Bashar al-Assad's Lebanese ally Hezbollah said his Western foes must now accept he will go on ruling Syria after fighting rebels to a standstill - a "reality" to which his foreign enemies seem increasingly resigned. Echoing recent bullish talk
coming out of Damascus, Sheikh Naim Qassem, deputy leader of the
Iranian-backed Shi'ite militia which is supporting Assad in combat, told
Reuters that the president retained popular support among many of
Syria's diverse religious communities and would shortly be re-elected. "There
is a practical Syrian reality that the West should deal with - not with
its wishes and dreams, which proved to be false," Qassem said during a
meeting with Reuters journalists at a Hezbollah office in the group's
southern Beirut stronghold. He said the United States and its Western allies were in disarray and lacked a coherent policy on Syria
- reflecting the quandary that Western officials acknowledge they face
since the pro-democracy protests they supported in 2011 became a war
that has drawn al Qaeda and other militants to the rebel cause. Syria's
fractious opposition - made up of guerrillas inside the country and a
largely impotent political coalition in exile - had, he said, proved
incapable of providing an alternative to four decades of rule by Assad
and his late father before him. "This
is why the option is clear. Either to have an understanding with Assad,
to reach a result, or to keep the crisis open with President Assad
having the upper hand in running the country," said the bearded and
turbaned cleric. Qassem's comments
follow an account from another Assad ally, Russian former prime minister
Sergei Stepashin, who said after meeting him last week that the Syrian
leader felt secure and expected heavy fighting to end this year. Officials
said this week that preparations would begin this month for the
presidential election - a move that seems to reflect a degree of
optimism in the capital and which may well end with Assad claiming a
popular mandate that he would use to resist U.N.-backed efforts to
negotiate a transition of power. Hezbollah
chief Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah also said this week that Assad is no
longer at risk and that military gains mean the danger of Syria
fragmenting was also receding. WESTERN RESIGNATION It
is a view of Assad that - quietly - seems to be gaining ground in
Western capitals. Calling it bad news for Syrians, the French foreign
ministry said this week: "Maybe he will be the sole survivor of this
policy of mass crimes". France,
which last year was preparing to join U.S. military action that was
eventually aborted, now rules out force and called the stalled talks on
"transition" the "only plan" - a view U.S. officials say is shared in
Washington, notably among military chiefs who see Assad as preferable to
sectarian chaos. While rebels do
not admit defeat, leaders like Badr Jamous of the Syrian National
Coalition accept that without foreign intervention "this stalemate will
go on". A U.S. official, asked about a deadlock that would leave Assad
in control of much of Syria, conceded: "This has become a drawn-out
conflict." Assad, 48, has
weathered an armed insurgency which started with protests in 2011 and
descended into a civil war that has sucked in regional powers, including
Shi'ite Iran and Hezbollah who back the Alawite president and Sunni states like Saudi Arabia and Qatar behind the rebels. With Russia blocking a U.N. mandate, and voters showing no appetite for war after losses in Afghanistan and Iraq, Western governments have held back from the kind of military engagement that could have toppled the well-armed Syrian leader. More
than 150,000 people have been killed in three years, as Assad has lost
the oil-producing and agricultural east and much of the north, including
parts of Syria's largest city, Aleppo. But
he did not suffer the fate of other autocrats in the Arab Spring,
whether the presidents of Tunisia, Egypt and Yemen or Muammar Gaddafi,
the Libyan leader toppled and killed by rebels who rode into Tripoli
under cover of Western air power. Instead,
he has clawed back control near Damascus, where a year ago rebels hoped
for a decisive assault, and the center of the country which links the
capital to the coastal stronghold of Assad's Alawite minority. His
troops, backed by Hezbollah fighters, took another key town on
Wednesday. Though as much as half
the country is being fought over, Assad could hope to hold at least a
roughly southwestern half, including most of the built-up heartlands
near the coast, and more than half of the prewar population of 23
million. This leaves Western powers
reflecting on a perceived loss of influence in the Middle East. Many
now see a new strategy of "containing" Assad - and the fallout from a
bitter war that has created millions of refugees and legions of hardened
guerrillas. "The U.S. has a stated
policy of regime change, but it has never devoted the resources to
effect that change," said Andrew Exum, a former U.S. official who worked
on Middle East issues at the Pentagon. "The de facto U.S. strategy of
containment is very well suited for what is likely to be a very long
war." "STALEMATE WILL CONTINUE" Qassem
said the United States, which backed away from military action in
September after blaming Assad for gassing civilians, was hamstrung by
fears over the dominance in rebel ranks of al Qaeda's Syrian branch, the
Nusra Front, and another group, the Islamic State in Iraq and the
Levant (ISIL). "America is in a
state of confusion. On the one hand it does not want the regime to stay
and on the other it cannot control the opposition which is represented
by ISIL and Nusra," he said. "This is why the latest American position was to leave the situation in Syria in a state of attrition." President
Barack Obama said last month that the United States had reached
"limits" after the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and questioned whether
years of military engagement in Syria would produce a better outcome
there. Qassem said: "I expect that
the stalemate will continue in the Syrian crisis because of the lack of
an international and regional decision to facilitate a political
solution." U.N.-mediated talks at
Geneva failed in February to bridge a gulf between Assad's government
and opponents who insist that Assad must make way for a government of
national unity. Western and
regional powers who support the Syrian opposition say it would be a
"parody of democracy" to hold an election in the midst of a conflict
which has displaced more than 9 million people and divided the country
across frontlines. Syria's
electoral law effectively rules out participation by opponents who have
fled the country in fear of Assad's police -candidates must have lived
in Syria continuously for 10 years. "My
conviction is that Assad will run and will win because he has popular
support in Syria from all the sects - Sunnis and secularists," Qassem
said. "I believe the election will take place on its due date and Assad
will run and win decisively." Fear
of hardline Islamists has undermined support for some rebels even among
the 75 percent Sunni majority, and bolstered support for Assad among
his fellow Alawites, and Christians. Qassem
said it was too soon to speak of Hezbollah pulling out of Syria,
despite an increase in Sunni-Shi'ite tensions within Lebanon caused by
the intervention across the border of a movement that is Lebanon's most
accomplished military force and also holds cabinet seats in the
government in Beirut. "Until now we consider our presence in Syria necessary and fundamental," Qassem said. "But when circumstances change, this will be a military and political matter that requires a new assessment. "But if the situation stays as is and the circumstances are similar, we will remain where we should be". Reuters
Hezbollah confident in Assad, West resigned to Syria stalemate
Zaman Alwasl
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