Monday, February 18, 2013

No Good News In Syria


President Bashar Al Assad’s regime in Syria seems to be gradually losing his bloody fight for survival. Key allies like Russia are becoming more diffident public in their support of Bashar. China, the other major source of Bashar’s support, is generally known for unsentimental pragmatism in international affairs.
The world should pause a bit before joining in the jubilation over the inevitable and see the future for what it is. While the nation seems to be heading toward fragmentation into satrapies, a murky Islamist group Al Nusra has captured the oil-rich town of Al Shahada, near the city of Hasaka. About 30 Al Nusra fighters, 100 Syrian soldiers and dozens of civilians were killed as a result of infighting that finally culminated in Al Shahada’s capture by Islamists, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Optimists cite the Syrian National Council, containing pro-western moderates, as the country’s saviors. Yet the rebel units are also packed with an assortment of Islamists. This means that even if Assad’s regime were to collapse immediately, Syria would continue in a spiral of instability as these rival groups scramble for space. Regional alliances could then change, providing further uncertainty.
To be sure, the international community will be around as the ultimate arbiter. But, true to its nature, the world picks and chooses where it wants to act. In Syria, in any case, the leading members of the international community have chosen to remain passive, largely on account of their ambivalence. The onus is thus on the regional governments. For quite some time, they have chosen sides in the conflict in keeping with their own interests. They may now have to unite to prevent the situation from spiraling out of control.