|

Syria's place in the U.S. agenda
Diplomacy: The world watches
nervously, hoping the nations can once again work out
differences without bloodshed.
By Shibley Telhami
The Baltimore Sun
April 20, 2003
The recent tension in U.S. relations with Syria quickly
raised the specter of another war to follow the Iraq
war. Although the possibility of such a war is very
small, the fears are real in many quarters in the Middle
East and around the world.
For even aside from the genuine U.S. concerns about
aspects of Syrian foreign policy, at issue are pervasive
fears about American intentions and about the shape of
American foreign policy after the military victory in
Iraq.
Just as the surprisingly easy toppling of the Taliban
regime in Afghanistan had empowered those who want to use
America's military might to pursue American objectives,
the quick demise of Saddam Hussein's regime has reinforced
the same tendency.
The immediate grievances leading to the tension with Syria
are important enough to deserve pursuit but certainly not
enough to raise the specter of war. Syria, as did many
other states, opposed the war on Iraq but it also
surprised many by supporting U.N. Resolution 1441
demanding immediate Iraqi compliance with previous United
Nations resolutions.
Syria has been accused of helping Iraq, including perhaps
supplying night-vision equipment, and also of harboring
former Iraqi leaders and scientists. These are important
issues that the United States will no doubt continue to
pursue as Secretary of State Colin L. Powell makes his way
to Damascus for talks with Syrian President Bashar Assad.
The tone of the relationship in the coming weeks will be
important not only in setting American priorities in the
Middle East but also in addressing concerns that the
United States is implementing a unilateralist policy to
remake the Middle East beyond Iraq.
Many in the Arab world also fear that rising tension with
Syria will make it more difficult to focus on Arab-Israeli
negotiations which most, including the United States and
Britain, want to revive.
In the past three decades, the Syrian-U.S. relationship
has been as complex as Syria's relations with Iraq.
Although Syria is ruled by the secularist Arab nationalist
Baath Party, it has been at odds with the Iraqi Baathists
for decades. In fact, the Syrians' mistrust of Saddam
Hussein was so strong that theirs became the only Arab
country to side with the non-Arab Islamic government of
Iran during the Iraq-Iran war in the 1980s.
When Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990, Syria pulled another
surprise by joining the U.S.-led coalition to liberate
Kuwait. That created a new American-Syrian relationship
that helped Syria survive the loss of its Soviet patron
after the Cold War ended. It also opened opportunities for
Arab-Israeli negotiations; Syria and Israel were brought
together to negotiate in the Madrid process immediately
after the 1991 gulf war.
Although the 1990s were characterized by episodes of
competition between the Syrian-Israeli negotiations on one
hand and the Palestinian-Israeli negotiations on the
other, the general sense was that a negotiated settlement
was obtainable. That helped reduce the tension between the
United States and Syria despite Syria's military presence
in Lebanon and its support for the Hezbollah guerrillas in
south Lebanon, which was under Israeli occupation.
By the end of the 1990s, the situation had changed. The
Israeli-Syrian negotiations collapsed even before the
Palestinian-Israeli negotiations did in July 2000. And
Israel unilaterally withdrew from Lebanese territories.
Syria, which has remained on the U.S. State Department's
list of "state sponsors of terrorism," continued its
support for Hezbollah, which continued to attack Israeli
targets, especially in a disputed border area, Shebaa
Farm. This increased the tension between the United States
and Syria even before the heightened focus on terrorism
that followed the tragedy of Sept. 11.
Until his death in June 2000, Syrian President Hafez el
Assad had managed to forge stable relations even with his
enemies through a cautious policy that understood the
limitations of Syrian power.
Both Israel and the United States have found predictable
ways to manage their relationship with Damascus even when
they strongly opposed Syria's policies.
When Bashar Assad became president after his father's
death, both hope and concern existed. The hope derived
from the man's youth, his education in Britain, and his
apparent understanding of the need to reform. The concern
derived from the understanding that he needed the old
guard even more to survive and that he lacked his father's
experience.
In the months since, both tendencies have been confirmed.
After initiating modest steps to open up the country
economically and politically, the process has stumbled
before its many obstacles. Given the decisions that Syria
has made in the past three years, it has been hard to
guess where it may be headed.
Syrian-American relations were surprisingly boosted
immediately after the tragedy of Sept. 11 in large part
because Syria expressed its unequivocal condemnation of
the horror and of al-Qaida, and more important, provided
significant intelligence information on al-Qaida that
gained it good will in the White House.
In recent months, however, as the Bush administration
shifted its focus from al-Qaida to regional militant
organizations, including Hezbollah, and to Iraq, the
differences with Syria were accentuated, and the good will
coming out of Syria's cooperation in the war against al-Qaida
faded into the background.
It is likely that the Bush administration's objections to
Syria's role in Iraq during and after the war could be
resolved, perhaps even during Secretary Powell's visit to
Damascus. It is even possible, although by no means
certain, that Syria may take steps down the road to close
offices of some groups on the U.S. list of terrorism, such
as Islamic Jihad. But it is highly unlikely that Syria
would act against Hezbollah in Lebanon beyond drawing some
red lines for its operations.
There are two reasons for this. First, Hezbollah is seen
by most Syrians, Lebanese and others in the region as a
guerrilla movement, because in recent years it has focused
its attacks largely on Israeli soldiers inside or near the
Lebanese border.
Second, the Syrian Golan Heights are still occupied by
Israel, and Damascus has little at its disposal to get
them back. Syria certainly does not have a military
capacity to fight a war with Israel and thus has little
incentive to rein in its Lebanese allies without a renewal
of peace negotiations over the Golan Heights.
Weapons of mass destruction have also become an issue in
the Syrian-U.S. relationship, with Syria accused of
developing chemical weapons. Here the Syrians, who have
denied receiving such weapons from Iraq, have taken a
position that coincides with that of other Arab states:
that they support making the Middle East - including
Israel - free of weapons of mass destruction. Since
Israel, which has nuclear weapons, is unlikely to accept
such a proposition, it is clear that this issue will
remain on the agenda of U.S.-Syrian relations in the
coming months.
In the end, there are steps that could be taken by Syria
and the United States to reduce the tension and resolve
some of the issues of contention even in the difficult
environment after the war with Iraq.
But other issues are much more difficult to address
without clarifying the thrust of both Syrian and American
foreign policies and without restarting Syrian-Israeli
peace negotiations.
The Syrian president will be watched for the signals he
sends about the path Syria intends to take at home and
abroad in the coming months and years. Washington will
have to decide on the direction it wants to take after the
Iraq war: Will Washington exploit the short-term leverage
to rebuild Iraq, revive the Arab-Israeli peace process and
repair relations that have been strained in the past year?
Or does America see the military victory in Iraq as a
first step in a policy to radically change the region
through the direct and indirect use of American power?
The future of U.S.-Syrian relations is in part dependent
on these bigger questions.
Shibley Telhami is Anwar Sadat Professor at the University of
Maryland and senior fellow at the Saban Center at the
Brookings Institution. He is author of "The Stakes:
America and the Middle East."
Copyright © 2003, The Baltimore Sun
|