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Commentary: How to destroy a revolution
Published in Al-Ahram Weekly on 06 - 10 - 2011

In Washington, Ramzy Baroud looks at the spectre of US intervention in the Syrian uprising
US Ambassador to Syria Robert Ford is quite a feisty diplomat. He shows up unannounced and uninvited at various hot spots in the country, greeted with varying degrees of enthusiasm, and, oftentimes, anger. When he made a highly touted appearance to the Syrian city of Hama in July, residents reportedly greeted him with flowers. However, his appearance at the home of an opposition figure in Damascus on 29 September earned him a salvo of tomatoes and rocks from angry protesters.
Naturally -- and as confirmed by various WikiLeaks cables -- American diplomats don't behave independently from the main organ of US foreign policy in Washington, the State Department. It is also safe to assume that Ford's alleged solidarity visits throughout Syria were not intended to cater to a Syrian audience. We all know how most Syrians feel about US foreign policy in the region.
Writing in the Gallop website, Steve Crabtree described a decision by the Obama administration to send a US ambassador to Syria (the first one in six years) as an "important signal that it seeks improved relations between the two countries". One of the unstated objectives of this was to "contend with widespread anti-US sentiment among Syrians".
According to a March 2009 poll, two-thirds of Syrians have unfavourable views of the United States, and more (71 per cent) disapprove of the US leadership. One could argue that such views are sensible, considering the US history of anti-Syria policies and lack of support for the Syrian people's urgent call for democracy and reforms.
In the last decade, if not longer, Syrians have watched as US policies in the region destroyed two neighbouring countries -- Iraq and Lebanon. For several decades now, they have seen the US support and subsidise the Israeli occupation of Palestine. The targeting of Syria at the US congress and plots to roll back Damascus to ensure Israeli domination is a whole different story. Few in Syria believe that the interests of the revolting people are at the heart of US policies.
Syria had already survived the regime-change frenzy that took Washington elites by storm after their success story in Iraq. This survival was aided by two conditions. One was the stiff resistance in Iraq following the US invasion, which thwarted the long-term US agenda for the country. Another factor was the number of concessions made by Bashar Al-Assad's regime, which had played its role well in the so-called war on terror.
Israel's friends in the US government, think-tanks and media were clearly frustrated that the US government was forced to settle for the status quo in Syria. This defied the conventional wisdom imparted by neoconservative likes of Richard Perle, Douglas Feith, David Wurmser and others. While the neocons were ready to move into a new phase -- one that went beyond simply "containing Syria" -- circumstances were no longer suitable; thus the unwelcome return of the containment policy, whereby Syria would pose as a guardian of Arab resistance while ensuring that its border with Israel (or rather its own occupied Golan Heights) remained calm.
The Syrian people began their uprising for long-denied rights last March. The government responded with the only method it knew well: sheer brutality, coupled with illusory language of change and reforms. The world watched as Syrians died in droves. But then, the politicking began. Some genuine Syrian opposition groups passionately organised to give a voice to their people at home. Others also organised, although their reasons were not so genuine.
The US insists on enforcing the same failed policies of the past, but expects different results every time. Propping up an Iraqi opposition that took part in the destruction of Iraq (following the US invasion of 2003) seems to be the model used by US policymakers in Syria. And the mode is doomed to fail again.
The US is also leading the charge against Syria at the United Nations, once more trying to co-opt the Security Council to impose crippling sanctions on Damascus. These sanctions are already felt in the streets of Syria, but hardly among the elites -- a characteristic of all US sanctions throughout history. The prices of most basic foodstuffs are already skyrocketing and this trend is likely to continue.
US involvement in Syria is the second greatest danger facing the Syria uprising (the first being the cruelty of the regime). Sweeping sanctions and threats will turn the conflict into another American fight against an Arab regime, as opposed to an unadulterated people's uprising -- a revolution even -- for the rights of Syrians and the future of their country.
Robert Ford is a mere conduit of failed US policies. His insistence on hijacking the diplomatic scene in the country will garner him some media attention, and perhaps a book deal. But for now it will be a liability for the Syrian uprising, which needs to remain independent from US posturing in order to triumph.
And in the long run, the economically-frail and militarily-compromised US cannot be an effective player in shaping the political landscape in Syria -- or anywhere else in the Middle East. Ultimately, the future of the Syrian people will be determined by their own fortitude.
The writer is editor of PalestineChronicle.com and author of My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story.


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