OBIT: Ed Brown

"Fighting Fire with a Feather" 

Ed Brown

 

Eddie Charles Brown, Jr., a great-souled human being committed to fighting the oppression of all people from Mississippi to South Africa, died at his home on November 23, 2011. In political circles, Ed was respected for his enduring commitment to our people. As a consequence of his tireless devotion to, and success in advancing the culture and economic progress of poor Black folk, Ed Brown was widely recognized as among the most, incorruptible, responsible, resourceful and effective of the activist leaders of the Movement. As his SNCC colleagues said of him, "More than most Ed's life embodies and exemplifies to a remarkable degree, the principle of undying love for our people both here and in the Motherland."

 

Although the consummate organizer and community activist in matters of the aesthetics of Black musical culture and the southern oral tradition, Ed had the soul of a poet and the eloquence of a griot.  Similarly, his great sensitivity to African cultures is reflected in the quality of the extraordinary collection of traditional African religious art, which he and his wife Valinda have painstakingly gathered over many years.

 

A year prior to his passing, Ed gave his Shahada (acceptance of Islam) to his younger brother the Imam Jamil Al-Amin (formerly known as H. Rap Brown) to whom Ed's observable devotion, loyalty and commitment was widely seen as an unconditional and admirable example of brotherly love. The janaza (last rites) were held on November 24, 2011 at the West End Community Mosque in Atlanta, Georgia.

 

A native of Louisiana, Ed was born on August 19, 1941 in New Orleans to Thelma Warren and Eddie Charles Brown, Sr. and raised in Baton Rouge.  Ed's historical efforts to fight segregation and all forms of oppression as well as to empower Black people started in 1960 when he was a young student at Louisiana's Southern University. He and 16 other classmates confronted the University and staged a sit-in protesting the racial segregation prevalent in Louisiana at the time. After he and the others were arrested, expelled and banned from enrolling in any university in Louisiana, Ed began the ongoing struggle for justice, which would define his entire life. This expulsion led Ed to Howard University in Washington, D.C. in 1961where he landed on the front line of the Civil Rights Movement. Ed was an active member of the Nonviolent Action Group, the SNCC affiliate at Howard.

 

As a leader and field secretary for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) he fought to win constitutional rights for Blacks and all disenfranchised people. Ed always proclaimed that he was "fighting fire with a feather," but he knew he would prevail because he often said, ironically, he was protected by "asbestos gloves."

 

 

A Life of Service

 

Ed never held a job not directly concerned with human advancement. Highly regarded in white political and philanthropic circles for a selfless incorruptibility, Ed bridged the gap between both communities and was able to direct very significant financial resources into poor Black communities. The three abiding concerns of his professional life, both here and in Africa, can be seen as: democratic political liberation; economic empowerment; and the celebration and enhancement of our cultures. Through Ed's efforts thousands of people have had their lives significantly improved.

 

Among fellow workers, he is remembered for his uncommon diplomatic skill, personal charm and political tact. Kalamu ya Salaam, who served with him on the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage commission recalls, "What I most remember is that the respect he commanded coupled with a delightful sense of humor enabled him to soothe the most outrageous egos, resolve conflicts and bring apparently irreconcilable warring factions together."

 

In 1965 as a staffer at the Citizen's Crusade Against Poverty in Washington, D.C., Ed developed information networks among community-based organizations to support anti-poverty legislation.   In 1967, he organized efforts to improve the political and economic conditions of Blacks in the Mississippi Delta as the Executive Director and founder of the Mississippi Action for Community Education (MACE) and The Delta Foundation in Greenville, Mississippi. At MACE, he developed community-based enterprises, producing Fine Vines blue jeans and establishing catfish farms in the Delta. He was the first executive director of the Mississippi Delta Blues and Heritage Festival. In 1974, Ed raised funds and helped organize the Sixth Pan African Congress held at the University of Tanzania at Dar-es-Salaam's Nkrumah Hall with delegates representing 52 independent states and/or liberation movements in Africa, the Caribbean and other people of African descent.

 

As Executive Director of the New Orleans Area Development Project in 1976, Ed organized advocacy groups to work for reform by organizing communities to fight police brutality and creating parent-teacher committees for education reform. Ed went on to serve as President and CEO of the Southern Agriculture Corporation in the 1980s where he worked to organize and gain capital funding for small Black southern farmers. In the 1990s as Executive Director of the Voter Education Project in Atlanta, Ed continued his tireless efforts to register Blacks and poor people to vote and to fight legislation restricting poor and disenfranchised people of all color from voting.

 

From the 1990s through 2006, Ed took his "asbestos gloves" to nations outside the United States. As a senior consultant to the National Democratic Institute, Ed designed and implemented civic and voter education programs to prepare for national elections in Ethiopia, Namibia, Zambia, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe. He was especially involved in the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa which resulted in the freeing of Nelson Mandela. As an international election observer for The Jimmy Carter Center, Ed worked in Ghana, Zambia and The Dominican Republic. As a human rights activist in corporate board rooms, Ed served on the World Council of Churches and Emergency Fund for Southern Africa raising funds for humanitarian relief; at the Center for National Security Studies monitoring American defense policies and budgets; and with the American Friends Service Committee, U.S. Department of Agriculture Citizens Advisory Committee Equal Opportunity and Atlanta Council for International Cooperation. He also consulted with the Asian Council of Churches and participated in the Consultation of Minority Peoples of Japan in Tokyo.

 

In addition to his international work during this time, from 1994 until 2003, Ed moved into the arena of municipal and city planning as southeastern marketing director for Sidney B. Bowne Engineering. He served as the strategic planner developing relationships between the company and city and state officials in the company's negotiation and establishment of Geography Information Systems. He worked on transition teams for the mayors of Macon and Albany, Georgia, in 2003 as a consultant with ABC Management where he evaluated and recommended management of staff for city departments and developed strategic plans for incoming mayoral administrations.

 

A Lover of Art

 

Ed developed an early appreciation and love of art while studying at Howard University under Professor Sterling Brown. He became especially interested in the history of African art and cultures. During his later journeys throughout the continent, he began collecting African sculptures and masks which he and his wife, Valinda, expanded with African and African-American art. Ed became a co-owner of Boston's Harris/Brown Art Gallery, which exhibited major African-American artists. He is widely known for furthering dialogue regarding the importance of nurturing artists of African-American and African descent. As a board member of the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, he was especially proud of being instrumental in helping to establish the annual David Driskell Young Artist Award. He also served on the board of the Atlanta Photography Group where he chaired the Youth Education Program and as chairman of the Funding Committee of the Academy Theater. Ed's many years of advocating the ascension of African-American artists has resulted in their inclusion in successful exhibitions at various art venues.

 

Ed's love and dedication to Black culture embraced music of all kind. He established and promoted the Mississippi Delta Blues Festival while at MACE. He especially enjoyed jazz and gospel and he and his wife made annual pilgrimages to New Orleans for the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. But Ed's most enjoyable times at his home with Valinda were preparing deliciously wonderful New Orleans cuisines and sharing those absolutely satisfying meals with friends and family who prized the opportunity to get a cup of Ed's Gumbo. Ed was a master New Orleans chef who was admired for his seafood, duck, or pheasant gumbos; quail in rich brown sauce; and turtle soup with sherry and crawfish bisque; fried catfish; spinach shrimp dressing; and sweet potato pone. His demonstrations of affection for food and sharing led to his wife's publication of a loving cookbook. Ed was an elaborate storyteller, so with each meal came colorful adventures with Ed Brown. Ed was a passionate historian of African culture and he accumulated a large library of African history. He spent many rewarding years studying Yoruba culture. During the 1970s with an extended stay in Nigeria, following an elaborate ritual that included him running alongside camels with a net over his head, Ed was initiated into the ruling Ogboni Society of Yoruba manhood.

 

Ed is survived by his loving wife, Valinda; three sons, Michael Johnson, Kevin George and Keith George; two sisters, Pat Brown Leak (Alex) and Cheryl Brown Hill (Donald); brothers Jamil Al-Amin (Karima) and Lance Brown (Pat); grandchildren Alexis Johnson, Aliyah Johnson, Tyler Johnson, Kristin George, Christopher George, Brandon George and nieces, nephews, cousins and a host of other family and friends.

 


VIDEO: The Bachmann Kerfuffle

Nov 22, 2011 4:37pm
1035941

 

QuestLove

Jimmy Fallon Drummer

Calls Bachmann ‘Bitch’ Song

‘Tongue in Cheek’

The drummer for the house band on “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon” apologized sort of for his decision to play ”Lyin’ Ass Bitch” when Rep.  Michele Bachmann appeared on the talk show Monday night.

“The performance was a tongue-in-cheek and spur of the moment decision. The show was not aware of it and I feel bad if her feelings were hurt. That was not my intention,” Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson said in a statement.

As Bachmann, congresswoman and GOP presidential contender,  walked across the stage to sit next to Fallon Monday night, house band the Roots played a refrain from the  song written by Fishbone.

Though the lyrics refer to a woman as a “slut trash can bitch,” the band sang the “la, la, la” of the refrain.

The band’s drummer sent a tweet prior to the show clueing viewers in on the song choice, writing: “late night walkon song devotees: you love it when we snark: this next one takes the cake. ask around cause i aint tweeting title.”

Later, he retweeted a fan’s reaction: “perfect entry song for her.”

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

Thompson’s initial tweet came prior to show making air, but after it had been taped earlier that evening.

Neither NBC, “Late Night” or Fallon himself would comment officially on the controversy .

Around noon Tuesday Fallon tweeted, “@Questlove is grounded.”

Thompson is a known supporter of President Obama and has contributed to his campaign. His Twitter account features a photograph of the drummer with the president.

Earlier Monday, Bachmann was asked on NBC’s “Today” show whether she believed she had been treated unfairly by the media because she is a woman.

“Sometimes you wonder about that,” she said. “I have no way of knowing.”

A spokesman for Bachmann did not immediately comment, but a colleague in the Congress came to her defense.

Rep. Nita Lowey, D- NY, called the song “sexist.”

“I do not share Michele Bachmann’s politcis,” said Lowey, “but she deserves to be treated with respect. No female politician — and no woman — should be subjected to sexist and offensive innuendo like she was last night.”

__________________________

 

 

Fishbone - Lyin' Ass Bitch

>via: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X7JkZG3O-N0&feature=player_embedded#!

 

__________________________

 

GO HERE TO VIEW VIDEO OF BACHMANN'S STATEMENT

2012

 Did Bachmann

Leak Classified

Intel During the Debate?

 

Did you hear Michele Bachmann at Tuesday's Republican debate saying that terrorists have made six different attempts on Pakistan's 15 nuclear sites? That's not information that's ever been made public! Which raises the question: did Bachmann just leak classified information to a national audience?

The thing about Michele Bachmann is that she sits on the House Intelligence Committee, and she loves to talk about her access to classified information. So it's possible that she slipped up tonight and told millions of people something only she and a few other people know: that there have been six terrorist attempts on Pakistani nuclear sites. Terrifying as that might sound, [LOUD GULPING NOISE], it's not out of the realm of possibility!

Except that the other thing about Michele Bachmann is that she's crazy, and wrong about almost everything, including her own life story. So it's also possible—equally possible?—that she just wholesale invented the line about "six terrorist attempts," much in the same way that she invented the line about "59,000 illegal immigrant terrorists" that she was peddling a few weeks ago. What a choice! Michele Bachmann, folks—either she's incompetent, or she's dishonest.

 

AUDIO: 100 Greatest Guitarists: Jimi Hendrix | Rolling Stone

GO HERE TO VIEW JIMI @ WOODSTOCK CONCERT

#1 - Jimi Hendrix

Tom Morello

 

David Redfern/Redferns

Jimi Hendrix exploded our idea of what rock music could be: He manipulated the guitar, the whammy bar, the studio and the stage. On songs like "Machine Gun" or "Voodoo Chile," his instrument is like a divining rod of the turbulent Sixties – you can hear the riots in the streets and napalm bombs dropping in his "Star-Spangled Banner."

His playing was effortless. There's not one minute of his recorded career that feels like he's working hard at it – it feels like it's all flowing through him. The most beautiful song of the Jimi Hendrix canon is "Little Wing." It's just this gorgeous song that, as a guitar player, you can study your whole life and not get down, never get inside it the way that he does. He seamlessly weaves chords and single-note runs together and uses chord voicings that don't appear in any music book. His riffs were a pre-metal funk bulldozer, and his lead lines were an electric LSD trip down to the crossroads, where he pimp-slapped the devil.

There are arguments about who was the first guitar player to use feedback. It doesn't really matter, because Hendrix used it better than anyone; he took what was to become Seventies funk and put it through a Marshall stack, in a way that nobody's done since.

It's impossible to think of what Jimi would be doing now; he seemed like a pretty mercurial character. Would he be an elder statesman of rock? Would he be Sir Jimi Hendrix? Or would he be doing some residency off the Vegas Strip? The good news is his legacy is assured as the greatest guitar player of all time.

Key Tracks: "Purple Haze," "Foxey Lady," "The Star-Spangled Banner," "Hey Joe"

Listen On Spotify

Related
The 100 Greatest Artists of All Time: Jimi Hendrix
The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time: The Jimi Hendrix Experience's 'Electric Ladyland'
Video: An Alternate Take of Jimi Hendrix's 1967 'Love or Confusion'

 

__________________________

 

Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Your loving son, Jimi

October, 1966: Very soon after forming The Jimi Hendrix ExperienceJimi Hendrix writes a postcard to his father back home in the U.S. and fills him in on recent developments.

Two months later — as mentioned by Jimi — the band's first single, "Hey Joe," was released. Their debut album, "Are You Experienced," soon followed; it is now considered by many to be one of the greatest albums of all time.

Transcript follows. Image kindly supplied by Jerry. 


Image: Jerry

Transcript
Dear Dad –

Well...Although I lost the address, I feel I must write before I get too far away – We're in Munich, Germany now – We just left Paris and Nancy France – We're playing around london now. That's where I'm staying these days. I have my own group and will have a record out about 2 months named "Hey Joe" By the Jimi Hendrix EXPERIENCE

I hope you get this card – I'll write a decent letter – I think things are getting a little Better – 

Your loving son

Jimi

 

 

PUB: Contest Submission Guidelines - Boom

boom

contest submission guidelines

Eligibility

Open to all writers.

Age and previous book publication are not considerations for eligibility.

Poems published in periodicals may be included in the manuscript.

Please, no submissions from students or close friends of the editors.


Reading Fee

$15 entry fee must come with EACH entry by deadline or entries will not be considered.

Manuscripts will NOT be returned.

Pay online! You can pay by credit card or check online. (You still need to send in your check via postal mail. But by "paying" online, we can keep track of your transaction and manuscript much more efficiently.)


Format

Manuscript format:

  • between 20 and 30 pages
  • must be typed (clear photocopies are fine) (for mail submissions only)
  • 2 title pages: 1-title with contact info, 2-book title only
  • a biographical profile is not necessary

**FOR ELECTRONIC SUBMISSIONS: There is no need to submit 2 title pages. Simply submit the manuscript with an anonymous title page online. Your contact info is with your submission (though the readers are not able to access this information).


Compensation

The winner will receive $250 and copies of the winning chapbook.

The winning chapbook will be a high quality printing with letterpress cover.

To get a very good idea of the production, order any of our previous winners.


Deadline

Deadline for submission is a December 31, 2011 postmark.

 

PUB: SHORT STORY COMPETITION - swanezine

SHORT STORY COMPETITION


Swanezine is accepting entries for the 2011 Short Story Writing Competition

 

ENTRY is FREE

 

Closing date for entries Wednesday November 30th 2011
Winning authors will be announced before December 15th 2011

 

UPDATE. Our E-mail was disrupted on the 13th November. This was out of our control hence we are unaware of entries submitted around that date. If you believe we might not have received your entry please resend it before the competition closure date. 

 

First Prize £30 
Second Prize £20
Third Prize £10
(English Pounds)
Plus Three Short-listed Entries
Plus Commended Entries and Judges'  Report

The Competition Rules

 

Maximum word count: One thousand (1000)
Language English.
There is no set theme; the main criterion being quality work.
We do not accept entries that promote goods, products, or businesses.
Maximum of two entries per author.
Authors can only win one prize per competition.
Entries must be your own work and not submitted to other competitions.
Entries must not have been previously published, or broadcast in any format.

Copyright and Publishing

 

Authors retain copyright of their material.
The three winning and the three short-listed entries will be announced on the Swanezine Short Story and Flash Fiction page before December 15th 2011 and their stories will be published within four weeks. 
Once the three winners and the three short-listed stories have been announced, Swanezine retains the right to publish these stories within a maximum of 4 weeks from the announcement. To clarify: these stories must NOT be published elsewhere until after their publication on the Swanezine and within 4 weeks whichever is the sooner; after which all rights revert to the authors upon publication.  Note: This does not apply to non winning and non short-listed entries who may submit or publish elsewhere. 

 
Submissions

 

Entries are only accepted by E-mail. 

 

In the subject line of your email submission, write: Short Story Competition.

 

Your story must be in the body of the E-mail: Do NOT send attachments, they will be deleted.

 

Include your name, address, your E-mail address and word count in the body of the E-mail, and the following disclaimer copied from this page and pasted into the body of your email:

 

" I  ( your name )  confirm that I am the author of this work and that it has not been previously published or broadcast in any form, I agree and accept the rules of this competition"

 

We do NOT publish winners addresses or e-mail.
The judges' decision will be final and no individual correspondence can be entered into.

 

Please ensure that you send your  Submissions to  Swanezine

Prize Money

 

Payment method: electronically by PayPal.

 

Entrants in the UK will receive their prize money by cheque.

 

We will contact the winners upon announcement to confirm payment arrangements.

Submission of an entry to the Swanezine short story competition implies acceptance of all the rules of the competition.

 

INFO: Breath of Life—John Coltrane, Betty Wright, 14 versions of "Felicidade"

The week begins full force with John Coltrane from 1963 in Stuttgart, we follow up with new music from Betty Wright backed by The Roots, and conclude with 14 versions of "Felcidade" featuring Tom Jobim with Astrud Gilberto, Tania Maria, Juju Duarte, Gal Costa, Antonio Serrano and Jose Reinoso, Cris Deanno, Martinho da Villa, Maria Creuza, Baden Powell, César Camargo Mariano, Miucha, Nara Leao, Group Som Brasil, and Maria Bethania.

http://www.kalamu.com/bol/

 

 

I have a lot to say about new music from Betty Wright but only need a little space to say it. Bessie Regina Norris was born December 21, 1953 in Miami, Florida. She was popular R&B artist of the seventies who continues to be a force on the modern music scene in this new millennium. Not only are many of her songs sampled in modern music, she is often employed for behind the scenes vocal work, vocal coaching, and vocal arranging. Appearances on her new album by rappers Lil Wayne and Snoop Dogg are based in part on her previous work with these and other popular rappers.

Ms. Wright had not released any commercial albums in ten years and then she, or someone, comes up with the brilliant idea of a new record with The Roots. Well, Ms. Betty acts like she been waiting on this for years.

Due to a number of factors, even as this album revels in a classic soul sound, there is nary a whiff of forced nostalgia. First of all there is the studio production that is fully contemporary even though style-wise it’s based on an earlier era. Second, there are the guest appearances, which except for Lenny Williams, are by youngsters in comparison to Betty Wright. Third, Betty Wright has taken care of herself physically; she’s almost sixty and still hitting the high notes and rocking your libido with her low growls. But fourth, and most importantly of all, Betty Wright is still writing real songs, offering real talk about real situations.

Addressing the mundane situations and enduring aspirations of working class black women has always been her strong suit and for this album she has a hand full of aces. This is Mama Betty Wright laying down experience-based advice and observations with all the wit and candor characteristic of a veteran of life. Moreover, she never over-sings, never tries to show us vocal tricks and acrobatics to prove that she still has her youthful range. No, instead, Betty just sincerely sings from the heart and in so doing, Betty captures both our attention and our love.

—kalamu ya salaam

HISTORY: New Documentary Tracks Cultural Genocide of American Indians > Truthout

New Documentary

Tracks Cultural Genocide

of American Indians

by: Rose Aguilar, Truthout | Report

 

Walter Littlemoon speaks to students at Colorado State University. (Photo courtesy Mike Kalush, The Rocky Mountain Collegian / The Thick Dark Fog)

 In 1892, US Army officer Richard Pratt delivered a speech in which he described his philosophy behind US government-run boarding schools for American Indians. "A great general has said that the only good Indian is a dead one," he said. "In a sense, I agree with the sentiment, but only in this: that all the Indian there is in the race should be dead. Kill the Indian in him, and save the man."

From 1879 until the 1960s, more than 100,000 American Indian children were forced to attend boarding schools. Children were forcibly removed or kidnapped from their homes and taken to the schools. Families risked imprisonment if they stood in the way or attempted to take their children back. 

Many of the country's 100 schools were still active up until the 1970s. Generations of children were subjected to dehumanization, cruelty and beatings, all intended to strip them of their Native identity and culture. The ultimate goal was to "civilize" the children.

A new documentary, "The Thick Dark Fog," shines a light on the traumatic boarding school experience through the telling of personal stories. The film focuses on Walter Littlemoon, a Lakota who was forced to attend a federal government boarding school on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota in the 1950s. Littlemoon says his culture, language and spirituality were brutally suppressed. 

"The government school had tried to force me to forget the Lakota language and I wouldn't do it," he says in the film. "We had a deep sense of preservation for our culture, so we would go and hide in order to speak Lakota. If we got caught, they were allowed to beat us with whatever they could, but we took that chance. The Lakota language is something that comes from deep inside of you. It comes from how you look at things and how you see things."

"The Thick Dark Fog" profiles Walter's healing process and attempt to reclaim his heritage. "It wasn't until my sixtieth year that I began to realize that there was more to me. Something was missing. It was like I was a nonbeing," he says. "I didn't know the medical words of multigenerational trauma or the complex post-traumatic stress disorder, so I called the problem what I felt it to be: the thick dark fog."

One of the film's more haunting moments provides a montage of excerpts of interviews with Indians describing their boarding school experiences:

"We had all our clothes taken from us."

"I remember always going to bed hungry."

"We were being punished, but none of us really knew why."

"It wasn't punishment. It was beatings. You'd put your hands down and they'd slam the desk down on your hands. They'd take you downstairs and make you kneel down on either a broom handle or a pencil."

"Soap. That's what she used to wash my mouth. I'll never forget the burning, the choking, the helplessness, the fading out that I went through."

Will the US government ever come to terms with and acknowledge its dark brutal past? In 1999, the state of Maine, in collaboration with the Wabanaki tribes, set up the Maine Tribal-State Child Welfare Truth and Reconciliation Commission. In 2008, the Canadian government set up a truth and reconciliation commission to help indigenous peoples tell their stories and heal. What should the US government do to help indigenous people heal from the abuses they suffered in government-run boarding schools? 

Listen to Your Call discuss "The Thick Dark Fog," accountability and the power of healing. 

Listen here:

Guests:

Randy Vasquez is the director of "The Thick Dark Fog." It debuted earlier this month at the American Indian Film Festival in San Francisco.  

Marilyn La Plant St. Germaine is a member of the Blackfeet and Cree tribes from Browning, Montana. She spent the eight grade at the Pierre Boarding School in Pierre, South Dakota, in the 1950s. She says her boarding school experience was bittersweet. She's been a social worker in American Indian communities for over 40 years.

Denise Alvater is a member of the Passamaquoddy Tribe. She is lead organizer of the Maine Tribal-State Child Welfare Truth and Reconciliation Commission, which is recording the testimony of the Wabanaki Peoples about their boarding school experiences. When Alvater was just seven years old, she and her siblings were forcibly removed from her home and put in an abusive foster home. They were tortured for four years.  

 

Creative Commons License

 



Rose Aguilar

Rose Aguilar is the host of "Your Call," a daily call-in radio show on KALW 91.7 FM in San Francisco and on KUSP 88.9 FM in Santa Cruz. She is author of "Red Highways: A Liberal's Journey Into the Heartland."

 

YEMEN: Q&A: Yemen crisis > BBC News

Q&A: Yemen crisis

Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh has signed a deal to transfer power to his vice-president following nine months of protests. The agreement, brokered by Gulf Arab states, ends his rule of more than 30 years. Mr Saleh had been clinging to power after being seriously wounded in an attack on his compound in June. He spent three months recuperating in Saudi Arabia.

What has caused the violence?


Yemen's protests

  • 27 Jan: Thousands take to the streets in Sanaa and southern cities urging President Saleh to quit; weeks of mass protests follow

  • 18 Mar: 52 protesters killed by snipers; Mr Saleh declares state of emergency

  • 21 Mar: Several senior army commanders defect to join the protesters

  • 23 Apr: Mr Saleh says he will stand down within weeks; he later appears to renege on the deal

  • 24 May: Clashes erupt between Saleh loyalists and tribal groups; dozens die in days of fighting

  • 3 Jun: Shells hit presidential compound, injuring Mr Saleh; he leaves the country for treatment

  • 18 Sep: Government forces launch crackdown on protester camps; more than 50 die in two days

  • 23 Sep: President Saleh returns to Yemen

  • 23 Nov: President Saleh signs deal to transfer power to vice-president

Security forces cracked down, often violently, on protests against President Saleh which began in late January. In parallel, a power struggle developed between rival factions loyal to Mr Saleh, Gen Ali Mohsin, and the powerful Ahmar family.

Clashes have largely taken place in the cities of Sanaa, Taiz and Aden, with hundreds of people killed and thousands injured.

Even before this, Yemen was facing several daunting security challenges. In the north, government troops had been battling Houthi rebels belonging to the minority Shia Zaidi sect, though a truce was signed in February 2010.

In the south, they have fought separatists who lost a civil war in 1994. Southern Yemen is also home to al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), considered by some to be the most threatening branch of the international al-Qaeda network. The political chaos in Sanaa has given Islamist militants more freedom to operate.

Is this part of the Arab Spring?

Yes, in as much as the mass protests against President Salah have been inspired by similar movements elsewhere in the Arab world. But the parallel power struggle involves factions that are firmly established within Yemen's elite.

Gen Ali Mohsin al-Ahmar declared his support for the protest movement in March. But protesters have complained that the factional fighting has compromised what would otherwise be a leaderless, popular revolution in the mold of uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt.

What has been done to find a resolution?

Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz (R) meets Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Riyadh, 19 September, 2011
Ali Abdullah Saleh (left) is in Saudi Arabia, and has yet to commit to a transition plan

 

The six Arab Gulf states that make up the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) tried to broker a deal to persuade Mr Saleh to stand down after more than three decades in power. The president appeared to accept the GCC's plan, first presented in March - but then repeatedly failed to sign or act on it.

Vice-President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi took over as acting president in June after Mr Saleh left for Saudi Arabia. On 12 September, Mr Saleh entrusted him with negotiating a transition deal, but called for further talks before anything was signed.

Mr Saleh finally signed the agreement on 23 November in the presence of Saudi King Abdullah and other senior Saudi officials after flying to Riyadh. In the weeks leading up to the deal, the UN Secretary General's special adviser on Yemen, Jamal Benomar, travelled to Yemen, talking to all sides and helping to negotiate the final details.

What are the terms of the deal?

Vice-President Hadi will form a power-sharing government within 14 days of the signing of the agreement and the opposition coalition will nominate a prime minister.

Mr Hadi will also head a temporary security council and try to negotiate a demilitarisation of the capital, Sanaa, which is currently under the control of rival military factions.

President Saleh must relinquish full control in early February, 90 days after signing the deal, and Mr Hadi will be elected president, as a consensus candidate agreed by all sides. Mr Hadi will then oversee a national dialogue to consider proposals for constitutional reform, such as proportional representation, replacing the presidential system with two chambers of parliament and multi-party federalism. He will also steward talks to restructure the military.

President Saleh and his allies will also have immunity from prosecution, something that has angered protesters.

Why does the rest of the world care?

The West has been increasingly preoccupied by the threat from AQAP, which claimed responsibility for a plot to blow up a US airliner over Detroit in 2009 and for sending bombs on cargo planes bound for the US in 2010. Preacher Anwar al-Awlaki, who was linked to the two plots and is said to be on a CIA hit list, went on the run in Yemen in 2007.

Western powers have long provided money and training to Yemen's security and intelligence agencies. But they have faced a dilemma: They backed Mr Saleh as the least-bad option and for his proclaimed intention to keep al-Qaeda at bay, yet this position has become increasingly hard to justify as Yemen has become more violent. Mr Saleh, however, has continued to play on fears of the chaos getting even worse if he steps down.

Yemen is in a sensitive position geographically, near to the Gulf's major oil fields and important shipping lanes in the Arabian and Red seas. Arab Gulf states are worried by the possibility that instability could spread, and that refugees could flood over the borders into Saudi Arabia and Oman if the situation in Yemen continues to deteriorate. Yemen is itself home to about 200,000 refugees, almost all of them Somali. The government's conflict with Houthi rebels in the north spilled over the border into Saudi Arabia in 2009; Yemen accused Iran of backing the Shia rebels, raising fears of a proxy conflict.

How bad has the fighting been?

Army forces move into the southern Yemeni city of Zinjibar, 10 September 2011
The Yemeni army has been battling militants in the south

There was growing talk of Yemen descending into civil war as the struggle for power became increasingly militarised. A UN report in September noted that authorities seemed to have "lost effective control of parts of the country and within the major cities, where armed opponents appear to have de facto control".

In June, government planes bombed cities said to be under militant control in southern Abyan province, causing tens of thousands of people to flee, and attacks in the area continued for months.

In October, authorities shut the international airport in Sanaa after explosions were reported at an adjacent air force base. There was also fierce fighting between renegade soldiers and government forces in the Hasaba district of Sanaa in October.

What has the impact been on ordinary Yemenis?

Yemen is the Arab world's most impoverished country. Some 40% of the rapidly growing population live on less than $2 (£1.25) a day. About 7.5 million Yemenis - one third of the population - are going hungry, according to Oxfam, and Yemen has the most serious water scarcity problems in the world.

The oil reserves Yemen has sold to pay for food imports are rapidly depleting. Unemployment is high, and many adults spend precious funds on the narcotic qat leaf. About 350,000 people have been displaced by conflict in the north.

via bbc.co.uk

 

SYRIA: A Second Powder Keg About To Blow + In-Depth Analysis

Syria:

'Our weapon is the camera'

in bloody revolution

By Jane Corbin
BBC Panorama
Hala saw her father being shot on Facebook from America

The town of Deraa in southern Syria is where the people's revolution began in March - sparked by the arrest and torture of a group of schoolchildren for scribbling graffiti critical of President Bashar al-Assad's regime.

Almost all foreign journalists are barred from reporting from Syria, but the people of Deraa continue to find a way to get their stories out.

I travelled along Syria's borders with Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan to meet the people who are risking their lives to smuggle out the truth of what is happening inside their country.

They have handed me videos showing acts of extraordinary bravery and defiance.

A young man who calls himself Abu Mahmoud has been hiding tiny cameras in cars and clothing to gather evidence of massacres by the security forces in and around Deraa.

In one video, protestors walked calmly towards the waiting guns of Syria's security services at a checkpoint. Suddenly, gunfire erupted from an army unit at the side and people could be seen falling in a bloody heap of bodies as others struggled to drag the wounded to safety.

"'The feeling was our weapon is the camera and making a record of all this," Abu Mahmoud said of his decision to risk everything to record what was happening to his people. "I was always fearing death but what kept me going was the spirit of the people."

Revolution 'live, online'

 

Nawal al Shari
This all began in Deraa and the regime's end will come in Deraa.
Nawal al Shari, mother of 15-year-old victim

Thanks to Abu Mahmoud and others in a loose network of activists, this revolution has been seen live online.

On the border with Turkey white tents have mushroomed as Syrians flee the violence, ending up in makeshift camps. Here, I met activist Omar al Muqdad.

In his computer are scores of phone videos that back up the claims that there have been crimes against humanity in Deraa.

"The state wants to take the revolution off-line and finish it by killing people," he said.

In one video, an ambulance is fired on by soldiers on the street while inside a driver and a nurse are dying as desperate people try to pull them out. Omar's footage was smuggled out and posted on the internet.

He believes the attacks on medical staff are an attempt by the regime to strike fear into people by showing them there are no boundaries when it comes to violence.

Syrian activists say that at least 3,000 civilians have died in six months of attacks by the security forces.

The Syrian government has claimed that armed gangs, criminals and terrorists are behind the violence and have blamed a foreign conspiracy.

The regime says 500 security forces have been killed in the past six months of violence and insists that the state of emergency in place for 30 years has been lifted and that it is now offering a national dialogue that will lead to reform.

To the people of Deraa these are hollow promises.

Facebook tragedy

In Washington, I met a woman Hala Abdul Aziz, a Syrian who lives in America and who had visited her family in March in Izra near Deraa, where the protests had spread.

Her father feared for her safety and urged her to return to America. On 22 April, Hala logged on to Facebook to follow events back home and found a graphic mobile phone footage showing 25 protestors in Izra shot by army snipers the previous day.

In the video, a man is shouting "this is a peaceful demonstration" as bullets ricochet around him. Children are among those shot in the street.

Omar - activist
Omar is trying to spread word of atrocities inside Syria

As was Hala's father. She saw him pass away before her eyes in the video.

"'It makes me upset and angry because my father was a brave and honest man who knew nothing about politics yet he was shot three times," she said.

In Turkey, I gained insight into what was happening on the other side when I met a young army defector.

Wasim is only 21 and he was a sniper in a unit sent to Izra in April when Hala's father was killed.

'Unarmed civilians'

Chain smoking nervously, Wasim showed me his military identification card and shared his story.

"Our officers told us the protest was a foreign conspiracy and so we wanted to clean out Deraa and Izra and get rid of the terrorists," said Wasim of his initial loyalty.

But, he said, when they arrived they realised the protestors were unarmed civilians, many of them women and children.

"Then the officers told us - there are no rebels or conspirators, only the people," he said. "They told us to shoot the people but we did not want to."

Wasim said he and some of the others aimed in the air or at the walls around them in order to spare lives.

"If you did not shoot, they would have killed you," he said of the army's Fourth Division, positioned directly behind them and led by the brother of President al-Assad and loyal to the regime.

Wasim and Jane Corbin
Wasim defected after he was told to shoot innocent civilians

Omar, the activist from Deraa, showed me a video of eight soldiers who had been shot in the back for refusing to shoot unarmed protestors.

Local townspeople had helped them to hide or escape. Wasim also managed to escape from his sniper unit and flee across the border.

In a safe house in a bordering nation, I met one of the highest ranking defectors from the army - Colonel Riad al-Asaad, a Sunni like most people in Syria.

But 90% of the Syrian army's officers are Alawite, from the same minority sect as the president's family. They are die hard Assad loyalists.

The colonel and other officers have defected to form the Free Syria Army. Unlike Egypt and Tunisia, he is not confident that Syria's regime will fall without bloodshed.

"We are counting of defections and there are large numbers occurring every day," he said during our meeting. "But this regime cannot be taken out except by force and if they do not agree to go peacefully we will have to take them out by force."

'Handsome prince'

In Deraa, many children joined the protestors.

Nawal al Shari is a tragic figure swathed in black who showed me a photo of her son and told me that 15-year-old Thamer was "like a handsome prince" in her eyes.

He was on a march to bring food to the besieged citizens of Deraa when he disappeared.

Five weeks later his body was returned by the security forces - tortured and mutilated beyond recognition.

''Don't these people have children?" she asked. "Aren't they human like us?"

Nawal said her family's sacrifice of their beloved son will be worth it in the end.

"The people of Deraa have suffered but God will grant them victory," she said. "This all began in Deraa and the regime's end will come in Deraa."

__________________________

 

GO HERE TO READ THIS REPORT ONLINE

Policy Briefing

Middle East Briefing N°31

Damascus/Brussels, 24 November 2011

 

 

Uncharted Waters:

 

Thinking Through Syria’s Dynamics

 

 

I. OVERVIEW

 

The Syrian crisis may or may not have entered its final phase, but it undoubtedly has entered its most dangerous one to date. The current stage is defined by an explosive mix of heightened strategic stakes tying into a regional and wider international competition on the one hand and emotionally charged attitudes, communal polarisation and political wishful thinking on the other. As dynamics in both Syria and the broader international arena turn squarely against the regime, reactions are ranging from hysterical defiance on the part of its supporters, optimism among protesters that a bloody stalemate finally might end and fears of sectarian retribution or even civil war shared by many, through to triumphalism among those who view the crisis as an historic opportunity to decisively tilt the regional balance of power.


Yet, almost entirely missing is a sober assessment of the challenges provoked by these shifts and the very real risk that they could derail or even foreclose the possibility of a successful transition. In particular, five issues likely to shape events have been absent from the public debate:

the fate of the Alawite community;

the connection between Syria and Lebanon;

the nature and implications of heightened international involvement;

thelong-termimpactoftheprotestmovement’sgrowing militarisation; and

the legacy of creeping social, economic and institutional decay.


Many in Syria and abroad are now banking on the regime’s imminent collapse and wagering that all then will be for the better. That is a luxury and an optimism they cannot afford. Instead, it is high time to squarely confront and address the difficulties before it is too late. In the “draft political program” it released on 20 November, the Syrian National Council ‒ an opposition umbrella group – pre- sented the image of an entirely peaceful movement endur- ing savage repression. The regime and its allies regularly describe the crisis solely as the local manifestation of a vicious regional and international struggle. The two black-and-white narratives are in every way contradictory and mutually exclusive. Both miss a central point: that success- ful management of this increasingly internationalised cri- sis depends on a clear-eyed understanding of the grey zone that lies between.

This briefing analyses and in its Conclusion presents recommendations for handling the pivotal issues.

 

II. A DEEPENING CRISIS

 

The situation faced by the regime hardly could be more dire. It is more isolated than ever: the Arab League has forged a remarkable consensus against it; support from Arab public opinion has reached an all-time low; the Syr- ian National Council rapidly is gaining recognition inter- nationally; and a UN General Assembly resolution regis- tering disapproval garnered 122 votes on 22 November. At home, the so-called Free Syrian Army, which purport- edly is drawing more and more military defectors to its side, has been claiming increasingly effective attacks against the security services.


From the outset, the regime strove to deny the existence of a deep-seated popular protest movement, choosing in- stead to reduce the crisis to actions of foreign-backed armed gangs. Paradoxically, now that it faces an emerging insurgency coupled with a broad international coalition bent on its demise, it appears wholly unprepared to cope with the very enemy it initially fantasised and which its short-sighted behaviour largely helped bring to life.


For over eight months, the regime was so obsessed with the desire to contain, defame and quash peaceful demon- strations that it let just about everything else go to waste. It failed to develop any discernible economic strategy to en- able it to carry out a sustained struggle; instead, it steadily drew down its reserves, alienated the business establish- ment and exposed ordinary citizens to worsening hardships. Remarkably, it did nothing to prepare itself for highly predictable sanctions on oil and gas. Electricity cuts have become endemic, even in central Damascus; there are short- ages of heating oil and cooking gas; and the price of basic foodstuffs is rising dangerously. The regime invested the bulk of its efforts toward shoring up the Syrian pound, but as the political crisis deepens, those too sooner or later will prove inadequate, precipitating a much deeper economic crisis.

 

Politically, the regime made only half-hearted and belated attempts to consolidate its support base. Beyond evoking a nebulous “model democracy” in-the-making, announc- ing legislative initiatives that were never implemented and undertaking a drawn-out constitutional revision pro- cess seemingly designed above all to gain time, President Bashar Assad signally failed to suggest a credible way for- ward. Instead, the official narrative became locked into the mantra that only a handful of decisive military opera- tions against residual terrorist pockets stood between the crisis and its resolution, all the while denying that peace- ful demonstrations were being repressed. This focus on a “security solution” dissipated much of the popular backing the regime initially enjoyed, both at home and throughout the region. Lastly, and perhaps most surprisingly for a re- gime renowned for its shrewd diplomacy, it created the conditions for its unprecedented international isolation.


Assad has registered only two achievements, albeit highly ambivalent ones. First, the regime in effect took the Ala- wite minority hostage, linking its fate to its own. It did so deliberately and cynically, not least in order to ensure the loyalty of the security services which, far from being a privileged, praetorian elite corps, are predominantly com- posed of underpaid and overworked Alawites hailing from villages the regime has left in a state of abject underdevel- opment. As unrest began, the regime staged sectarian in- cidents in confessionally-mixed areas as a means of bring- ing to the surface deeply-ingrained feelings of insecurity among Alawites who, in centuries past, had been socially marginalised, economically exploited and targets of reli- gious discrimination. To stoke fear, authorities distributed weapons and bags of sand – designed to erect fortifications ‒ to Alawites living in rural areas long before any objec- tive threat existed; security services and official media spread blood-curdling, often exaggerated and sometimes wholly imaginary stories of the protesters’ alleged sec- tarian barbarism.


With time, the Alawites’ conspicuous role in putting down protests, disseminating propaganda and staging pro-regime demonstrations transformed anti-Alawite feelings ‒ ini- tially latent and largely repressed ‒ into a perilous reality. The regime’s behaviour conformed to the worst anti-Alawite stereotypes. It revived age-old prejudices about the com- munity’s “savagery”. It exacerbated historic grievances regarding ownership of land, which in some parts of the country had been transferred from Sunni feudal elites to Alawite serfs during the agrarian reform that began in the 1950s. It intensified resentment over the inequitable use of state institutions, which have been a key source of em- ployment for Alawites and, over time, have become an intrument with which to plunder the public while serving the ruling family’s interests.


As repression escalated in recent months, many Syrians have shifted from blaming elements of the regime, to blaming the regime as a whole and, finally, to blaming the Alawite community itself. As a result, many Alawites are now in a state of panic, leading them to embrace a regime for which most, at the start of the crisis, evinced little sympathy. Sharing analogous fears born of their minority status, large swathes of the Christian community appear to be following a similar path.


The regime’s second ambiguous success was in compart- mentalising its territory. Denied both mobility and control of any symbolically decisive space (notably in the capital, Damascus, and the biggest city, Aleppo), the protest move- ment failed to reach the critical mass necessary to estab- lish, once and for all, that Assad has lost his legitimacy. Instead, demonstrators doggedly resisted escalating vio- lence on the part of the security services and their civilian proxies in an ever-growing number of hotspots segregated from one another by numerous checkpoints. Within each of these separate locations, security forces turned their firepower against uncomfortably large gatherings, stalked local leadership figures, seized tools used to communicate with the outside world and resorted to collective punish- ment ‒ in some instances carrying out such gruesome scare tactics as returning victims’ desecrated bodies to their families.


However, the regime has been able to ensure such territo- rial control largely because the protest movement remained essentially peaceful. This allowed it to rely on numerous but lightly armed security forces and proxies, drawing on military combat troops solely for secondary missions (such as manning checkpoints) or in response to the relatively rare instances when it met organised armed resistance. This was for a reason. Over the years, the regime built up the instruments of a police state while distrusting the army ‒ large but poorly trained, ill-equipped and lacking esprit de corps. To minimise the risk of a military coup, Assad made sure the army stayed both weak and divided. The net result is that ‒ save for a few praetorian units ‒ it can- not be depended upon as an instrument of repression.


There are signs the regime’s formula no longer is work- ing. Its failure to shore up its legitimacy coupled with the gap between its narrative (in which the state fights to re- store law and order in the face of terrorist attacks) and everyday reality (in which security forces make no distinc- tion between peaceful protesters and armed groups) has produced a growing number of military defectors. Civil- ians, hungry for protection and eager for revenge, are ever more willing to welcome, support and shelter them, mak- ing it virtually impossible for security services to root them out. In short, their brutality has provoked an incipient armed reaction the security services and proxy forces are not in a position to address. Increasingly exposed, they need the help of combat troops who have not been prepared for the task, feel gradually more alienated from the regime’s ap- paratus of repression and increasingly are drawn toward the protesters. The immediate consequence is that security forces progressively are losing ground in various parts of the country where they can do little more than engage in hit-and-run operations.


By the time its lengthening list of foes was able to begin to move in unison, the regime had squandered virtually every chance to consolidate its domestic front, brought the economy to near breaking point, pushed its own military to defect in small but ever-increasing numbers and lost almost all sympathy from the broader Arab street, whose support historically had been a key source of legitimacy.

 

 

III. CLOUDS ON THE HORIZON

 

In several respects, Syria’s society is far better prepared for change than at the outset of the uprising. The regime’s divide-and-rule tactics have kept most Alawites, many Christians, as well as some Druze and Sunnis on its side, but simultaneously given rise to an unprecedented sense of awareness, solidarity and responsibility among large segments of the population. After decades of suppression, civil society has emerged as a surprisingly enterprising and energised actor, providing support to those targeted by the regime and often bridging communal and geograph- ic divides. Over time, social divisions also gradually have receded. Members of the business community have extend- ed material assistance to protesters, and some within the middle classes belatedly have thrown in their lot with what initially had been a disproportionately working-class, pro- letarian uprising.


A long-apathetic youth has become politicised and is now actively engaged in the struggle, seeking to push back against some of the more thuggish and sectarian trends among protesters. The latter, through their coordination efforts, have produced incipient, discreet yet increasingly effective local leadership. Through the string of defec- tions, the army itself may be generating the skeleton of a future, more cohesive apparatus.

Finally, a relatively positive relationship has developed between Syrians living in the country and the diaspora. Overseas Syrians have been mobilised, providing consid- erable logistical support to the protest movement; they have given rise to an opposition in exile that has acquired real, if fragile credibility both on the ground and interna- tionally. They also possess significant resources that could prove crucial to a political transition.


But that is only the brightest part of a canvas of shadows. Prospects for a successful transition are clouded by five critical issues that largely have been left unaddressed.

 


A. THE ALAWITE QUESTION

Rather than abruptly fall, the regime could well endure for a considerable time even as it continues to both erode and mutate, spawning die-hard, nihilist militias. In several recent interviews, Assad essentially pledged to go down fighting. He will not do so alone. Military defections aside, and notwithstanding significant discontent within the se- curity services and the power structure itself, the regime retains considerable manpower. That support base is being radicalised even as it narrows. It is being reorganised around a hard-core composed of ruling family members and loy- alists whose determination to fight has only heightened as their involvement in months of gruesome repression has grown, diminishing chances of a palace coup. The most extreme elements among the regime’s civilian proxies ‒ disparagingly referred to as shabbiha – reportedly have been creating their own battalions, whose fanaticism in- stils fear in less committed troops.1

 

The word shabbiha is a reference to an essentially unrelated phenomenon, namely criminal gangs with ties to the ruling fami- ly that terrorised people on the Syrian coast and drove around in a kind of Mercedes dubbed shabah (ghost). They were root- ed out by the regime in the 1980s, but the expression stuck, in a very liberal acceptation, to describe a wide array of behaviours seen either as supportive of the regime or as an expression of its deeper-self.

 

More generally, many regime supporters are terrified about their future and thus liable to resist till the bitter end. A majority of Alawite officials, security officers and ordi- nary citizens, along with segments of the Christian com- munity and some secularists, have become convinced that their fate is either to kill or be killed.

 

Alawites at least are not entirely mistaken. Although the regime has been infinitely more sectarian than the protest movement, and although it clearly bears responsibility for exacerbating and exploiting sectarian feelings, reality gradually has been catching up with fiction. There is eve- ry reason to fear that, regardless of how the situation un- folds, Alawite villages whose residents have been most actively involved in repressing demonstrators – such as Rabi’a on the outskirts of Hama and Qabu in the hills over- looking Homs – could well witness large-scale retribution.


Many other Alawite villages have sought to keep their distance from the confrontation, either because they are located far from confessional fault lines or because they have retained a rural identity largely independent from the regime. But even they will not be immune from strife, for these are the home villages of the urbanised Alawites who are being radicalised by events and feel almost en- tirely beholden to Assad – virtually incapable of imagin- ing a future without him. Were the regime to lose control of the capital, these diehard loyalists could well retreat to their villages in order to defend the wives, children and elderly whom they long ago dispatched to the countryside for protection. Should they choose to make a last stand in defence of their strongholds, any distinction between re- gime stalwarts and ordinary Alawites could well be erased. As witnessed in Libya, attempts to eradicate the last pock- ets of loyalists could trigger civilian massacres.


Some entertain the hope that Assad will be killed and that this would prompt the rapid collapse of what remains of the power structure, paving the way for a smooth transition. There is little chance of such a scenario and high proba- bility that his death would produce the opposite effect. By now, given the extent to which Alawites have come to equate their fate with his, they likely would see in it a har- binger of their own.

 

 

B. THE QUESTION OF LEBANON

 

The connection between what happens in Syria and Leba- non seldom has been so stark and so perilous. Over the past several months, the Lebanese political scene has been eerily quiet even as it remained deeply polarised. Hizbol- lah, the Shiite resistance movement, has offered the Assad regime all-out political support. Al-Manar, its television station, readily embraced the official narrative of a for- eign-sponsored, Sunni-Islamist insurgency; its secretary general, Hassan Nasrallah, in effect labelled any Syrian who expressed dissatisfaction with Assad’s meagre pack- age of reforms an Israel supporter and enemy. For Hizbol- lah, the core issue remains the regional balance of power and the struggle against Israel; for its Shiite rank-and-file, sectarian anxiety looms large: should Sunnis dominate a new Syrian regime, they fear being caught between it and Lebanon’s own Sunni community.


Paradoxically, many Lebanese Sunnis share their Shiite counterparts’ sectarian interpretation, viewing their co- religionists eventual victory in Damascus as both historical revenge and an opportunity to shift the local and regional balance of power at Hizbollah’s expense. Still, despite oc- casional pro- and anti-regime demonstrations, as well as the periodic arrest or disappearance of Syrian dissident activists, the country appeared suspended in time, pending clarification of where the crisis next door was heading.


This has begun to change. The increasingly evident weak- ness of the Syrian regime has altered domestic calculations. Even as it struggled to find home-grown spokespersons willing to defend it on Arabic satellite television channels, the regime could count on an army of Lebanese volunteers to fill the vacuum. Echoing Assad’s apocalyptic vow to destabilise the entire region rather than step down, Hiz- bollah and its Lebanese partners are now issuing the most alarmist pronouncements on the Syrian president’s behalf. Solidarity with an embattled ally is not their sole motiva- tion. They also are driven by the strongly-held conviction that events in Syria are part and parcel of a broader inter- national conspiracy to deal a decisive blow against what they consider the axis of resistance to Israeli and U.S. dom- ination of the Middle East.


They have grounds to be worried. International pressure for the regime’s demise is not simply a matter of humani- tarian concern at mounting loss of life. In more than one country ‒ notably the U.S., Israel and Saudi Arabia – top- pling Assad is seen as a critical step toward crippling Hizbollah and isolating Iran. Escalating pressure on Teh- ran – manifested by growing talk of a possible Israeli strike against its nuclear facilities – coupled with intensifying efforts to ensure Beirut continues to fund the Special Tri- bunal for Lebanon (which has accused Hizbollah of in- volvement in the assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri), further fuels belief that popular protests in Syria have morphed into an existential tug-of- war over the region’s fate.


Nor has Hizbollah helped its case. By offering blind sup- port to the Syrian regime while championing the largely Shiite uprising in Bahrain, it has come across as deeply sectarian and squandered much of the sympathy it once enjoyed among Arab public opinion. And, by placing the practical exigencies of resistance over its purported ethi- cal foundations, it has forfeited its moral standing.


This presents significant threats both to Syria and Leba- non. It could push Hizbollah to step up its assistance to its Syrian ally in concrete ways. Now that failure of the re- cent Arab League initiative appears to have closed the door on a negotiated solution, and now that Turkey has hinted it could establish a buffer zone on Syrian soil and implic- itly recognised the legitimacy of armed struggle against the regime, Hizbollah could conclude that the conflict’s patently international character justifies its own direct in- volvement on the ground. This would mark a sea change; periodic accusations to the contrary notwithstanding, to date no hard evidence has surfaced of the Shiite move- ment’s military role in suppressing the uprising.


Likewise, should the situation reach the point where As- sad’s ouster appears imminent, Hizbollah potentially could be drawn to launch attacks against Israel in an attempt to radically alter the focus of attention. At this point, there is little indication the movement will take this course, which would present major risks for the Shiite movement. Its motivations would be transparent, and it would subject itself to massive Israeli retaliation at a time when it no longer could safely bank on physical protection and military resupply from Syria. By the same token, Iran might prefer to keep Hizbollah’s powder dry in anticipation of – and in order to deter ‒ a possible Israeli strike. Still, the more Hizbollah and Tehran perceive the Syrian crisis as an existential struggle designed to deal them a decisive blow, the greater the risk that they would choose to go for broke. At a minimum, it is a prospect not to be entirely discounted.


Nor would Lebanon itself necessarily be unscathed. If and when the Syrian regime collapses, anything Hizbollah views as an effort to undermine its position could reignite a bloody domestic conflict. For now, Lebanon’s embold- ened Sunnis have shown no appetite for military confron- tation with their nemesis. Rather than arming themselves, they are investing their hopes in the Syrian protest move- ment and opposition to whom they reportedly have been extending logistical and material assistance. The Shiite movement undoubtedly would be weakened by the loss of its ally, but nonetheless would remain by far the most pow- erful Lebanese actor, with strong popular support among Shiites and Christians and an unmatched military arsenal.


For Hizbollah’s opponents to use this opportunity to press their advantage would be to play with fire. All would likely lose – the Lebanese people, of course, but also Syria’s own transition, which inevitably would be disrupted by a vio- lent crisis at its border. In short, given the current balance of power and the Sunnis’ realistic reluctance to turn to a military option, the odds of this scenario remain low. But circumstances and calculations could change. The Syrian crisis might serve as a turning point, leading outside actors to step up their efforts on behalf of their Lebanese Sunni allies.

 

C. THE IMPACT OF INTERNATIONALISATION

 

For protesters relentlessly subjected to harsh repression, the shift toward greater international involvement almost certainly comes as welcome news. Support within Syria for such intervention has grown, a development all the more remarkable given its people’s legendary suspicion of out- side meddling. It also is a development that speaks volumes ‒ not about the breadth of the purported foreign conspiracy, as the regime and its allies would have it, but rather about the depth of the people’s despair. Yet, a short-term remedy for their suffering could spell long-term trouble and com- plicate a political transition. Among Arab nations that have experienced popular uprisings, Syria arguably is the most vulnerable to disruptive foreign involvement, a reflection of its long conflict with Israel; intense security ties to Iran and Hizbollah; frail institutions; complex ethnic and con- fessional makeup; and deep interconnection with Arab neigh- bours, Turkey and the Gulf states, where many of its citi- zens have found work and been exposed to militant forms of Islamism that are unlikely to sit well with their nation’s pluralistic society.

It is not difficult to imagine where all this could be head- ed in the context of a transition. The U.S. and Israel likely would seek to shape Syria’s foreign policy. Turkey would strive to contain Kurdish autonomist aspirations and could choose to promote the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood. Saudi Arabia might back Salafi-inspired currents. Iran, but also Iraq, would want to thwart emergence of a Sunni-dominated polity and could be tempted to play the Alawite card; Teh- ran in particular might sponsor remnants of the former security services. The more Syria is exposed to external interference before the transition takes place, the more likely that it will become an arena for foreign intrusion after it has occurred. In short, the challenge is less to draw in outside actors than to keep them at bay.

At this point, the trend toward internationalisation may well be impossible to stop. The regime wasted months during which the outside world essentially remained pas- sive; rather than acknowledge, let alone address its domes- tic crisis, it chose instead to shift the focus to an imaginary international conspiracy. Today, it faces both a deepening internal crisis and escalating foreign intervention. But for the international community to up the level of such inter- vention, and in particular for it to resort to military means of any kind, would provide the regime’s allies with the necessary justification to step up their own involvement. The outcome could well be a catastrophic escalation for which none of the regime’s foes appears prepared and that would both distract from the protest movement’s goals and diminish its chances of success.

 

 

D. THEOPPOSITION’SMILITARISATION

The security services and their proxies are subjected to ever-increasing attacks, in particular targeting their means of transportation. As a result, regime forces run the risk of progressively losing their mobility as well as control over portions of the country, thus forcing them to retreat. By now, there no longer is a permanent loyalist military pres- ence in parts of Idlib, Hama and Homs governorates, a situation that enables the armed opposition to further re- group and organise. The governorates of Dayr Zor and Deraa appear on the verge of following a similar path. As defections mount and the army is under ever greater stress, there is reason to doubt that the regime can muster suffi- cient military resources to reverse the trend. Talk about creating safe-havens on the Turkish and Jordanian borders could soon be moot; in many ways, Syrians appear on their way to doing that on their own.

But what is emerging in those areas free of regime con- trol? For now, both the Syrian opposition and much of the mainstream international media paint a reassuring picture: an army of devoted patriots backed by civilians in need of self-defence gradually is asserting itself wherever regime forces retreat. There is truth to the narrative. But there also is a more disquieting underside, as evidence mounts of spreading chaos, sectarian retribution and criminal activ- ity, notably in central Syria. In the ensuing vacuum, fun- damentalist fighters and proxies reporting directly to for- eign parties may join the fray. In self-serving fashion, the regime long has claimed that such forms of violence were the crux of the matter, when in reality they were at most a sideshow. That does not mean one ought to dismiss the possibility that they could assume a more central role as the conflict pivots from one pitting a ruthless police state against a predominantly peaceful movement to a far more fragmented confrontation in which all sides wield arms.

The Free Syrian Army itself is more a wild card than a known entity. Does it serve as an umbrella for essentially self-directed armed groups that could morph into disor- derly militias? Or is it integrating defectors into a hierar- chical, disciplined structure? In the latter case, will its leadership agree to political oversight, for instance by the National Council, or will it endeavour to steer its own course and act autonomously in the aftermath of the re- gime’s fall? Will it stand for national unity or fall prey to sectarian polarisation? Can it refrain from mimicking the murderous behaviour of the regime against which it is fighting but from which it springs? The Free Army’s post- ing of forced confessions by captured security officers – who, in at least one instance, showed obvious signs of tor- ture – stands as a first, cautionary tale.

 

 

 

E. THE STATE’S DECAY

The regime endlessly claims to represent and defend the “state”, defined as the embodiment of national unity, guar- antor of law and order and ultimate source of legitimacy. In reality, it has done nothing of the sort. Instead, it has manipulated social fault lines and used divisive tactics to frighten Syrians into accepting its rule as a lesser evil. It has endangered the Alawite community for the sake of holding on to its power; sought to play minorities off against the Sunni Arab majority; unleashed its security forces against unarmed protesters and covered up for their sectarian behaviour; and hired criminals to do its dirty work, while turning a blind eye to the criminalisation of its own regular forces – elements of which have resorted to theft, kidnapping and weapons smuggling. High-level corruption, malfeasance and incompetence occur with impunity whenever the ruling family’s interests are in- volved. All in all, the regime has encouraged ‒ if not re- warded ‒ the most destructive forms of social behaviour.

The impact of this deliberate corrosion of state and social institutions – which were weak to begin with ‒ could prove devastating. By now deeply entrenched, mutual mistrust and resentment have come to define relations between mem- bers of opposing camps. In schools and universities, ten- sions frequently reach boiling point, provoking clashes, at times encouraged by the regime itself. Communal in- stincts and, in certain instances, genuine threats, are in- ducing citizens to resettle in like-minded areas, producing a worrying pattern of sectarian segregation. In a country long known for its safety, some areas are witnessing ram- pant criminality. The regime’s extensive use of civilian proxies almost certainly will further fuel this development.

A major economic crisis also is looming, with ruinous consequences for the future. The regime almost certainly will empty state coffers in order to hold on to power as long as possible. Meanwhile, international sanctions are bringing business to a virtual standstill, generating grow- ing unemployment. As the price of imports rises and local production is disrupted, Syrians find it harder to obtain commodities, including medicine and milk powder. As businessmen and citizens scramble to protect their assets, banks are being weakened. Sanctions, however narrowly focused, inexorably contribute to a vast economic down- turn. Even assuming a quick resolution of the political crisis, a socio-economic one almost certainly will take centre stage.


The Syrian National Council’s draft political program ap- pears premised on the notion that, when the regime ulti- mately falls, the opposition will inherit a functioning state capable of holding the country together while a democrat- ic political process unfolds. That view is far too rosy. Syr- ians might well display remarkable patience and restraint during the trying transitional period, but the challenges they will face likely will be far more daunting than those encountered by Tunisians, Egyptians and Libyans before them. Wishful thinking is a poor substitute for forward thinking.

 

 

 

IV. CONCLUSION

 

That the current crisis and future transition present enor- mous risks is not a reason to defend a regime that offers no solution and whose sole strategy appears to be to cre- ate greater hazards still. Optimally, this would be the time for third-party mediation leading to a negotiated transi- tion. Yet, there is little sign of that either. The recent Arab League initiative rightly insisted that the regime end its attacks against peaceful protesters. But popular demonstra- tions are precisely what the regime fears most, making such an undertaking virtually unthinkable. The League has demanded – and the regime in principle accepted – the dispatch of foreign observers. But the authorities have far more to hide than to put on display; they will acquiesce only to the extent outsiders corroborate the existence of armed groups and only insofar as they are prevented from documenting security forces’ crimes. The regime also has pledged to hold municipal elections and reform the consti- tution, but neither step comes close to matching the depth of the crisis.

Even rhetorically, the regime is not suggesting willing- ness to compromise. Al-Dunia, its semi-official television station, is more belligerent than ever. In his latest inter- view, Assad flatly denied that civilians had been shot by the security services; by his count, the sum total of 619 victims comprised protesters accidentally killed in cross- fire with armed gangs; individuals targeted by sectarian attacks; and loyalists. Meanwhile, conservative estimates put the number of fatalities at 3,500 (excluding members of the security services and army), most as a result of re- gime violence.


The choice offered by the regime appears clear-cut: preser- vation of Assad’s rule or collective destruction. In this ni- hilistic view, citizens are admonished to rally around the old socio-political pact, while the international communi- ty is expected to retreat out of fear of the chaos that might otherwise ensue. As its supporters abroad – and notably Hizbollah – see it, the regional struggle must trump all else; protesters are either witting or unwitting foreign agents who have brought the current devastation upon themselves. Such narratives almost by definition rule out the possibil- ity of a workable compromise.

Under the circumstances, the international community should neither surrender to the regime’s cynical black- mail nor respond to Damascus’s brinksmanship with in- judiciousness or imprudence of its own. Rather than head straight toward direct confrontation, it ought to carefully weigh its options.


Negotiations. However unlikely they are to succeed, me- diation efforts ought to be encouraged in principle, and none should be automatically dismissed. The focus should remain for now on the Arab League initiative, the most promising proposal currently on the table. For internation- al actors or the opposition to rule out dialogue or negotia- tions with the regime would be to validate its argument that nothing short of its immediate fall will be deemed satisfactory. At the same time, Damascus should not be given an opportunity to gain time, nor should it be offered concessions in the absence of tangible signs that it is act- ing in good faith. Should the regime present a genuine, detailed proposal backed by immediate, concrete steps on the ground – again, an implausible scenario – mediated talks with the opposition should swiftly begin.


Military action. Threat of military action in any form ‒ including imposition of a “no-fly-zone” or establishment of foreign-backed buffer zones in Syrian territory ‒ is naive, counterproductive and irresponsible. It would not deter a regime that, more than ever, appears indifferent to pressure; it would provide cover for its allies to intensify their own support; and it would not meaningfully alter the situa- tion on the ground insofar as defectors already enjoy great- er freedom of manoeuvre in central and northern Syria.


Economic sanctions. There is little doubt that the sanc- tions are having a significant economic impact, but it re- mains unclear whether they are having a political one – and whether whatever political benefits might accrue outweigh the inevitable socio-economic costs. For now, no further sanctions should be considered without first assessing both the immediate implications of those already in place and the longer-term burden they would impose on Syria’s economic and social recovery. At the same time, Syria’s opposition and the international community should begin planning on how to rebuild the economy in the context of a transition.


Regional implications. The international community ought to realise the dangers of overreach – and in particular the dangers posed by cornering Hizbollah and heightening pressure on Iran (notably by raising the spectre of a mili- tary attack against its nuclear facilities) at a time when both fear the loss of a critical ally. The greatest risk argu- ably lies in Lebanon, where an effort ought to be made by all sides to defuse confessional tensions and regional actors should avoid meddling. Diplomacy in Lebanon tradition- ally kicks in only after simmering hostilities break into the open. Such a reactive approach would be too costly now given the stakes; instead, an urgent effort is needed to reassure rival parties and thus seek to insulate Lebanon from its neighbour’s conflict to the extent possible.


UN resolution. There is every indication that the regime remains sensitive to its growing isolation. Its acceptance (however perfunctory) of the Arab League initiative came about only as a result of Russian and Chinese pressure and fear it would lose their support. But its back-peddling on the Arab League initiative just days later may have helped erode Russian and Chinese support: both abstained on the UN General Assembly Resolution. That resolution, which condemned the violence, obtained wide support, garnering 122 votes in favour, thirteen against and 41 abstentions; notably, six Arab countries co-sponsored the resolution, and none voted against it. Passage of a Security Council resolution demanding a cessation of violence and the im- mediate deployment of monitors on the ground would be an important next step, albeit a difficult one.


Accountability. The international community ought to lay down clear markers to the regime but also to its opponents (notably if and when they come to power) that all who en- gage in human rights violations, and notably war crimes and crimes against humanity will be held accountable, includ- ing, if necessary, before the International Criminal Court.

 

Protection. Ironically, and however difficult it may be to admit, the Alawite community ultimately might need the kind of protection the protest movement long has strived to obtain for itself. As seen, risks of massacres in the early stages of a transition are very real; should they occur, chances of success could be fatally imperilled. It is not too soon for the opposition to address these fears head on; it might consider possible mechanisms – for example co- ordinating the swift dispatch, once the regime falls, of ob- servers from local and perhaps international human rights organisations – to minimise this risk.


Fate of regime officials. Assuming the regime is over- thrown, every effort should be made by the Syrian oppo- sition and international community to treat its leadership with the fairness it denied its own people – they should be detained, protected and tried. A repeat of Gaddafi’s ma- cabre killing would only further inflame sectarian passions in a country where they represent the greatest threat to any potential transition.

 

Damascus/Brussels, 24 November 2011