Syria Is Iraq By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
Syria Is Iraq
By THOMAS L.
FRIEDMAN
Published: July
24, 2012 169 Comments
Lord knows I am rooting
for the opposition forces in Syria to quickly prevail on their own and turn out
to be as democratically inclined as we hope. But the chances of this best-of-all-possible
outcomes is low. That’s because Syria is a lot like Iraq. Indeed, Syria is
Iraq’s twin — a multisectarian, minority-ruled dictatorship that was held
together by an iron fist under Baathist ideology. And, for me, the lesson of
Iraq is quite simple: You can’t go from Saddam to Switzerland without getting
stuck in Hobbes — a war of all against all — unless you have a well-armed
external midwife, whom everyone on the ground both fears and trusts to manage
the transition. In Iraq, that was America. The kind of low-cost,
remote-control, U.S./NATO midwifery that ousted Qaddafi and gave birth to a new
Libya is not likely to be repeated in Syria. Syria is harder. Syria is Iraq.
And Iraq was such a
bitter experience for America that we prefer never to speak of it again. But
Iraq is relevant here. The only reason Iraq has any chance for a decent outcome
today is because America was on the ground with tens of thousands of troops to
act as that well-armed midwife, reasonably trusted and certainly feared by all
sides, to manage Iraq’s transition to more consensual politics. My gut tells me
that Syria will require the same to have the same chance.
But because I absolutely
would not advocate U.S. intervention on the ground in Syria or anywhere in the
Arab world again — and the U.S. public would not support it — I find myself
hoping my analysis is wrong and that Syrians will surprise us by finding their
own way, with just arms and diplomatic assistance, to a better political
future. I know columnists are supposed to pound the table and declaim what is
necessary. But when you believe that what is necessary, an outside midwife for
Syria, is impossible, you need to say so. I think those who have been
advocating a more activist U.S. intervention in Syria — and excoriating
President Obama for not leading that — are not being realistic about what it
would take to create a decent outcome.
Why? In the Middle East,
the alternative to bad is not always good. It can be worse. I am awed at the
bravery of those Syrian rebels who started this uprising, peacefully, without
any arms, against a regime that plays by what I call Hama Rules, which are no
rules at all. The Assad regime deliberately killed demonstrators to turn this
conflict into a sectarian struggle between the ruling minority Alawite sect,
led by the Assad clan, and the country’s majority of Sunni Muslims. That’s why
the opposite of the Assad dictatorship could be the breakup of Syria — as the
Alawites retreat to their coastal redoubt — and a permanent civil war.
There are two things
that could divert us from that outcome. One is the Iraq alternative, where
America went in and decapitated the Saddam regime, occupied the country and
forcibly changed it from a minority Sunni-led dictatorship to a majority
Shiite-led democracy. Because of both U.S. incompetence and the nature of Iraq,
this U.S. intervention triggered a civil war in which all the parties in Iraq —
Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds — tested the new balance of power, inflicting
enormous casualties on each other and leading, tragically, to ethnic cleansing
that rearranged the country into more homogeneous blocks of Sunnis, Shiites and
Kurds.
But the U.S. presence in
Iraq contained that civil war and ethnic cleansing from spreading to
neighboring states. And once that civil war burned itself out — and all sides
were exhausted and more separated — the U.S. successfully brokered a new
constitution and power-sharing deal in Iraq, with the Shiites enjoying majority
rule, the Sunnis out of power but not powerless, and the Kurds securing
semi-autonomy. The cost of this transition in lives and money was huge, and
even today Iraq is not a stable or healthy democracy. But it has a chance, and
it’s now up to Iraqis.
Since it is highly
unlikely that an armed, feared and trusted midwife will dare enter the fray in
Syria, the rebels on the ground there will have to do it themselves. Given
Syria’s fractured society, that will not be easy — unless there is a surprise.
A surprise would be the disparate Syrian opposition groups congealing into a
united political front — maybe with the help of U.S., Turkish and Saudi
intelligence officers on the ground — and this new front reaching out to
moderate Alawites and Christians who supported the Assads out of fear and
agreeing to build a new order together that protects majority and minority
rights. It would be wonderful to see the tyrannical Assad-
Russia-Iran-Hezbollah axis replaced by a democratizing Syria, not a chaotic
Syria.
But color me dubious.
The 20 percent of Syrians who are pro-Assad Alawites or Christians will be
terrified of the new Sunni Muslim majority, with its Muslim Brotherhood
component, and this Sunni Muslim majority has suffered such brutality from this
regime that reconciliation will be difficult, especially with each passing day
of bloodshed. Without an external midwife or a Syrian Mandela, the fires of
conflict could burn for a long time. I hope I am surprised.
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