Syria, imperialism and the left (2)

Some people on the moderate but also the Trotskyist-influenced left defend not only the Syrian revolt, but also, sadly, find Western intervention against Assad quite acceptable. Second part of a three-part series.

Submitted by rooieravotr on August 9, 2012

Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3

That we detest the Syrian dictatorship enough to want it to be seen overthrown, does not mean that we should become cheerleaders for the revolt against the Assad regime! That brings us at the other side of the argument, which basically goes like this. The revolt against the dictatorship is a struggle for freedom and justice . First demonstrations, later armed struggle, against the regime is fully justified and should be supported by progressives. Not only that: the rebels have the right to get arms where they can find them, and we should not stand in the way. If the CIA, the Saudi, Turkish, Qatari states send arms to the Free Syrian Army, that is useful. If the rebels want a no fly zone and call for air strikes on Syria army positions, this also should go unopposed. Western help to the revolt may have its downsides. Still, better that the revolt wins – like the Lybian one – with NATO aid , than that it becomes suppressed while the West stands aside. Such a pro-revolt position, with a refusal to oppose Western interference (to say the least) is expressed by moderate progressives, like Juan Cole on Informed Comment, like Paul Woodward on War in Context , but also by people considering themselves Marxist and revolutionary, like Louis Proyect on Unrepentant Marxist , and Pham Binh on North Star . Both are from a Trotskyist background.

What we see here is: legitimate sympathy for a struggle against oppression, combined with the most wrongheaded search for allies where allies cannot be found: in Western imperialism. Also, some very unsavoury aspects of the revolt tend to get overlooked or badly underestimated by people like Binh, Proyect, Cole and Woodward. First, there already is a serious amount of Western intervention. There is a consistent pattern of arms support from Saudi and Qatari sources to insurgent groups in Syria. The CIA is, at the very least, monitoring things, while the US is giving “non lethal” aid to “the opposition”. That is: US-delivered communication tools make it possible to use Saudi-delivered arms to strike more efficiently against Syrian regime forces. The distincion between 'lethal' and 'non-lethal' aid may help Obama prevent trouble with Congressional oversight. In real war terms, the distinction is not that relevant. There are other forms of US interference as well: the Syrian National Congress, the exiled opposition umbrella – not taken seriously by many anti-regime fighters in Syria itself, by the way – has spokespeople who are connected to all kinds of US government-funded bodies acting to undermine the Syrian regime for their own reasons. There is also a US role in 'advising' Syrian opposition forces on a transition to a post-Assad regime. Connections go bak to 2005, when the Bush administration had Syria on its hit list. Charrlie Skelton describes a number of these connections in the Guardian.

The big worry for the US at the moment seems to be a 'power vacuum', a collapse of the Syrian state; the US hope is a managed transition from above, Assadism without Assad. That is, the US wants to get rid of the dictator, without the revolt being in a position to enforce thorough change from below. For instance, you can read talks are described in Foreign Policy about meetings, held in Germany, between opposition politicians and US experts, with State Department money involved and U.S officials indirectly in touch. “The idea is to preserve those parts of the Syrian state that can be carried over while preferring to reform the parts that can't. For example, large parts of the Syrian legal system could be preserved.” Dissidents having been punished by the 'Syrian legal system' might disagree. The US supports the opposition in order to prevent its development in a revolutionary direction. They would have much preferred to work with Assad himself. Now that he proves a bit recalcitrant, he must be replaced – with a somewhat more amenable look-alike. Encouraging this kind of support for the revolt is encouraging the events to develop in a more and more counterrevolutionary direction.

The same applies to the arms deliveries that the Saudi and Qatari regimes organize, no doubt with US toleration, permission, maybe encouragement. They do not strengthen the revolt as such. They certainly do not strengthen the forces in Syria who try to bould broad-based protests, demonstrations and so on, and who try to resist the increasing militarization of the struggle. Resistance coalitions like the Local Coordination Committees, for instance, may not find Qatari guns very useful. The arms end up in, you guessed it, armed insurgent'groups. Of course, there are strings attached. The Saudi and Qatari regimes detest the Syrian regime, not because it is an oppressive dictatorship – they operate an oppressive dictatorship at home - , but because it opposes their ambitions and religious preferences. The Saudi state stands opposed to Iranian regional ambitions, and therefore considers Iran's ally Syria, as an enemy as well. Both the Saudi and Qatari monarchies encourage a conservative Sunni identity, which stands opposed to the ostentatiously secular Syrian regime with its Shiite friends in Tehran and Lebanon. Both these monarchies tend to support, not 'the Syrian opposition', but the most right-wing, Sunni-based Jihadi forces within the revolt – with all the sectarian dynamics this implies. The Telegraph gives interesting details. Saudi support mainly goes to such forces within the Free Syrian Army. Qatari support tends to go to groups outside the FSA umbrella, independent Jihadi groups. There is a bit of competition between those regimes. But both work in the same direction: towards replacement of the Assad dictatorship with a conservative Sunni-dominated Jihadi regime, hostile to Iran. Where these kind of right wing forces are strong – in Homs - members of the Alawite minority feel threatened and insecure, with good reason. Many Alawites have already fled.

There may be even bigger interests at stake. Pepe Escobar describes an oil-and-gas connection. Syria was involved in a pipeline project connecting Iran through Iraq and Syria to the Mediterranean. This would leave Western ally Turkey out of the loop and without the loot to go with projects like these. And it would help Iran, which is not what Washington wants. Now, it would be simplistic to say: aha, so that is why the US and Turkey wants Assad to go! To put a stop to this project that harms US and Turkish interests! But that the thing is wholly unconnected is not very credible either.

What all this US, Qatari, Turkish, Saudi activity amounts to is a serious effort to derail the revolt, instrumentalize it and turn it intio a proxy war against Syria and against Iran as well. The more intervention like this there is going to be, the weakar any prospect that anything positive comes out of the struggle becomes. A Western-backed, Saudi-and-Qatari-armed, well-organized insurgency may get rid of Assad for sure. But this wil not be liberation, only the replacement of one oppressive regime with another. The less Western interference, the more chance that this will not be the fate of the revolt. Supporting or encouraging Western intervention against the Assad regime is supporting a counterrevolutionary derailment of whatever liberatory dynamics the revolt may possess or have possessed.

Comments

Steven.

12 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Steven. on August 9, 2012

Hey, thanks for posting this I look forward to reading it later. Just one quick note that I have created a "Syria conflict" tag for articles on this topic, so in the tags box in future just put in "Syria conflict" instead of putting in "Syria" again. Cheers

rooieravotr

12 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by rooieravotr on August 10, 2012

Thanks:) I saw some errors, fixed a few, will try to fix the rest: ).

Binh

12 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Binh on August 11, 2012

"But this wil not be liberation, only the replacement of one oppressive regime with another."

Nonsense. A bourgeois democracy is a step forward from a police state dictatorship.

Libya proved that it is indeed possible to co-opt imperialist aid for revolutionary ends. They won.

S. Artesian

12 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by S. Artesian on August 11, 2012

Binh

"But this wil not be liberation, only the replacement of one oppressive regime with another."

Nonsense. A bourgeois democracy is a step forward from a police state dictatorship.

Libya proved that it is indeed possible to co-opt imperialist aid for revolutionary ends. They won.

And Libya qualifies as a "bourgeois democracy" exactly how? Exactly what has changed in the economy that not enshrines bourgeois democracy in the mode of accumulation?

Note: this is not an argument for supporting Ghadafi, or Assad, or Mubarak. The issue is what the economics behind the revolt? Is there a class struggle? (My answer: yes) Can this "democratic revolution" be secured with the aid and assistance of the advanced capitalist countries? (My answer: no) Will that aid and assistance be, sooner rather than later, and inevitability used against the workers, against the struggle for the emancipation of labor? (My answer, a most emphatic yes)

Mark.

12 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Mark. on August 11, 2012

Binh

"But this wil not be liberation, only the replacement of one oppressive regime with another."

Nonsense. A bourgeois democracy is a step forward from a police state dictatorship.

Libya proved that it is indeed possible to co-opt imperialist aid for revolutionary ends. They won.

I've already posted this link from AJE on the Libya thread but I think it's worth posting again here as it seems relevant to Binh's argument (and before anyone starts coming out with nonsense about the situation in Libya):

Najla Abdurrahman: Hopeful signs emerge in Libya

Granted that they won, it was still a victory at a massive cost in destruction and loss of lives. Maybe that's an argument for avoiding Arab spring type protests being turned into armed uprisings at all costs, though too late for Syria obviously.

communal_pie

12 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by communal_pie on August 11, 2012

That stuff about it being "hopeful" in Libya and possibly better is really not okay, no one should support that stuff.

jonthom

12 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by jonthom on August 12, 2012

Binh

"But this wil not be liberation, only the replacement of one oppressive regime with another."

Nonsense. A bourgeois democracy is a step forward from a police state dictatorship.

Libya proved that it is indeed possible to co-opt imperialist aid for revolutionary ends. They won.

Please provide evidence of this "step forward". As MediaLens pointed out at the time of the elections, things aren't quite as lovely - or for that matter "democratic" - as you're making out.

And then of course, there's things like this.

And this.

And this.

And this.

And this:

[youtube]rhYv7ylu_to[/youtube]

But hey, at least it's happening in a "bourgeois democracy", right? :rolleyes:

Just to put in the seemingly obligatory disclaimer, no I don't think Gaddafi was some sort of humanitarian superhero. But the gloating from some quarters - including you - that somehow the anti-interventionists have been proven wrong is, at the very least, premature.

jonthom

12 years 3 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by jonthom on August 12, 2012

Mark.

Binh

"But this wil not be liberation, only the replacement of one oppressive regime with another."

Nonsense. A bourgeois democracy is a step forward from a police state dictatorship.

Libya proved that it is indeed possible to co-opt imperialist aid for revolutionary ends. They won.

I've already posted this link from AJE on the Libya thread but I think it's worth posting again here as it seems relevant to Binh's argument (and before anyone starts coming out with nonsense about the situation in Libya):

Najla Abdurrahman: Hopeful signs emerge in Libya

The main thing that stuck out to me from that article was the following, which - I think justifiably - rang alarm bells:

Libya is a country burdened by enormous social and structural problems: failing healthcare and education systems; a crumbling infrastructure; serious environmental issues; the undiversified economy of a distributive oil state, which tends to encourage feelings of entitlement and erode a society's work ethic; massive corruption at all levels, which has contributed to a lack of professionalism and accountability; and the list goes on.

IME, complaints about entitlement and a lack of work ethic tend to come hand in hand with support for cutting welfare, privatisation and the like. Similarly, later in the article, the author points to the allegedly liberal and secular qualities of Mahmoud Jibril's National Forces Alliance, and the Islamist nature of other, less successful parties, without pointing to Jibril's avowedly neoliberal stance, support for privatisation, "special economic zones" and the like.

That aside, the main impression from the article is that criticisms and concerns over how things are going in Libya are largely confined to international spectators with an ax to grind. This would seem to be undermined by the fact that many of the concerns being raised come from people within Libya itself - for example, the Libyan Observatory for Human Rights recently stated that the situation in Libya was in fact worse than under Gaddafi. This post links to a number of other relevant articles.

I've also noticed both with that article and in general that there's little to no mention of pro-Gaddafi groups within Libya - of which there are many - nor the fact that they have been explicitly removed from the political process, with laws against expressing support for the former government, electoral candidates expressing pro-Gaddafi sentiment, etc. Which somewhat skews the apparently "free" and "democratic" state of affairs IMO.

Obviously western media liked to senationalise things, as though the whole of Libya were simply one big war zone. And it's good to be able to see another side of things. But the idea that intervention was positive, or that things now seem positive or hopeful, doesn't seem that accurate to me.