defeat.
The Syrian opposition can say it is strong. It controls large swaths of
Syria and is knocking at the capital’s door. Atrocious violence against opposition
supporters and strongholds amplified hatred of the regime.
True, the opposition enjoys wide popular approval
and thorough Arab, Islamic and Western backing.
You can also cite its success in the Arab
de-legitimization of the regime.
The opposition can profess being strong and
buttressed against detractors by the sacrifices of its martyrs. But it cannot
deny its weaknesses.
The opposition failed to crystallize either a
unified vision or a cohesive representative body.
It failed to project a reliable and reassuring
profile to citizens at home and abroad.
It was unable to force its way to the component
protecting the regime by winning the component’s trust or allaying its fears of
change.
Inasmuch as the opposition benefited from the combat
experience of “roving fighters” that made their way to the battlefronts, it is
paying the price of fears raised by Jabhat al-Nusra sinking roots across the
country.
Russia is strong.
She paralyzed the Security Council and denied
Western powers the international legitimacy cover to deal with the Syria crisis.
She turned the June 2012 Geneva Declaration into a
war of conflicting interpretations. She supplied the Syrian Army with all the
weapons it needs.
But Russia is also weak. She can abort a solution unfavorable
to her ally but is incapable of initiating one liable to bring Syria’s
predicament to a close.
Russia is a “strong-weak” player.
Iran is undoubtedly the superstar player sustaining
the Syrian regime’s military staying power. She didn’t skimp on the quality or
quantity of her backing. She proved her ability to brave the storm.
But Iran is also weak.
Her deep involvement in the confrontation deprived
her of any role in contributing to a solution.
Iran is also swimming in a sea of popular resentment
in Syria and the region. Her stance is inflaming the Sunnite-Shiite face-off.
The same is true of Hezbollah, which is swimming in
the same waters.
The “strong-weak” syndrome applies to other players,
such as Turkey and the countries supplying cash, weapons and diplomatic
support.
All sides are currently racking their brains to try
and change the balance of forces and the “strong-weak” equilibrium in the hope
of creating new facts on the ground that would force the regime to subscribe to
a political solution.
This chapter will prove to be extremely harsh and
fraught with danger.