By Patrick Devenny on 9.22.05 @ 12:06AM
The Mehlis investigation brings up new questions concerning the President of Syria.
WASHINGTON -- Last week, German judge Detlev Mehlis arrived in
Damascus, prepared to interview several high-ranking Syrian
security chiefs over their role in the February murder of former
Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Mehlis, whose U.S.-backed
UN-led investigation has already led to the unprecedented arrest of
four Lebanese security officials, is rumored to have requested
additional interviews with Assad family members, a move destined to
heighten the apprehension among Syria's ruling elite.
Just five years ago, such a chain of events would have been
considered patently absurd. The idea than an international
investigation would gain access to those who hold the Assad
regime's darkest secrets, let alone be allowed into the country,
would have been unfathomable under the reign of Bashar's father,
Hafiz. After all, the elder Assad once consigned the entire city of
Hama to death on the simple suspicion that some of its residents
were rendering aid and comfort to anti-regime elements.
The younger Assad's willingness to accede to Mehlis's demands
adds to the mystery concerning the nature of his regime. Upon his
assumption of the presidential throne in 2000, many experts --
pointing to his Western training as, of all things, an
ophthalmologist -- expected a more moderate tone from Syria. This
initial optimism among Syria observers laid the foundations for a
major school of thought, which views Bashar as an unwilling captive
of his father's considerable legacy.
The view, most elegantly advanced by former NSC staffer and
Brookings Institution fellow Flynt Leverett and enumerated in his
latest work Inheriting Syria, holds that the Syrian
dictator is a virtual prisoner of his father's shadow, obliged to
satisfy his old guard minders while unable to enact reform because
of a woefully decrepit state bureaucracy. Those who adhere to the
Leverett school see in Bashar a repressed reformer who, as Leverett
contends, exudes "reformist impulses," including the construction
of a shadow governing mechanism which allows him to bypass the
moribund apparatus built by his father.
Other Syrian watchers, especially those in academia, see Assad
in an even more sympathetic light, as a closeted pro-American
figure whose interests are in many ways analogous with
Washington's. One such academic observer, Jonathan Landis, writing
in the New York Times, suggested that Assad and the United
States "share a common interest in subduing jihadism and helping
Iraq build stability."
Recent events in Lebanon seem to support the idea of Bashar as
clandestine reformer. His willingness to end the overt occupation
of Lebanon -- a cornerstone of his father's foreign policy --
appeared to signal a readiness to defy hardliners in pursuit of
international favor.
THERE IS CONSIDERABLE REASON, however, to doubt the "captive
president" theory. A more accurate view which, wisely, seems to
have been embraced by the Bush administration, sees Bashar as a
leader who holds the levers of Syrian power firmly in his grasp.
Like his predecessor, he has little interest in fundamental reform,
only seeking change when it serves to maintain the power of his
meticulously managed elite. Externally, he is content with a
continuation of Syria's quiet but considerable alliance with
various terrorist organizations, while facilitating the Iraqi
insurgency through inaction and covert cooperation.
Additionally, as Assad's actions in Lebanon have shown, he is
far from the Syrian Gorbachev some desperately wish him to be.
While much remains unknown concerning the regime's possible role in
the murder of Mr. Hariri, the present body of evidence seems to be
leading investigators to Damascus, with a particular focus placed
on an August 2004 meeting between Assad and Hariri. At the
high-level conference, Assad informed Hariri that, were he to
refuse to acquiesce to the Syrian plan to reinstall Emile Lahoud as
Lebanese president, the Syrian dictator would "break Lebanon over
[Hariri's] head."
To guarantee Hariri's cooperation, Assad turned to two close
allies, Minister of the Interior and former Syrian intelligence
chief in Lebanon Ghazi Kana'an and Rustom Ghazaleh, the current
Syrian intelligence commander in Lebanon. The two Assad loyalists
were to maintain the pressure on Hariri through threats and
intimidation, ensuring that the popular and wealthy former prime
minister would continue to toe the Damascus line. Tensions
immediately flared when Hariri spurned Ghazaleh's request for
increased political cooperation during a meeting that took place
just weeks before Hariri's assassination. Not surprisingly, Kana'an
and Ghazaleh have become the prime targets of the Mehlis
investigation, and have had their overseas assets frozen by the
United States government for their involvement in facilitating
terrorist attacks inside Lebanon.
While none of these facts implicate Assad personally, there can
be little doubt he gave at least his assent -- if not guidance --
to the operation. For the past five years, Assad has methodically
purged his security services of anyone not regarded as directly
loyal to him. This process was quickly followed by the appointments
of such Bashar stalwarts as his brother Maher Assad, brother-in-law
Asif Shawkat, and family friend Fouad Nassif Khair-Bek to critical
positions in the intelligence apparatus. In fact, the security
agencies, along with the military, have been the two instruments of
Syrian power most affected by Bashar's consolidation, a detail
which calls into question their willingness or ability to initiate
independent action absent presidential consent.
THE IDEA OF ASSAD AS COVERT reformer can further be challenged by
his disinclination to embrace even rudimentary alterations of his
domestic policy. His much anticipated speech before the Baath Party
Congress in June -- during which Assad was expected to announce
several new reform initiatives -- was instead a retread airing of
conservative rhetoric which elicited a cacophony of anguished
groans even from normally regime-friendly elements.
This political stasis has fueled a widespread disgust with the
Baathist regime among the vast majority of Syria's population, an
antipathy only heightened by the nation's failing economic
situation. With unemployment at 20 percent and the nation's energy
supplies rapidly dwindling, even some in the ruling class are
chafing at the regime's consistent inability to make meaningful
changes to the centralized economic model of the Syrian state. All
of this comes as Bashar has assiduously shaped the government in
his own image, making it difficult for observers to suggest that
culpability for Syria's deteriorating state lies anywhere else but
in the presidential offices.
In the coming weeks, Assad will have a truly golden opportunity
to enact the reform that some believe him to sincerely want. He
could choose to cooperate with the Hariri investigation (he has
plenty of intelligence functionaries to sacrifice to Mehlis), end
aid to Iraqi insurgents, and authorize the cessation of
Syrian-motivated violence in Lebanon. Of course, as long as the
Assad power structure is thoroughly ensconced in Damascus, these
developments will never come to pass, no matter how "conciliatory"
U.S. policy becomes. Bashar Assad does have the authority and the
requisite power to enact real change in Syria and the rest of the
Middle East, but has shown little willingness to do so, offering
weak excuses which are too readily accepted by some in the West.
Were his recalcitrance to stir some form of backlash -- either
internal or external -- against the regime, he would have no one to
blame but himself.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Law, Military, Iraq, Energy