Asad . . . rule[d] with an iron hand for thirty years. This clearly was a noteworthy achievement for a member of a disdained community that numbers only ten percent of the population in a country that had experienced some twelve violent changes of leadership since the French were forced out in 1945.
A retired senior Foreign Service officer with many years of experience in the Middle East, the author concludes that President Asad had more success, at least in military affairs, than some of the other Arab leaders in the region. He notes nonetheless that Syrias future under a new leader like that of her neighbors remains unpredictable. ~ Ed.
EOGRAPHICALLY, THE MIDDLE EAST is an indissoluble unit lashed together by rivers, oil fields, pipelines, trade routes, and patterns of labor migration. Culturally, it is a composite of four distinct blocs: Turkey, Iran, the Caucasus, and the eastern Arab world. Politically, Turkey, Iran, and the three communal states in the Caucasus have achieved a high degree of national identity. The Arabs are behind the curve, however; linked by a common language, complex sectarian affiliations, and a shared history, they remain strewn among thirteen nominal nationalities.
Recent European history affords the Arabs an instructive precedent. After centuries of civil war, the European continent is well along on a three-stage course toward unification. Stage One, establishing viable, liberal nation-states, was finally accomplished in the wake of World War II; Stage Two, erecting regional institutions, is now underway; Stage Three, transferring sovereignty from the states to regional authorities a feat accomplished by the former American colonies in eleven years (1776-87) will hopefully be achieved in Europe within the new century.
The Arabs are still in the throes of Stage One. Realistic leaders like Syrias late President Hafiz al Asad recognize that the long-term welfare of everyone in the region depends upon following the American and European examples, but the dismal failure of past unity schemes demonstrated that their immediate preoccupation must be the consolidation of power in their own narrow purviews. Their task is uniquely difficult; Europe and America had no onerous foreign intrusions to contend with. The Arabs still have to compete with Turkey and Iran for hegemony in the region they share. More crucially, they have to operate within the strict confines of perceived U.S. interests in the region.
The United States has materially abridged Arab self-determination by shoring up favored regimes such as Saudi Arabia, punishing errant ones like Iraq, and shoring up the non-Arab state of Israel. Beneficiary of a tacit security guarantee from Washington, Israel has relative immunity from the operation of the regional balance of power; for all practical purposes, it is an American enclave. Variously citing Israel, oil, and the international welfare as its motives, Washington has taken on itself the task of regulating the affairs of the Middle East.
Therefore, whether or not a ruler of Syria is committed to the cause of Arab unity, as Asad was, he is confined by the circumstances of the time to the narrow focus of Syria/Lebanon and to the narrow objectives of promoting his subjects welfare, maintaining order, preserving Syrian independence, and staying in power.
What was President Asads record his legacy in this context?
The national welfare
Syria is impoverished and unproductive, held back by the regimes restrictions on private enterprise, information exchange, and access to the internet. Even Lebanon, rebuilding after Israeli invasion and fifteen years of civil war, has a more vigorous economy; it provides employment for up to a million Syrian migrants. Asads bureaucracy is corrupt and sclerotic. However, Baathism is populist and the regime has made a doctrinaire effort to narrow the gap between rich and poor. New President Bashar al Asad reputedly wants to bring Syria into the information age. If he succeeds, Syrians will owe the father a debt of gratitude.
Maintaining order
Asad presided over the 1982 massacre of Syrian citizens in Hamah, years of bloody participation in the Lebanese civil war, and several political assassinations, notably those of Lebanese rivals Kamal Junblatt and Bashir Jumayyil. Moral judgments aside, he prevailed over antagonists whose methods were equally brutal, and he did what the Lebanese seemingly couldnt do end their vicious civil war.
American officials issue ritual recommendations for Arab adoption of democratic forms of government. At the present stage, however, any bold experiment with democracy would probably go the way of the Quwwatli government, overthrown by Syrias first of many military coups in 1949. Even Washingtons enthusiasm for Arab democracy fails to withstand close examination, witness the devout alliance with the royal house of Saud.
Since the accidental death of his older son in 1994, Asad had been grooming second son Bashar for the succession. Catapulting this improbable figure into the presidency is a perversion of Baathist democracy, but if the mild-mannered ophthalmologist steps into a phone booth and emerges as a caped benevolent dictator, the electorate may come to consider itself well served.
Maintaining independence
Syria/Lebanon is flanked by three hostile regimes all militarily superior. Issues of rivers, minorities, and irredentism divide Syria from Turkey, but Asad was careful to avoid armed conflict. In 1998, under the threat of Turkish military action on the border, he threw Kurdish militant Abdalla Ocalan to the wolves, even though Ocalan was a political ally and may be an Alawite. Ankara ran Ocalan to ground in Africa, with CIA help, and he now sits in a Turkish prison under sentence of death.
The dispute between the Baathist regimes in Damascus and Baghdad has the special bitterness of partisan rivalry. In 1991 Asad carried pragmatism to the brink when he sided with the West and the oil shaykhs against Saddams clumsy effort to advance the causes of Arab unity, and Iraqi leadership, by annexing Kuwayt. The dividends of heresy were handsome: subsidies from the oil states, ingratiation in Washington, and carte blanche to accomplish in Lebanon what Saddam failed to accomplish in Kuwayt.
