Sunday, August 7, 2011

The Great Divide!

Both Assad supporters and opponents are not as homogeneous as they are said to be, and both hold deeply held beliefs about the “other side,” but only the protesters have so far shown demonstrable willingness to rise above their prejudice and reach out to the other side. Assad supporters have responded by lies, accusations, and mindless violence.

Saturday August 6, 2011

Eyewitness reports that Hama City has now completely fallen under the control of Assad troops. Most inhabitants have left the city and those left are now hostages. Power is still out and many streets are reportedly strewn with bodies of residents who were killed by the shelling and/or snipers. Food supplies are running low, and the city virtually ran out of baby formulas. Eyewitnesses report serious shortage of potable water.

In response to allegations that the Iraqi Government will be providing $10 billion in aid to the Assad regime, the Iraqi Minster of Finance, Rafei Aleissawi, issued a statement recently clarifying that the amount is actually $6 billion only, to be paid in three installments over the next 9 months, beginning from the agreement date signed between the two governments on July 27th.

Human Rights Organization put the death toll for Friday August 5, excluding Hama City, at 29, with dozens reported missing.

The Austrian Central Bank decided to stop abiding by a bilateral agreement to mint Syrian currency.

Syrian security officers arrest the known dissident Walid Al-Bouni, and his two sons.

Syrian army sends more tanks and troops into Homs and Deir Ezzor City.

Links
Poet Adunis is one of the Arab world's well-respected intellectuals; describes Syria's oppostion movement as disunited.
Gulf states called for an "immediate halt to violence and bloodshed" in Syria after security forces killed at least 24 civilians in the latest round of anti-government protests.
A leading member of Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats has called for EU ambassadors to be withdrawn from Syria. Meanwhile, Germany's foreign minister says change is inevitable in Damascus.
But Syrian opposition members say it's questionable whether the move could end decades of single-party Baathist rule without constitutional reform. Observers say one of the articles of the Syrian constitution guarantees supremacy for the ruling Baath party.
Activists also said that the death toll could be much higher, but that a comprehensive and accurate count was almost impossible, given the state of communications in the city, the siege and the difficulty of moving around. They said that they feared the near-total media blackout imposed on the city could mean that the military was carrying out an unrestrained operation.
It was the start of the Muslim month of Ramadan, supposed to be a period of daytime fasting and prayer to reinforce the virtues of patience, spirituality, humility and submission to God.
Lieutenant Khalaf, who served in the Syrian army for 10 years, said the military itself is "completely" subject to the security apparatus, adding that Syrian prisons are filled with hundreds of army officers who refused to open fire on civilians.
the United States should continue to pursue a resolution at the U.N. Security Council condemning the Syrian government’s behavior. Last week’s statement by the council was a positive step but should be bolstered by a strong resolution.

The Assads do have supporters on the ground, after all the protesters are not killing themselves. But, and  while the majority of the supporters of the Assads come from an Alawite, Christian, Druze and Ismailite background, not all members of these communities are in agreement with the Assads and many have been part of this Revolution since the beginning.

On the other hand, the Assad support base include a significant Sunni component whose membership is not only derived from the ranks of the Sunni commercial elite and the upper middle class, but also from the ranks of poorer urban and rural classes whose family members are connected one way or another to the Assads’ large security apparatus, and Baath institutions.

In theory, these communal intersections between the supporters and opponents of the Assads should facilitate dialog and negotiations at some point, but now is clearly not the time for that.

To be clear, the Assads can never be part of any dialog. Theirs has always been an all-or-nothing approach, which makes them unable to offer anything of substance to the protesters. Moreover, the Assads don’t seem to have reached the stage yet where they may be willing to negotiate an exit strategy for themselves. They still believe, it seems, as do their supporters, that they can somehow contain and survive the Revolution with little change. Current developments reflect continued commitment to this mentality. The Assads can never be part of any solution.

But there cannot be a solution, one that can help us avoid significant bloodshed, without successfully reaching out to the Assad support base.

The problem here is that if top military general and security chiefs have shown themselves to be too far gone to be promising candidates for a successful outreach effort, the civilian component does not seem that promising either, at least at this stage.

Indeed, there is a certain level of paranoia and denial within the ranks of Assads’ supporters that leaves little room for any kind of dialog or outreach, again at this stage. They keep seeing networks of Salafists and terrorists springing up all over Syria leading to the establishment of one Kandahar after another, when the only evidence in this regard is the verbal assertions of regime propagandists and inflammatory reports on state-run media. Regional and international news networks that provide evidence to the contrary, evidence that highlights regime brutality and the peaceful nature of the Revolution, are seen as part of an ongoing conspiracy, and their evidence is ignored.  

Even Assad supporters living in the West and who have access to reportage by known western journalists like Anthony Shadid among others, who actually managed to visit Hama City, walked down its streets and talked to its residents and protest leaders, chalk off the observations of these people on the peaceful nature of the protest movement as part of the international conspiracy or as reflection of the naivety of the journalists involved.

Furthermore, signs of religiosity among the protesters are taken as evidence of extremism, and the rural appearance of some as evidence of backwardness and lack of readiness for democracy. Meanwhile, most Assad supporters, especially those who joined the army or security forces or became members of the proliferating pro-Assad militias, themselves come from a rural background and are no less religiously observant than the protesters, as evidenced by the jewelry and/or tattoos they wear: the crosses, the Allah engraving and the mini forked swords (a Shiite and Alawite religious symbol). Religiosity is simply not the exclusive domain of the Sunnis in Syria.

How can rational dialog take place in these conditions? What sort of guarantees can be offered to change this mentality? What sort of statements and/or actions can the protesters offer to appease the fear and worries involved? Assad supporters seem to be currently cruising on a “cut down the tall trees” mode, it’s pretty much doubtful that they will stop for a serious rational chat anytime soon. So long as they cling to the belief that the Revolution can and should be crushed, and that Assad should be in charge of whatever “reform” process to take place, they leave little room for dialog or even negotiations.

Religious and sectarian prejudice is deeply ingrained in our culture, this is something that no one can deny. And yes, both protesters and supporters, irrespective of their particular religious sectarian backgrounds, are guilty in this regard. But the protesters have been trying to rise above theirs since the beginning of the Revolution. The discourse of some of their “spokespeople” might occasionally fall short of the slogans of national unity they raise, a shortcoming characteristic of such nascent movements and which at this stage also comes as a reaction to the ongoing brutal crackdown and the lies and provocations that come with it, but the preponderance of their actions come as a reflection of a sincere desire to build something new and inclusive.

Their efforts at outreach, however, are unlikely to have the desired effects at this stage. It is only when the regime is at the very point of collapse that we can hope to begin negotiating and dialoging with the other side, because only then some might be willing to listen, driven by the same existential angst that is being manipulated by the Assads today and channeled into the current crackdown.

Right now, the focus of the protesters should be on winning, and that, in large part, calls for keeping their activities peaceful. With increasing violence on part of the Assads and their supporters and loyalists, and increasing attempts by fringe elements to push for retributions, protest leaders have their work cut out for them.

The focus on winning, however, does not preclude the need for enunciating a vision for an inclusive tomorrow and coming out with a plan for the transitional period, seeing that our ability to acquire international legitimacy and to successfully reach out to that important segment of the population that remains silent seems to hinge on this.

At the end of the day, however, it seems quite probable that the Assads will have some diehard supporters who will fight for them to the end. While so many are focused on the potential drive for retribution on part the revolutionaries, it is more than likely that these diehard elements, who are responsible for the preponderance of the violence today, will be the ones to seek retributions tomorrow when their cause is lost, after all they are the better organized and armed side, and the brainwashed ones whose paranoia is fueling the current mayhem.

Hama City: the havoc (Aug 6) http://youtu.be/QrzFxq_xFhI (Aug 5) http://youtu.be/_aUAIewvU8U , http://youtu.be/jjSAA71iNUg Despite these tragic developments in Hama City herself, resident of nearby communities in the larger Province take on the mantle of rebellion: Kfar Zita http://youtu.be/H3Law2W_TJE

Deir Ezzor City: defiant before the looming crackdown http://youtu.be/RzndJldFgVc , http://youtu.be/scAB1vX5teY


Nawar BoulBoul, a known young actor, leading a demonstration in Homs, shouting “Allahu Akbar (God Is Great), Hurriyeh (Freedom), Silmiyyeh (Peaceful), Muslims and Christians, Sunnis and Alawites” 

Damascus / Douma: a video showing how protesters came under fire and stayed defiant on Friday http://youtu.be/0uLGvuldq8cn

Damascus / Zamalka: security officers celebrating yesterday’s crackdown http://youtu.be/t8b2xHeVu0w

Bashar Al-Assad Cartoon: Bashar complains to Ahmadinejad of the protest movement, who takes him to see Khamenei. Khamenei advises Bashar to lay siege to cities, confiscates all freedom, and lie, lie, lie until he is believed. http://youtu.be/mCRg4orLmd4

This recently uploaded video records the demonstration by Palestinians refugees in the Damascus’ Yarmouk Camp that took place on June 6. The demonstration came one day after Palestinian youths were bused to the Golan by Syrian security officers and were made to cross the border into Israeli occupies parts. The act led to a massacre that was perpetrated by Israeli border patrols. The demonstration on June 6 was marred by another massacre, this one perpetrated by Syrian security forces. The trigger seems to have been the chants against Bashar and Maher Al-Assad. http://youtu.be/BmTRflx8Wss

DAMASCUS


IDLIB
Protesters come under fire in Idlib City http://youtu.be/PufuLyu79Eg They have been chanting “the people want to execute the President” http://youtu.be/inP7iNd1kd8 , their numbers were estimated at 10,000 http://youtu.be/rGlJvdaRhk0 Some of the wounded http://youtu.be/vmJob_UKh90 , http://youtu.be/_tlO61-y42g Protesters record looting by security officers http://youtu.be/c4JCBYtq3Uk , http://youtu.be/_cjeQZ6qLQU , The moment when the power was switched off http://youtu.be/-Kh0hn2Tg7o
Ma’arrat Al-Nouman http://youtu.be/pmLiEPN6xyw
Jabal Al-Zawiyeh http://youtu.be/1WvXd_Etn4M

DEIR EZZOR

HAURAN

HOMS
Jobar Neighborhood http://youtu.be/Hj3ojw2x70E
Al-Khaldiyeh Neighborhood: under fire yesterday, still rebellious today http://youtu.be/Q1kUJIv45iA , http://youtu.be/qcLOskW9VCA In the morning, there were funerals http://youtu.be/c_cdE-MNcJ4 , http://youtu.be/TTVHseKG_lU ,
Bab Dreib Neighborhood http://youtu.be/b5QuHJ9MrYs
Bab Amr Neighborhood http://youtu.be/tGAUR9krEyk
Al-Qousour Neighborhood http://youtu.be/IsY0Np8AGKc
Bab Al-Sibaa Neighborhood http://youtu.be/jhhBrWcNDd0
Palmyra: protesters carry signs demanding army not interfere in their local affairs, as they seem to have taken control over this historic city  http://youtu.be/PbheXpb2yh0 , http://youtu.be/m7vjTS31NWk
Al-Qseir:Damn your soul Hafiz” is sang to the tunes of a popular song http://youtu.be/c40noPWv8eA

ELSEWHERE
Al-Hassekh /Al-Qamishly http://youtu.be/riZ87cCPUEU
Al-Raqqah / Al-Tabaqa http://youtu.be/nnOabhMkoqM
Aleppo / Andan (Aug 5) http://youtu.be/giTPsBkipRU
Lattakia / Al-Ramel http://youtu.be/6bOJwkidEgk

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