Zaman-Alwasl, exclusively, summarized for Its readers an important and detailed study on the Syrian conflict prepared by the Congressional Research Service last month. The newspaper will publish the study in series of articles.
''The popular-uprising-turned-armed-rebellion in Syria has
entered its third year, and seems poised to continue, with the government and a
bewildering array of militias locked in a bloody struggle of attrition.''
Jeremy M. Sharp and Christopher M. Blanchard; Specialists in Middle Eastern
Affairs, said.
U.S. officials and many analysts believe that
Assad and his supporters will ultimately be forced from power, but few offer
specific, credible timetables for a resolution to the crisis.
Opposition forces are formidable, but forces
loyal to President Bashar al Assad continue to resist, using air strikes,
artillery, and pro-government militias in punishing counterattacks. U.S.
officials believe that the capacity of government forces is eroding but also
believe that fighting would likely continue even if opposition groups achieve their
objective of toppling Assad.
Some members of the Sunni Arab majority and of
ethnic and sectarian minority groups view the conflict in communal, zero-sum
terms. Many observers worry that a further escalation in fighting or swift
Regime change could jeopardize the security of chemical and conventional
weapons stockpiles, threaten minority groups, or lead to wider civil or
regional conflict.
Amid extensive damage to major urban areas and
reports attributing war crimes to government and opposition forces, the
fighting has created a regional humanitarian emergency. Some estimates suggest
more than 70,000 Syrians have been killed since unrest began in March 2011.
As of April 22, more than 1,380,406 refugees
had fled the country, more than 1.1 million of them since September 2012.
According to the United Nations, as many as 3.6 million Syrians may be
internally displaced. United Nations appeals for $1.5 billion for Syrians
through June 2013 remain mostly underfunded, with U.N officials warning of a
potential collapse of their ability to support the growing number of those
displaced and in need. The United States has provided $409 million in
humanitarian assistance to date.
President Obama and his Administration have
been calling for Asad’s resignation since August 2011, and have pressed the
United Nations Security Council to condemn the Syrian government.
The United States has recognized the National
Coalition of Revolution and Opposition Forces (SOC) as the legitimate
representative of the Syrian people and is providing nonlethal assistance to
the Coalition and an affiliated Supreme Military Command Council (SMC). The
Obama Administration believes that a negotiated political settlement is
required and has prepared military plans to secure Syria’s stockpiles of chemical
weapons, if necessary. Members of Congress and Obama Administration officials
are weighing these issues as they continue to debate U.S. policy. Some
observers advocate for more robust nonlethal and lethal aid to the SOC and SMC
as a means of forcing the Assad regime to the negotiating table. Opponents of
this approach argue that making opposition groups more formidable could
intensify the fighting and risks empowering extremists. Meanwhile, Assad
refuses to step down and warns his supporters that “victory is the only
option.” Some armed opposition factions, including powerful Islamist
coalitions, reject negotiation outright and prefer a military solution to the
conflict.
After two years of unrest and violence, the
central question for policy makers remains how best to bring the conflict in
Syria to a close before the crisis consigns the region to one of several
destructive and destabilizing scenarios. The human toll of the fighting, and
the resulting political, ethnic, and sectarian polarization, all but guarantee
that political, security, humanitarian, and economic challenges will outlast
Assad and keep Syria on the U.S. agenda for years to come.
The
American assessment for The Syrian Conflict
The escalating conflict in Syria poses increasingly
complex and difficult policy questions for Congress and the Obama
Administration. The popular-uprising-turned-armed-rebellion against the Assad
regime has entered its third year, and seems poised to continue, with the
government and a bewildering array of militias locked in a bloody struggle of
attrition. Al Qaeda affiliates and other violent extremists, including foreign
fighters, have assertively demonstrated their presence in Syria. Syria’s armed
forces remain under tremendous strain, and reportedly continue to receive
significant outside assistance from Iran, Russia, and Hezbollah. The Syrian
government has resorted to indiscriminate attacks on rebel-held areas and has
stated its willingness to use its unconventional weapons in the event of foreign
military intervention. The Syrian opposition’s political divisions persist,
even as the resilience and tactics of armed rebels make the limitations of the
Syrian security forces more and more apparent. United Nations officials have
cited estimates that as many as 3.6 million Syrians have been displaced inside
the country. As of 22 April, there are an estimated 1.38 million Syrian
refugees in neighboring countries.
These factors complicate ongoing debates over U.S.
national interests in Syria and potential policy responses. To date, debate has
largely focused on the humanitarian and regional balance of power implications
of the uprising, and Members of Congress have weighed various policy proposals
in the hope of catalyzing and facilitating a relatively orderly negotiated
transition.
Looking ahead, the prospects for such a transition
appear to be all but nonexistent, and the focus of debate is shifting toward
identifying and mitigating the negative consequences of a series of less
orderly contingencies. Issues of particular concern include the potential for
prolonged sectarian or ethnic conflict, threats to Syria’s territorial
integrity, potential insecurity of chemical weapons and conventional arms
stockpiles, regional refugee flows, the future of violent extremist groups, and
the future costs of establishing security and rebuilding the country
Status
of Ongoing Armed Conflict
As of April 2013, the armed conflict in Syria
shows no signs of abating. Opposition forces have strengthened their capabilities
and broadened their control over areas of northwestern, eastern, and southern
Syria, but they have been unable to deal a decisive blow against the Alawite
dominated security forces of President Bashar al-Assad. The broad grouping of
forces opposing Assad’s regime includes a multitude of local militias; army
defectors; and volunteers fighting in brigades that are organized under the
banner of the Free Syrian Army and various armed Islamist coalitions. Some of
these groups include foreign fighters. Various rebel forces have gradually
seized territory in an arc along the Syria-Turkey border, along the Euphrates
River, in the eastern suburbs of Damascus, and along the Syria-Jordan border.
Islamist groups; Free Syrian Army brigades; and
local fighters in different cities, continue to operate relatively
independently. Several leading opposition groups hold divergent and potentially
contradictory goals for the country’s political future. Groups with divergent
priorities now control different areas of the country. Islamist fighters,
including the Al Qaeda-affiliated Jabhat al Nusra (Support Front), captured the
city of Al Raqqah (Raqqa) in March 2013. Kurdish forces control areas of
northeastern Syria, and some Kurds have clashed with Arab Islamists.
Bombings and clashes occur daily near and inside
the capital, Damascus, and the contest continues for control over military
bases near Aleppo, Syria’s commercial hub and second-largest city. Intense
fighting in the south is ongoing, while government forces apparently are
consolidating in strongholds in the center of the capital and its western
suburbs. Media reports and online videos indicate that rebel forces have taken
over several military bases outside Aleppo, along with strategic towns and
checkpoints along the main highway that links Aleppo to Damascus. These rebel gains have created a major
obstacle for the government’s resupply of its forces in northern Syria. The
government is widely presumed to prioritize maintaining control over its
strongholds in Damascus and parts of Aleppo, along with the arc linking
Damascus north and west along the Lebanese border to the Alawite-populated
areas of the coast.
As death tolls have spiraled, both sides have
adopted brutal tactics. In many areas, the regime has resorted to the use of
air power, Scud missile strikes, and indiscriminate shelling of entire
population centers, as part of a strategy to leave rebels with damaged physical
infrastructure and a resentful population. A February 2013 report by a United
Nations Human Rights Council Independent International Commission of Inquiry
on Syria found that “grave human rights violations, war crimes, and crimes
against humanity” continue to occur in Syria. The report attributes war crimes
to both government and opposition forces.
These crimes have intensified as Syria’s civil
war has taken on an increasingly sectarian dimension. In many areas,
Alawite-led security forces and allied militia such as Jaysh al-Sha'abi
(Popular Army) are engaged in combat with predominantly Sunni rebel militias.
Some of these Sunni militias are becoming more radicalized and aligned with
extremist groups such as Ahrar al-Sham (the Free Ones of the Levant) or the
Nusra Front. The Obama Administration has designated as terrorist groups both
the Popular Army and the Nusra Front pursuant to terrorism and Syria-related
sanctions legislation and executive orders. In early April, the Al Qaeda
affiliated Islamic State of Iraq announced its merger with the Nusra Front, but
a Nusra leader reportedly rejected the claim and pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda
leader Ayman al Zawahiri. Over time, Syria’s conflict has become more complex.
Sporadic clashes have broken out within the ranks of the armed opposition and
allegedly within the tight-knit Alawite community.
Violence also has spilled over to varying
degrees into neighboring states, such as Israel, Turkey, Iraq, Jordan, and
Lebanon. Many observers are concerned that the country is descending into
anarchy. If current trends hold, fighting may gradually turn from a two-sided
war into a contest involving multiple combatants from armed ethnic/sectarian
communities, rebel militias, and remnants of the old regime. Cross-border
violence is growing in parallel to Asad’s desperation.
In November 2012, Lakhdar Brahimi, the United
Nations and Arab League Special Envoy to Syria, warned that “if this issue is
not dealt with correctly, the danger is ‘Somalisation’ and not partition—the
collapse of the state and the emergence of warlords, militias and fighting
groups.”
President Assad routinely warns that state
failure in Syria will destabilize the region. U.S. officials and some Members
of Congress have expressed similar concerns about fragmentation and extremism,
while also demanding Assad’s departure and increasing support to the
opposition.
In sum, the short-to- medium-term security
outlook for Syria and its neighbors is not positive.
The United States and other third parties face
difficult choices with limited potential to shape the overall outcome.
Prospects
for a Negotiated Settlement
During 2013, Syrian government and opposition
leaders and their international backers have weighed negotiations for either a
cease-fire or a political settlement. However, as of April, these efforts had
yet to bear fruit, and conflicting statements from opposition leaders cast
doubt on the opposition’s unity and continued openness to considering a
negotiated settlement. In February 2013, then-leader of the National Coalition
of Syrian Revolution and Opposition Forces (hereafter referred to as the Syrian
Opposition Coalition or SOC) Mouaz al-Khatib made a surprise announcement that
he was willing to conditionally enter into negotiations with the Assad
government. Khatib’s resignation and replacement by Syrian National Council
leader George Sabra signaled a potential change in approach. In February, Sabra
said there would be “no formal and informal talks with the Syrian regime if
Bashar al-Assad and his team is still in power. They have to leave power. Then
we can start the dialogue, with the others which didn't give any orders to kill
people, to damage the country.” Opposition Interim Prime Minister Ghassan Hitto
stated in his inaugural speech that “there will be no dialogue with the Assad
regime.” Defining a consensus list of regime officials to negotiate with
continues to prove difficult for the fractious opposition.
Although Assad has rejected calls for his
resignation since January, he also has called for a mutual cease-fire, which if
adhered to could lead to a “national dialogue.” Negotiations, involving U.S.,
Russian, Arab League, and U.N. officials have explored the potential for
national dialogue in line with the Geneva Accord of mid-2012, which called for
dialogue as the basis for a transition to a new government. In the meantime,
the Obama Administration continues to call for Asad’s resignation while
providing humanitarian aid to international organizations supporting Syrian
civilians and nonlethal support to unarmed and armed elements of the Syrian
opposition.
Secretary of State John Kerry has indicated that
the U.S. “goal is to see us have a negotiated outcome and minimize the
violence.” In the interim, the Obama Administration has worked with Congress to
increase the provision of support to the political opposition and shift toward the
overt provision of nonlethal support to armed opposition elements.
The central question for policy makers remains
how best to bring the conflict in Syria to a close before the crisis consigns
the region to one of several destructive and destabilizing scenarios. The SOC
recently demanded the imposition of a no-fly zone near Syria’s borders and
called for targeted strikes on missile and chemical weapons sites. Some
observers have advocated more robust nonlethal and lethal aid to the SOC and
the opposition’s Supreme Military Command Council (SMC). Supporters of this
approach argue that increasing aid to the opposition will force the Assad
regime to the negotiating table. Opponents argue that making opposition groups
more formidable could intensify the fighting. Some armed opposition factions,
including powerful Islamist coalitions, reject negotiation outright and prefer
a military solution to the conflict.
As noted above, the Obama Administration and
U.N. officials continue to call for a political settlement. However, as of
April, such a settlement remained elusive, and continued conflict appeared
likely
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