Endgame for the Syrian National Coalition
The international conference called for by
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
to end the conflict in Syria may not actually take place. And if it does, it is
unlikely to succeed. At the very least, preliminary talks about who will be
invited—or excluded—from the Syrian government and the opposition and whether
Iran will be asked to participate could drag on for weeks, if not months, well
past the supposed start date of early June.
But whatever the eventual outcome, the joint
U.S.-Russian proposal has deepened the disarray of the main opposition umbrella
framework, the National Coalition of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition
Forces, which was already facing a terminal crisis.
TERMINAL DECLINE
The signs of dysfunction have multiplied
since Moaz al-Khatib confirmed his resignation as chairman of the National
Coalition on April 21.
The coalition, which had disregarded al-Khatib’s first attempt to resign on
March 24, was supposed to elect a new chairman at a
meeting of its general assembly on May 11–12. Agenda items also included the election
of a new leadership committee, confirmation of Ghassan Hitto to head the
provisional government that the coalition intends to establish in rebel-held
areas inside Syria, and publication of the government’s cabinet lineup. But the
general assembly instead deferred all these items to a new set of meetings on
May 23–25,
when the coalition will also announce its final stance on attending the
international conference called for by Washington and Moscow.
The National Coalition has no realistic
choice other than to accept the Friends of Syria–endorsed invitation. After
all, the Friends of Syria anointed the coalition the “sole legitimate
representative of the Syrian people” last December. But the coalition was
visibly discomfited when the international grouping came out officially on
April 20 in
favor of negotiation with the ruling Syrian regime in the hope, as Kerry
stated, of reaching a political solution “along the lines of the Geneva
communiqué” of June 30,
2012. That plan calls for a transitional
government to be formed by the opposition and the incumbent authorities,
without making the departure of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad a
precondition. It goes directly against the National Coalition’s declared
position of “no dialogue, no negotiation” with the president. The coalition has
no substantive response to this proposed transitional agenda and, as an
internal assessment leaked on May 16 acknowledges, no defense against
the distinct possibility of being left hanging out to dry on the diplomatic
clothesline if it does not engage fully with it.
Even if the international conference does not
convene or collapses, the National Coalition’s fortunes will not look up. It
remains dependent on political and financial support from the Friends of Syria,
but that relationship has become increasingly tenuous of late. In part, this is
because the coalition has failed to devise a political strategy capable of
cleaving critical social and institutional constituencies away from the Assad
regime, which would make a negotiated transition feasible. And the coalition
has yet to provide opposition-held areas in Syria with effective administration
or basic services and security.
The National Coalition is beset on other
fronts as well. The Free Syrian Army (FSA) command inside Syria, which is
supposedly allied with the National Coalition, has been in a nasty public spat
with the Muslim Brotherhood since the end of March 2013. The Brotherhood is the most coherent
organization in the Syrian opposition and the most influential single component
of the Syrian National Council (SNC), the dominant force in the National
Coalition. The FSA command accused the Brotherhood of imposing its “hegemony”
over the SNC and the National Coalition, subverting “local councils and tens of
coordination committees and bodies” to its agenda, and “forming militias and
even creating warlords loyal to the [Brotherhood].” It also rejected the
coalition’s choice of Hitto to head a provisional government to run the
liberated areas, regarding him as imposed by the Brotherhood.
The exact status of the FSA command inside
Syria is ambiguous. The fact that it does not exist within the organizational
chart of the Higher Military Council, which was announced in mid-December 2012 as
the overarching coordinating structure for all FSA and nonjihadist opposition
units, reflects the continuing fluidity of rebel chains of command. But the
sentiments expressed by the FSA command inside Syria are certainly shared among
the FSA general staff, which is formally attached to the head of the Higher
Military Council, Brigadier General Salim Idris.
For example, Brigadier General Ahmad Rahal,
head of the revolutionary military council in Syria’s northern coastal region,
which is part of the Higher Military Council framework, angrily claimed at an
opposition conference in Cairo in mid-May that “weapons are reaching the Muslim
Brotherhood and those close to Qatar although they are in the rear ranks of the
revolution, while those in the frontlines do not have weapons.” Rahal then
called for a restructuring of the FSA general staff, saying it was “not
permissible for it to be preponderantly civilian in character,” a reference to
the body’s deliberate mix of professionally trained defectors from the Syrian
army and civilian activists.
The Higher Military Council is itself
displaying political autonomy from the National Coalition. In an official
letter to the coalition on May 1—leaked
to the daily newspaper Asharq al-Awsat and separately confirmed by FSA general
staff officers—the council demanded that “revolutionary forces and battalions
operating on the ground [inside Syria] be represented by 50 percent of the
coalition’s membership,” specifically by “civilian revolutionaries in the
battalions.” It then warned that it would not submit nominations to fill the
posts of ministers of defense and interior in the provisional government until
its demand was met.
In a further sign of political assertiveness
a fortnight later, Higher Military Council head Idris informed Kerry that he
was ready to attend the proposed international peace conference. The National
Coalition, to which Idris is nominally affiliated, has yet to make a formal
decision on attendance.
Similar divisions and dynamics afflict the
opposition’s civilian wing. The Muslim Brotherhood is arguably not as strong as
is commonly believed, which may be why its leader, Riad al-Shaqfeh, announced
on April 26 plans
to open offices and rebuild the Brotherhood’s organizational structures and
popular base in liberated areas in Syria. The Brotherhood’s attempts at
entering the military sphere and sponsoring an umbrella framework of rebel
formations—known as the Commission of the Revolution’s Shields—have faltered
badly.
The Brotherhood has become increasingly
defensive in response to unprecedentedly sharp accusations from other members
of the National Coalition that it dominates the opposition framework. The head
of its politburo, Hassan al-Hashimi, issued an official rebuttal on April 19, but its critics’ distrust has only
deepened.
In mid-May, around 200 activists—including
prominent National Coalition members such as Michel Kilo, former SNC chairman
Burhan Ghalioun, and several others who opposed Hitto in the March vote—announced
they were setting up a new opposition grouping. They formed the Union of Syrian
Democrats to “mobilize Syria’s ‘silent majority’” and preempt the Muslim
Brotherhood from “grasping power here [as in] Tunisia and Egypt.” This
“democratic pole,” as Kilo initially labeled it, hopes to provide a
counterweight to the Muslim Brotherhood and the other main faction in the
National Coalition, which is led by its secretary general, Mustafa Sabbagh, who
is widely regarded as “Qatar’s man” in the coalition.
Drawn-out negotiations have been under way
over the expansion of the National Coalition’s general assembly to allow a more
equitable balance. There are reports that eight new members close to the
democratic pole may be added, bringing their number in the general assembly to 25. Even if these reports are true, the
distrust appears unbridgeable. Writing on May 11, Kilo accused the National Coalition and the SNC of failing as
leadership bodies and even of bringing about “the reverse effect of
contributing to the continuation of the regime.” The opposition, he concluded,
“has been more a burden on the hirak [revolutionary grassroots movement] than a
negation of the regime.”
THE STRUGGLE FOR AUTHORITY INSIDE SYRIA
The deepening disarray of the National Coalition
places its provisional government in jeopardy. Hitto announced on April 25 that
preparations to launch it were complete and that he would present the cabinet
lineup to the coalition for ratification on May 11. But by then it had already become a common assumption in
opposition circles that Hitto would be replaced. The Muslim Brotherhood has
suggested that his replacement will be “independent Islamist” Ahmad Khodr.
Other sources predict the post will go to Ahmad Tomeh, secretary of the
Damascus Declaration platform within the SNC.
But it is also likely that Hitto will not be
replaced because the provisional government may not see the light of day. And
even if it does, whether it would be sufficiently empowered politically to
acquire effective political and moral authority in rebel-held areas of Syria is
an open question.
The provisional government has moreover
already fallen victim to the rivalry between Qatar and Saudi Arabia for
influence within the National Coalition. In opposition circles, there is a
widespread perception that Qatar imposed Hitto on the National Coalition as
prime minister–designate, and that opinion has proven impossible to shake.
According to senior opposition figures, Saudi Arabia, which seeks a
counterweight to the Qatari-backed Muslim Brotherhood, has made continuation of
its assistance to the coalition contingent on replacing him. On May 11, al-Khatib complained publicly that
formation of the provisional government had been overshadowed by the tussle
between “two regional powers,” each of which had its own preferred candidate
for prime minister and sought to select ministers according to its own wishes.
The National Coalition may now take refuge in
the view that the convening of the international conference proposed by Russia and
the United States will make the establishment of a provisional government
unnecessary or even counterproductive. Certainly its leaked internal assessment
suggests that “the timing is not appropriate to announce it now, as
circumstances do not favor securing international and regional recognition of
it.” But this poses a dilemma for the coalition: unless it swiftly makes a
concrete difference in liberated areas, shelving the provisional government
will further erode the coalition’s standing, internationally and domestically.
In the coalition’s assessment, it now faces
an additional distinct danger that the Friends of Syria will withdraw their
sweeping diplomatic recognition of it as sole legitimate representative of the
Syrian people should it ultimately refuse to attend the international
conference. The coalition has no doubt taken note of the May 15 United Nations
General Assembly resolution calling for a political transition in Syria.
Although the text placed the onus on the regime for its use of heavy weapons
and “widespread and systematic gross violations of human rights and fundamental
freedoms,” it effectively downgraded the National Coalition to the status of
“effective representative interlocutors for a political transition.”
As the National Coalition’s legitimacy fades,
de facto leadership will start to pass more visibly to those on the ground:
rebel groups and military councils more or less loosely affiliated with the
FSA; local civilian councils; the increasingly cohesive Islamist rebel alliances;
and in some cases Jabhat al-Nusra and other jihadist groups, both foreign
sponsored and homegrown. The process will be messy. With the rebels and the
regime heading toward a strategic equilibrium militarily, the absence of an
effective, overarching political framework will produce a patchwork of
competing allegiances and areas of control in opposition-held areas.
Areas of friction are clear enough. Vying for
control over territory, border crossings, and resources such as the oil fields
in Syria’s northeast, FSA and Islamist units, Kurdish militias, jihadists, and
Arab clans have already clashed. Internecine violence has only been occasional
so far, but social, political, and ideological fault lines within the
opposition will be revealed more plainly should the stalemate with the regime
persist. Tensions exist between rural and urban populations, armed rebels and
civilian activists, and diverse Islamist and secular opposition groups. They
too will be sharply accentuated.
Syria’s humanitarian crisis meanwhile
continues to deepen at a staggering pace. In early May, United Nations
officials estimated that the number of internally displaced Syrians had more
than doubled in the preceding two months and that roughly one in three Syrians
now needs urgent assistance. Looking ahead, the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees expects up to 50 percent of the population of some 24 million
to be internally displaced or seeking refuge in neighboring countries by the
end of 2013. The Friends of Syria are already
seriously behind in delivering on existing pledges of humanitarian aid, with
only half the $1.5
billion pledged at the Kuwait donors’ conference in January disbursed by
mid-May.
TIME’S UP
Clearly the international community bears a
major responsibility to deal with this crisis and to find ways to prevent it
from worsening. But the National Coalition must also take every opportunity to
reach a political solution to the ongoing conflict. The authors of its leaked
internal assessment offer convincing reasoning in favor of such an approach,
specifically including formal engagement in negotiations within the framework
of the U.S.-Russian proposal.
However, the National Coalition has
repeatedly shown that it will not do this, and remains too divided to allow a
volte-face of this magnitude. When al-Khatib proposed direct dialogue with
Assad on January 30,
his coalition partners in the SNC condemned him bitterly for “stabbing the
revolution and its martyrs.” Since his resignation, he has been accused of
privately backing the al-Damir Initiative, which among other points calls for
Assad to remain in office until the next presidential election in May 2014, in which he would not run.
In a response posted on his Facebook page on
April 26, al-Khatib confirmed that he is currently
working on “an initiative to spare the blood of Syrians.” He did not
specifically deny involvement with al-Damir but noted that he had discussed his
initiative with certain unnamed members of the National Coalition. Al-Khatib
seemed to imply readiness to meet Assad by stressing that his political and
personal status entitled him “to meet every Syrian” while adding that he had
not agreed to Assad remaining in office and would make an announcement should
he do so.
Anything resembling the al-Damir Initiative
is a complete nonstarter for the dominant factions of the National Coalition,
but an international peace conference could leave Assad in office until the
next presidential election. So even if al-Khatib’s initiative runs aground, as
it indeed might given the various odds stacked against it, the political
challenge facing the coalition will not go away.
Even if the coalition formally accepts a
U.S.-Russian invitation to the peace conference, the dysfunctional nature of
its internal politics and the adverse impact of Qatari-Saudi rivalry on its
policy choices will impede it from playing a critical role in any negotiations.
Other opposition interlocutors are already
positioning themselves to be part of a political solution, or at least to
challenge the National Coalition’s claim to leadership. A principal contender,
the National Coordination Body for Democratic Change, which is still based in
Damascus and has always called for a political solution, has been discussing
the establishment of a Civil Democratic Alliance of like-minded opposition
groups since February. And although it insists on Assad’s departure as a
precondition for a negotiated transition, Kilo’s Union of Syrian Democrats sees
itself as a representative opposition framework, not merely a component of the
National Coalition, as shown by its planning to open offices in various
international capitals.
The Friends of Syria might not withdraw their
official recognition of the National Coalition as the sole legitimate
representative of the Syrian people anytime soon. But they are close to
starting the search once again for a more credible opposition framework,
preferably inside Syria. In the meantime the National Coalition will not
receive financial and military assistance on the scale it needs, especially if
it is to launch its provisional government. Instead, it will find itself
sidelined should a substantive political process commence. The National Coalition,
never destined to be more than an interlude, may limp on. But its time has
already run out.
Yezid Sayigh
SENIOR ASSOCIATE
MIDDLE EAST CENTER
Carnegie Middle East Center
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