After two weeks of shock and awe, Syria’s opposition remains
intact. Will Assad’s army do likewise?
The iron fist against “terrorist gangs” as promised by Bashar
Assad got off to a fairly impressive start two weeks ago. Homs —
the Benghazi of the Syrian rebels — has been subjected to massive
and sustained shelling for days, causing hundreds of fatalities
among the defenders. With the fist heading for its third week,
however, the spectacular artillery barrages seem to have delivered
little.
This is not the first time during the uprising that the
Syrian army has stormed urban areas. In July and August, the army
recaptured Hama, Deir ez Zor, and Latakia after these had been
taken over by crowds of protesters reinforced by army
defectors.
However, while it took the Syrian army approximately five
days to regain control of Hama and two days to take Deir ez Zor,
Latakia turned into a drawn out battle that lasted several days.
Homs was shelled, but an all out assault failed to
follow.
October 26, 2011. Panic in Homs as the army
strikes.
This time Homs is clearly the primary objective. But once
again the shelling failed to be backed by meaningful advances of
ground forces. Whatever the reason the Syrian army is always
struggling in Homs, by now, the death tolls in Homs have dropped to
the low dozens as many locals have apparently fled the city. Large
chunks of Homs have become ghost towns populated primarily by
insurgents and a particularly hardened version of local residents.
The “shock and awe” effect of the first days is fading away as the
remaining population is getting used to the daily bombardment. “We
are safe. They can’t hit here,” said a local guide to a BBC
reporter as shells and mortars were falling all
around.
February 6, 2012. Defiance in Homs in the face
of heavy barrage.
Elsewhere,according to Reuters, many opposition
centers have been transformed into a bunch of mini-Homs and
half-Homs. All of them seem to be subjected to the same kind of
artillery siege and blockade, but Zabadani was apparently the only
prominent opposition stronghold to fall into the regime’s hands
until now. An attack on Rastanwas repelled. A CNN reporter, who
traveled to Northern Syria, foundmuch of its countryside under the control of the
opposition; and while the fighters are
waiting for Bashar’s tanks to appear in force every moment, these
are yet to come. In fact, the situation may be no better in other
parts of Syria, but many areas are harder to reach for reporters
(the Idlib province in the north is adjacent to Turkey).
There is an obvious danger for the
regime in projecting weakness for so long. Many Sunni soldiers are
deterred from switching sides only by the perception that the
regime is strong enough to defeat the rebels. Failure to take over
Homs anytime soon is likely to trigger an avalanche of defections.
Homs is a must now. It’s become the bare minimum for the survival
of the regime.
This is not to say that the opposite is true, as
throughout this uprising the rebels have demonstrated a high
ability to recover and re-infiltrate lost areas. Some besieged
towns were repeatedly reported to have already been brought under
the regime’s control in the past. For example, this is the second
time the army is storming Rastan.
Large chunks of Syria, including the cradle of the
revolution in Deraa, are part of a massive tribal belt stretching
from the Persian Gulf across several countries in the region, with
Bedouin tribes reportedly at the forefront of the armed resistance
in many areas. The tribal dimension of the uprising makes for a
curious historical analogy. Bashar’s situation is beginning to
resemble the military campaign waged by the Emperor Tiberius’
adopted son Germanicus in 15-6 CE, who unsuccessfully tried to
subdue under Roman rule the German tribes that lived beyond the
Rhine. Even when Germanicus was able to defeat the Germans in an
engagement, the tribes were able to re-group so quickly that in the
end he could only achieve short-lived, skirmish victories: true
conquest was simply impossible.
The prevailing expert opinion at the beginning of the
current campaign against the rebels used to be that the rate of
defections was rather low and the bulk of the armed forces remained
intact. For example, in his recent article on Syria, Israeli
analystJonathan Spyerestimated that the
regime can still marshal 300,000 troops, as opposed to at most
20,000 guerrillas in the Free Syrian Army. Yet, after two weeks of
an iron fist that appears unable to decisively hammer the
opposition anywhere, one question is begging to be asked: Where
exactly is Bashar hiding his 300,000 strong army? The Syrian army
may have more troops than it appears from its muddling in Homs,
given that it apparently pursues offensives on several fronts at
once. Yet, the army is clearly severely short on ground-troops. For
it is no longer capable of being present in all areas of revolt nor
mustering enough forces anywhere to smash the opposition with a
decisive local Blitzkrieg.
Two weeks ago Mustafa Ahmad Al-Sheikh, a high level
defector, who has fled to Turkey,claimedthat the Syrian army was so
depleted by defections that he expected it to collapse by the end
of this month. This assessment was dismissed by many as rebel
propaganda, but now Al-Sheikh is starting to look closer to reality
than his critics. In fact, not so long ago the same Al-Sheikh
estimated that he needed a whole year to topple the regime with
guerrilla tactics and at that time he was not treated as a rebel
propagandist.
With each passing day that the Syrian army remains bogged
down in Homs and elsewhere, the graver the consequences for the
regime. Two weeks of intense bombardment televised on Al-Jazeera
and other Arabic channels have already triggered a tsunami of
outrage across the Arab world. Weapons and foreign fighters are
reported to be streaming into Syria from neighboring Arab countries
and Turkey.
More ominously for the regime, it has finally witnessed
jihad declared against it by radical Islamists, including al Qaeda.
The religious and sectarian dimensions of the conflict are clearly
escalating. A goodexample of the
latest trendis a video, purportedly from
Homs, that shows Free Syrian Army soldiers with members of
al-Qa’ida.
February 17, 2012. Some rebel groups in Homs
fly their and al Qaeda’s flags together.
In the background, alongside the banners of the Free
Syrian Army, there are the familiar black flags of al Qaeda’s Iraqi
branch, with the black background and white Arabic script,
featuring the Shahadah on top and a circular logo bearing the words
“Allah, Rasul Mohammed.” The black background indicates the
Islamist militants’ mindset: they are fighting in Dar al-Harb
against an infidel regime. This point is corroborated by the fact
that they identify the Free Syrian Army with the “mumineen”
(“believers”).
In the Missile East, failure to trumpet one’s strength can
have severe consequences. You cannot promise to come down with an
iron fist and then fail to deliver. By now even roosters in Homs
are no longer impressed with Bashar’s artillery. If there is still
some of this iron fist we haven’t seen until today, Assad Junior
had better show it now. Otherwise, the chickens may soon come Homs
to roost for his regime.
February 17, 2012. The chickens in Homs are no
longer impressed.
About the Author
Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi is a Shillman-Ginsburg Fellow at the Middle East Forum, and a student at Brasenose College, Oxford University. His website is http://www.aymennjawad.org.
About the Author
Oskar Svadkovsky is a computer networking professional based in Tel Aviv, and the owner of the Happy Arab News Service blog. He graduated in Indian and Chinese Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
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