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Navigating Syria: The Impossible,
Indispensable Mission
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, May 12, 2014
I unfriended another Facebook friend this week. It may seem to
be a trivial matter, but for me, it is not. The reason behind my action was
Syria. As in Egypt, Syria has instigated many social media breakups with
people whom, until then, were regarded with a degree of respect and
admiration. But this is not a social media affair. The problems lie
at the core of the Syrian conflict, with all of its manifestations, be they
political, sectarian, ideological, cultural, and intellectual. While on the
left (not the establishment left of course) Palestine has brought many
likeminded people together, Egypt has fragmented that unity, and Syria has
crushed and pulverized it to bits. Those who cried over the victims
of Israeli wars on Gaza, did not seem very concerned about Palestinians
starving to death in the Yarmouk refugee camp on the outskirts of Damascus.
Some squarely blamed the Syrian government for the siege that killed
hundreds, while others blamed the rebels. Some writers even went further,
blaming the residents of the camp. Somehow, the refugees were implicated in
their own misery and needed to be collectively punished for showing sympathy
to the Syrian opposition. The only line of logic that exists in the
Yarmouk narrative, as in the Syrian story as a whole, is that there is no
logic. It has turned out that solidarity with Palestinians has limits. If
forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad do the shooting – and the shelling
and the starving – then the plight of the refugees is open for discussion.
It also has turned out that some of those who pose as human rights
activists are rarely compelled by ethical priorities, but rather dogmatic
ideology that is so rigid it has no space for a sensible argument based on a
serious investigation of facts. Some self-proclaimed ‘progressives’
have decided to elevate the status of Bashar al-Assad to that of being the
last line of defence against American imperialism. They have done so with
Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi as well. Their line of reasoning doesn’t stem from a
serious understanding of the legacies of both men, but an entirely different
set of representations, as in the West’s own attitude towards Libya and
Syria. Syria supported Hezbollah and Hamas in their resistance to Israel.
True. Leading US neoconservatives have plotted for years to ‘roll back’
Damascus, and to subdue any resistance to Israeli hegemony. Also true. But
between delineating these truths and others, in all that the Syrian
government has done - the horrendous war crimes, the perpetual sieges, the
unhindered violations of human rights - everything is somehow forgiven. They
are not to be discussed, or even acknowledged. In fact, for some, they never
happened. The other side is just as culpable. Crimes committed by
opposition forces and al-Qaeda affiliated groups are heinous and barbaric. A
simple news search produces volumes of crimes, massacres of entire villages,
and whole families or individuals who belonged to the wrong sect, or
religion. The intellectual crowd that opposes Assad is also unmoved
by all of this. They often pin the blame on Assad or the thugs (shabiha) for
any reported crime anywhere in Syria. And when news emerges that the victims
were loyalists to Assad, they find ways to twist the story in order to place
the blame on Assad forces anyway. But when more is revealed to prove the
responsibility of an opposition-affiliated militia, or a gang, they simply
shift gears to another massacre elsewhere, which is real or fabricated.
How is one to navigate a Syria where there are no ‘good guys’, where a
return to the status quo of an inherently corrupt, oppressive and an
undemocratic, clan-based government is unthinkable? And where neither al-Nusra,
the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant nor any other warning faction
offers the antidotes to Syria’s many ills – even worse, they offer an
archaic and essentially violent interpretation of Islam? How is one
to navigate the Syrian intellectual realm when both narratives are riddled
with half-truths or outright lies, where each discourse is predicated on the
complete dismissal of the other? How is one to navigate this territory when
many intellectuals who also masquerade as ‘human rights activists’ turn out
to be narrow-minded ideologues devoid of any humanism? Bashar is not
a deity. He is no Che Guevara either. The crimes his forces committed, would
be enough to send thousands of his backers to a never ending imprisonment.
His opponents are no liberators. Few amongst them have any potential of
being a harbinger of democracy or justice. Their crime record is vile and
frightening. The Syrian narrative is very complex because a
‘just solution’ is not a matter of a clever articulation of words. Aside
from the Syrian camps, parties involved include Western powers, Arab
governments, Israel, Russia, Iran, and a cluster of intelligence agencies
and legions of foreigners, on all sides. The agendas are mostly sinister.
The media campaigns are driven by lies. The story of the Ghouta chemical
attack of last year is particularly poignant. A war was about to break out,
led by the US and cheered on by Arabs. A recent investigation by Pulitzer
Prize-winning journalist Seymour Hersh suggests that the whole thing
might’ve been a plot, involving Turkey, to indict the regime. He argues that
the Americans knew it, yet still were ready to go to war. If
the Nusra group was indeed behind the Ghouta killings of hundreds of
innocent Syrians, the Syrian army is not innocent; far from it; as it has
killed thousands. The barrel bombs continue to level entire neighborhoods.
Those who survived the chemical attacks, manage to die in numerous other
ways. New killing methods are now reportedly include crucifying
victims. All of Syria is in fact being crucified. In fact, despite their
differences, Syria’s warring parties are united in the blood of Syrians –
and Palestinians – which they shed on a daily basis. When over 150,000
Syrians, including 10,000 children are dead, and 6.5 million are internally
displaced, and 2.5 million have fled beyond the country’s borders, no one is
innocent. As for the pseudo-intellectuals who are keeping track of one body
count, and ignoring the other, they must wake up to the fact that there is
only one pool of victims, the Syrian people. Bishop Desmond
Tutu is famous for his quote “If you are neutral in situations of injustice,
you have chosen the side of the oppressor.” Some of those who applied the
quote abundantly in the case of Palestine, are now ignoring it in the case
of Syria, for it doesn’t fit perfectly with their ideas, where there can
only be space for one single unadulterated and simplified narrative. All
‘facts’ are carefully selected and stacked in so carefully away to glorify
one party and demonize the other. In their world, the story is convincingly
clear, and those who don’t agree to its every component must be either a
Jihadist, a Zionist, an Assad-sympathizer, a fan of Hezbollah or on the
payroll of one intelligence service or the other. But how do
you navigate an impossible story? The answer: You side with the victim, no
matter her colour, sect or creed. You remain committed to the truth, no
matter how elusive. You drop every presupposition, abandon ideology,
permanently discard dogma, and approach Syria with abundance of humanity and
humility. We need to understand the roots of this heinous war, but we also
need it to end for the good of the Syrian people. The Syrian conflict should
not be a stage of bloody political intrigues for the West and Russia,
Israel, Iran and the Arabs. Syria is not a God-given inheritance of the
Assad-clan and their friends, or a space for another extremist experiment,
as was the case in Afghanistan and Somalia, or another imaginary battlefield
for social media leftists, whose claim to socialism is an occasional
Facebook profile photo of a clasped fist, or an earth shattering quote about
defeating capitalism. Syria belongs to its people. You either stand
on their side, or the side of the oppressor. - Ramzy Baroud is the
Managing Editor of Middle East Eye. He is an internationally-syndicated
columnist, a media consultant, an author and the founder of
PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter:
Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London). (A version of this article was
first published in Middle East Eye –
www.middleeasteye.net)
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