A Country That Was Once Syria and the Agony of Its People
(Khalil Ashawi/Reuters) "More humanitarian access is needed,. Intensified cross-line and cross-border deliveries are essential to reach everyone in need everywhere." |
"If Bashar al-Assad wins or survives in ways that give him control over most of Syria, Iran will have a massive new degree of influence over Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon in a polarized Middle East divided between Sunni and Shi'ite and steadily driving minorities into exile."Anthony Cordesman, (2013) military and national security analyst, Center for Strategic and International Studies"Bashar was never going to accept anything short of a total restoration of the 'wall of terror' built by this father in the 1970s and 1980s.""No peace negotiations or reconciliation processes will ever change this reality, which has been built on fear and enforced with sectarian weapons."Mustafa Khalifa, Syrian intellectual
"I would never (forget). When I left Syria, I had one of those rubber bands that you wear on your wrist. I had the Syrian flag on my hand. I swore that I will never take it off until I actually get my Canadian citizenship.""Every day I look at it, it reminds me of what I've been through and what I've become right now.""The big misconception is people calling it war. I guess it's war now, but it wasn't war when it started. It was a revolution against the dictatorship regime."Mohammad Al Masalma, owner Mosy Photography, Syrian refugee, Halifax
A
father reacts in 2013 after the death of two of his children, whom
activists said were killed by shelling from forces loyal to Syria's
President Bashar al-Assad, at alAnsari area in Aleppo. |
Syrian
Sunnis felt they had good reason to mount protests against their status
as citizens of Syria ruled by a Shi'ite Alawite minority regime that
ignored the human rights of the majority Sunni population. Their
president felt they had no right to protest anything. He called them
terrorists. He warned the world community that if the protests which
turned into armed rebellion after the Syrian military arrested, tortured
and murdered children and adults alike for presuming to protest their
living conditions and human rights, would impact the entire Middle
East.
What started as a peaceful protest became a searing, no-holds-barred civil war.
Sectarian
hatred, tribalism, ethnic loyalties have always divided the Middle
East. In Syria those divisions became a symbol of just how gruesome
atrocities can become as commonplace instances of rancor and rage as the
conflict began to attract the attention of seasoned Islamist jihadists
from other dangerous conflicts like Libya arriving in Syria to further
season the simmering pot of lethal antipathies. Syrian Sunnis whether or
not they became part of the rebellion, became victims in a war of
attrition, targeted by their president as connivers with the rebels
intent on bringing down the regime.
It
took no time at all before terrified Sunnis were forced to vacate their
homes, their farms, their businesses, and towns seeking to escape being
strafed and bombed by military aircraft. Hospitals, clinics, schools,
apartment buildings were being indiscriminately bombed as long as they
were in Sunni-majority areas. Heritage UNESCO areas of ancient antiquity
weren't spared. Soon a new scourge entered the ravaged areas calling
itself a new caliphate and threatening Christians, Yazidis and Kurds
with death as infidels.
The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant's publicized atrocities horrified the world.
A
doctor talks with refugees at a displaced persons camp in Atme in
Syria's northwestern Idlib province near the border with Turkey, March
14, 2020 |
But
it was the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad that was responsible for
slaughtering a half-million of its own citizens, of creating six million
displaced Syrians living in squalid camps within Syria, and another six
million swelling refugee camps in Turkey, Iraq and Lebanon. Europe and
North America became the destination of Syrian refugees hoping to secure
a future for their families. It has been a decade since the first
demonstration turned into an uprising on March 15, 2011.
Then
the Assad regime began to put down a rebellion of 'terrorists', turning
to barrel bombs for greater effect in bombing innocent civilians and
rebel groups alike. This has been as much Iran's war as it has been
Syria's. Assad wants his authority reestablished throughout the country
that was once Syria, and Iran plans to be the power behind the throne,
as its rightful destiny. The Syrian Observatory of Human Rights counts
560,000 dead, while the Syrian Network for Human Rights places that
figure 100,000 greater taking account of the Syrians brought to Assad's
dungeons and never seen again.
Syrian amputee in refugee camp, with his children (Mahmoud Hassano/Reuters) |
With
Tehran and Moscow at his side, Bashar al-Assad prevailed. The
Peshmerga in Kurdistan made it their mission to destroy ISIL's power
base and threat to defenceless communities, even as Turkey as the
neighbour sheltering more Syrians than any other, violates the Syrian
border with the intention of rooting out a Kurdish presence in
collaboration with the anti-Turkey Turkish Kurdish PKK. The awkward
collaboration between Moscow and Ankara in defiance of a U.S. presence
failed to relieve the agony of Syrians.
Syrian farmer, walks with his grandchildren, at an internally displaced camp in northern Idlib, Syria on March 11, 2021. (Reuters) |
Any
censuring initiatives arising in the United Nations is foiled by Russia
which has gained a deep-water seaport and an airbase in Syria for its
invaluable assistance in bombing Syrian Sunnis. The U.S. under the Obama
administration challenged Assad to avoid using proscribed weapons
against his people, that would be a 'red line' that could never be
tolerated. The sarin gas attack in 2013 in Ghouta killed up to 1,729
Syrians of all ages. A trifling inconvenience that required no response
from the U.S.
With
that level of assent-by-unresponsiveness, there was nothing that would
stop Assad from continued use of poison gas as a weapon of mass
destruction and he now has over 300 chemical attacks under his belt,
along with Russian protection of his regime. But of course the Obama
administration could do little because to intervene in Syria would mean
encountering the Russian air-defence system at Assad's disposal. Except
the Russian anti-aircraft batteries appear to be unused, along with the
Chinese low-altitude radar system.
The
reality appears to be that only Israel has committed to deterring the
best-laid plans of the Islamic Republic of Iran in its takeover of Syria
and placement of Hezbollah at Syria's ostensible disposal. The Israeli
Air Force carries out myriad bombing attacks on Hezbollah targets in
Syria. The Israeli Air Force is well on its way to destroying a good
proportion of Syria's air defences. And still maintains diplomatic
relations with Moscow.
The
mass butcher of his own civilians remains beyond accountability for the
atrocities he has committed against his country and its people. Aided
and abetted by Russia and by Iran there appears no appetite from within
the international community to demand justice for those who lost their
human rights along with their disposable lives.
An explosion is seen following Russian airstrikes on the village of al-Bara
in the southern part of Syria's northwestern Idlib province, March 5,
2020. AFP |
Labels: Bashar al-Assad, Iran, Russia, Syrian Civil War, Syrian Refugees
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