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Will Syria Remain a Unified State?
12.7.2012
By Harold Rhode - Gatestone Institute |
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July
12, 2012
What stands behind much of the violence in Syria
is the rise of Arab Sunni fundamentalism in its
various forms – whether Salafi, Wahhabi, or Muslim
Brotherhood? All of these threaten the very
existence of the Alawites, the Kurds, and other
non-Sunni ethnic and religious groups.
While the news is filled daily with terrible
atrocities which the Syrian regime is carrying out,
these reports mask another development: the breakup
of Syria into at least two, if not more, statelets.
Is Assad trying to create an Alawite homeland in the
traditional Alawite area along the Syrian coast
between Lebanon and Turkey? Will Syria end up being
a federated state, more along the lines of Iraq? And
where are Syria's Kurds headed?
Reports from various sources inside Syria and from
the defectors and refugees whom al-Jazeera has
interviewed in northern Jordan reveal that the war
in Syria has descended into a sectarian war,
primarily between the ruling Alawite minority and
the Arab Sunni majority.
One of the places that the Assad regime has been
most violent is against the Sunnis living in the
Alawite traditional homeland and in Homs, a largely
Sunni city just to the east of the Alawite
heartland. Assad's forces have been destroying Sunni
villages in that area, and wreaking havoc on Homs.
As the Sunni refugees in Jordan – mostly from the
Homs area – who were cited on al-Jazeera on July 4
noted, "The regime has turned this into a sectarian
battle between itself and the Sunnis. It is killing
the Sunnis in Homs and forcing other Sunnis to flee
that area.
Clearly, the Syrian regime of Bashar Assad
understands that the trend in the Middle East is
towards Islamic Sunni fundamentalism, supported by
the Muslim Brotherhood, the Wahhabis, the Qataris,
and Turkey's Sunni fundamentalist leadership.
The regime knows that in the long run, it cannot
stand up to these forces -- possibly the reason
Assad and his cohorts are doing everything they can
to destroy the Sunni fundamentalists and perhaps
hoping then to retreat to the Alawites' ancient
homeland.
Another sign that the Syrian Sunnis are abandoning
Assad is the defection of Manaf Tlas, a senior Sunni
Syrian military official – a childhood friend of
Bashar Assad, and whose father Mustafa was a close
ally of Bashar's father Hafiz, the previous dictator
who ruled Syria with an iron hand.
Since 1966, Syria has been ruled by the Alawite
minority, who make up about 12% of Syria's
population and live mainly in the coastal area
between Lebanon and Turkey. As the Alawites
historically would do the distasteful work which the
Sunnis refused to do, the Syrian Sunni Arab
establishment traditionally looked down upon them,
referring them as as "abid," or, roughly "slave."
Also, as Alawites believe that Ali – the Muslim
prophet Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law – is God,
Sunnis do not see them as monotheists, and often
therefore do not even accept them as Muslims.
During the 1940s and 1950s, the Sunnis, who did
their best to avoid military service, gave their
Alawite servants recommendations to enter the
military. As they rose to higher and higher ranks,
the Alawites eventually, in 1966, took over Syria in
a military coup.
Members of Alawite community have all along felt
conflicted: should they see themselves as Arabs and
try to attain, through Arab nationalism, the
equality they lacked among the Sunnis? Those who
accepted this view became the most ardent Arab
nationalists in Syria; their hope was that speaking
Arabic as the Sunnis did would serve to gain them
the equality that was eluding them under Syrian
traditional system, in which being Sunni was a key
element to advancement.
Others within the Alawite community, who disagreed
with this approach, argued that they would never be
accepted by the Sunni majority as equals; and
instead strove to attain an independent homeland in
their traditional homeland: the Syrian coastal area
between today's Lebanon and Turkey.
In the early 1940s after the French had ruled Syria
from post-World War I until 1946, Suleyman Assad,
the grandfather of Syria's present leader, Bashar
Assad, and about five other Alawite leaders wrote to
the French government asking the French to let the
Alawites have their own state in their homeland
along the coast. These Alawite leaders claimed that
the Sunnis had never treated the non-Sunnis fairly,
and that therefore, in a united Syrian state, the
Alawites would continue to suffer serious
discrimination. They cited as evidence the way the
Sunnis were at that time treating the Jews in
British-Mandated Palestine.
Given the present trend towards Sunni Islamist rule
throughout the region, the non-Sunnis clearly feel
threatened. Christians have been leaving the Middle
East in droves. Shiites in Bahrain, although they
form the majority, are ruled by an oppressive Sunni
minority who use brutal force and who, earlier this
year, called in their Sunni Saudi allies to subdue
the Shiites, who were calling for equal rights.
Syria's Druze, Ismailis, Christians and other
minorities seem to be terrified about what might
happen to them if the Sunni Muslim Brotherhood takes
over there.
If one views Assad in this context, there is a real
possibility that Syria will not stay united, and
that the days of Arab nationalism are over. Islamist
Sunni fundamentalism is the enemy of the non-Sunnis,
who, to survive, will likely have to look for other
political alternatives beyond the present borders,
and possibly ally themselves with fellow non-Sunni
Arabs in the region.
Similarly, the Kurds in northern Syria, who are
directly connected to the Kurdish territories inside
Iraq, although also Sunni, see the Muslim
Brotherhood and the Wahhabis by and large as Arab
imperialists trying to force them to abandon their
Kurdish identity and become Arabs -- probably the
reason most Kurds loathe the Muslim Brotherhood. For
the Brotherhood,www.ekurd.net
being Sunni is not enough. For the Brotherhood, only
Arabs can be true Muslims. Non-Arabs must abandon
their non-Arab and non-Sunni languages and cultures,
and adopt an Arab identity -- exactly how most of
the Middle East became Arabs during the first
century of Islam.
If the present violence in Syria does not come to an
end, Syria could easily disintegrate; the northern
part of the country would become a Kurdish entity –
either within a loosely federated, geographically
altered Syria, or possibly even as an independent
state. If either of these were to happen, Iraqi
Kurds, who have been politically counseling the
Syrian Kurds, could form an alliance with Syria's
Kurds who inhabit an area which reaches west almost
to Aleppo, a city not far from the Mediterranean
Sea. If the Kurds then made some political
arrangement/alliance with a future Alawite state,
they could gain access to the sea . This would be a
major step towards the establishment of an
independent Kurdish state.
In short, what stands behind most of the violence in
Syria is the rise of Arab Sunni fundamentalism in
its various forms – whether Salafi, Wahhabi, or
Muslim Brotherhood. All of those threaten the very
existence of the Alawites, the Kurds, and other
members of the non-Sunni ethnic and religious
groups.
It is therefore much easier to understand why the
ruling Alawites feel they are fighting a life and
death battle with the Sunnis, and why they believe
they must spare no effort to survive. It also
explains why most of Syria's other minorities – such
as the Druze, Ismailis, and Christians – still
largely support the Assad regime.
Copyright ©, respective
author or news agency,
gatestoneinstitute.org
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