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    You are at:Home»Robert Satloff: U.S.-Syria Relations and the Peace Process

    Robert Satloff: U.S.-Syria Relations and the Peace Process

    1
    By Sarah Akel on 12 November 2009 Uncategorized

    Prepared remarks for delivery at debate with Syrian ambassador Imad Moustapha, American University, November 11, 2009.

    We should begin by noting the empty chair that sits next to the platform. That is for the Israeli
    representative who, in any normal situation, would be here to respond to the many charges and
    accusations that have been raised about his country. It is not my place, as an American, to speak
    for Israel, especially when Israel has its own able representatives in its embassy just minutes
    from this auditorium. I asked that a representative of the State of Israel be permitted to join this
    program—after hearing the Syrian ambassador, you can understand why that is so important.
    Regrettably, that request was not accepted because, as I understand it, it is the policy of the
    Syrian government not to permit its representatives to meet, talk, discuss, and debate with
    Israeli representatives, even here in a great American university. Eighteen years after Syria’s
    foreign minister first launched direct negotiations with Israel at the Madrid peace conference,
    Syrians refuse to talk with Israelis. This is a very sad reality.

    Syrian spokesmen make three arguments, much of which we heard here today:

    1. There is nothing inherently or structurally wrong to prevent cooperation between
    America and Syria.

    2. Syria can play a useful mediation role in the region, especially with Iran and Hamas.

    3. Syrian support for “resistance” would vanish with peace, which Syria supports with all
    its heart and effort.

    The regrettable reality beneath this happy “only if” picture is what I will call “Syria’s paradox”—
    its influence, such as it is, comes from being exactly the opposite of a constructive, helpful player
    in the Middle East; indeed, its influence comes from being a spoiler, a troublemaker, a source of
    mischief. Otherwise, it is a relatively small, weak player in the wider Middle East arena.
    Let me focus on several aspects of Syria’s role as a “spoiler”:

    Middle East peace process. Syria’s main role in the peace process is to serve as host, patron,
    and supporter of the most radical opponents of peace, i.e., Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad,
    PFLP-GC, and other groups. At times, Syria says it uses its influence to moderate these
    organizations. In fact, the evidence works in the opposite direction. Just take a small issue, but
    one that is emblematic of the problem: Last summer, the United States asked Syria to use its
    influence with Hamas to allow Fatah members in Gaza to participate in the Fatah conference in
    Bethlehem that would endorse peacemaking and bolster Mahmoud Abbas. With all its vaunted
    influence with Hamas, Syria couldn’t—wouldn’t—deliver. So in the end, they provide cover
    and support for the radicals but either can’t or won’t deliver on the restraint over the radicals
    they promise us.

    Lebanon. Syria is a major benefactor, supporter, and supplier of Hizballah, an organization
    that, until September 11, was responsible for the murder of more Americans than any other
    terrorist group in the world. The arms flow from Syria to Lebanon is breathtaking. In the “good
    old days,” Syria only used to transship weapons from Iran to Syria, playing the middleman. That
    has changed. There is incontrovertible evidence from the 2006 war that Syria took its own arms
    off the shelf to send to Hizballah—such as Russian-made Kornet antitank weapons, 220 mm
    antipersonnel rockets. On top of this, Syria refuses international resolutions calling for
    international effort to demarcate its border with Lebanon so that the UN can stop this flow of
    illegal weapons. Syria has even threatened that UN-sponsored border demarcation and
    international participation in border control would be viewed as a hostile act. And then there is
    the most recent scandal regarding the Iranian shipment of more than 300 tons of weapons to
    Hizballah, intercepted at sea by the Israelis. Let us remember that the boat was headed to a
    Syrian port, where—undoubtedly—the weapons would have been unloaded and trucked into
    Lebanon. What the international community—especially the UN—needs to take special note
    of is the fact that the weapons included short-range missiles that could only be usefully
    deployed by Hizballah south of the Litani River, in direct violation of UN Security Council
    resolutions. What does all this say about Syria’s commitments and intentions? How can anyone
    trust a Syrian regime that talks peace but illegally ships arms for war and terrorism?

    Iraq. There is a very serious issue of Syrian official support and facilitation for the flow of
    jihadis across the border to kill Americans. Indeed, a U.S. court recently delivered a $415
    million civil judgment against the government of Syria for its responsibility in the murder of
    Americans. Today being Veterans Day, it is important we take time to focus on this critical
    issue. Let me quote our top commander in Iraq, Gen. Ray Odierno, September 11, 2009—that
    is just two months ago, not two years or four years ago: “During the past years, Syria was lending
    indirect support to some of the fighters, on top of financial support. Syria has not changed this
    type of interference.” He also said: “Syria continues to allow the facilitation of foreign fighters
    through Syria that come both into Iraq as well as, I believe, into Afghanistan.” Just at the
    moment when America was hoping for a three-way U.S.-Syria-Iraq understanding on this issue
    last summer, immense bombs went off in Baghdad, killing hundreds of people. The Iraqi
    government accused Syria of complicity in this and to this day demands that Syria turn over the
    dozens of ex-Saddam supporters and henchmen still in Damascus and that the UN launch a full
    international inquiry, which the United States supports.

    It is against this backdrop that we should look at U.S.-Syrian relations. The Obama
    administration has pursued its policy of engagement with Syria quite prudently, cautiously, and
    so far, in my view, quite wisely. Because of certain campaign rhetoric, Syria may have thought
    that Barack Obama himself was going to land in Damascus soon after inauguration. Well, that
    didn’t happen. Washington has been certainly willing to engage, but on issues that matter—and
    every time we focus on an issue that matters, the Syrians disappoint us, whether it is the Middle
    East peace process, Lebanese government formation, Iraqi insurgents, etc. The result is that
    under the Obama administration—yes, the Obama administration—sanctions on Syria were
    renewed, the state of emergency regarding Lebanese sovereignty was renewed, and U.S.-Syria
    engagement is nowhere close to a breakthrough.

    Interestingly, our European allies can’t even get “yes” for an answer when they decide to make a
    major concession to Syria. The European Union actually wants, for its own reasons, to sign an
    Association Agreement with Syria, and it offered Syria a huge concession this summer to do so
    when it proposed to remove the customary human rights elements of its agreement and move
    them from the body of the main text to an annex where they would be declarative but have no
    legal or regulatory impact on the agreement. In order words, precisely at a time when the
    Syrians were throwing more dissidents in jail, the EU was willing to strip the Association
    Agreement of its human rights content. And precisely at a time when you would have expected
    Syria to hurry and sign the deal that it too good to be true, the Syrians said, “Wait a minute, we
    need to think about this.” And so, that’s the situation as of today. The Syrians won’t even take
    yes for an answer.

    There are, of course, two other issues that hover above everything I’ve mentioned so far, issues
    that hang like a sword of Damocles over the Syrian regime: the UN investigation of the
    assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq al-Hariri and the IAEA investigation of
    Syria’s al-Kibar nuclear reactor destroyed by the Israeli Air Force two years ago. These things
    clearly take time—time as measured in years. But they are huge issues. Did the Syrians play a
    role in the murder of Hariri? Right now, speculation ranges from whether it was the Syrians or
    the Syrians’ local allies, Hizballah. Either way, Syria will get its fingers burned, and either way,
    Syria has already paid a huge price for the perception of involvement. On the nuclear issue, even
    the IAEA, which normally can’t say a bad word about anyone, has roundly criticized Syria for
    its lack of cooperation in investigating the site that Syria has since paved over like a parking lot.
    What is remarkable about the nuclear issue is what it says about the Syrian regime: with few
    assets at its disposal, it jumped into bed with North Korea, one of its few allies, in a vain effort
    to gain leverage in the region.

    This is my closing point. Syria has a very weak hand that it knows to play only one way. It is a
    poor state, with few resources, a weak economy. It has an authoritarian regime that smothers
    the entrepreneurship of its people, so that it can’t be like Lebanon; it has a regime that smothers
    the curiosity of its people, so that it can’t be like Turkey; it has a regime that smothers efforts to
    take advantage of its rich history and antiquities for tourism, so that it can’t be like Egypt. Syria
    has a lot in common with its neighbor Jordan, but whereas Jordan made a choice for peace,
    stability, and constructive partnership relations with the world, Syria continually chooses
    conflict, troublemaking, brinksmanship, and mischief—mischief that at times leads to the
    death of Americans. There isn’t a structural reason why Syria can’t have better relations with
    America and the world—on this point, the ambassador is correct. It is a matter of choice, a
    matter of how Syria has chosen to play its weak hand. In my view, it is played it poorly.

    But we—being Americans—will continue to try. We will most likely send a new ambassador to
    Damascus soon, which is probably a good idea. Having an American ambassador in Damascus
    will provide a more direct and clearer way to communicate to Syria than has been the case in
    recent years. But the real issue is the choices that Syria makes—as the old saying goes, you are
    either part of the problem or part of the solution. For years we have tried to get Syria to make a
    choice. Until it does, the chances that the United States will use its influence to press Israel to
    talk about peacemaking with Syria are pretty low. After all, our equities are being damaged by
    Syria’s actions—in Iraq, in Lebanon, in terms of nuclear proliferation, on human rights— and
    until those are addressed, the Syrians will need to knock on Israel’s door because they won’t find
    a welcome mat in front of ours.

    Will Israel open the door? I do not discount some tactical tango with Damascus, especially if
    the Palestinian track remains in a deep freeze. But as a strategic choice for Israel, taking the road
    to Damascus only makes sense if Israelis are convinced—without fog or obfuscation—that Syria
    has itself made a different choice about its own role in the region. Without change in Syria—
    real, verifiable, substantive change in behavior—I don’t think we should expect a breakthrough
    on that front either.

    Robert Satloff is the executive director of the Washington Institute
    for Near East Policy.

    The Washington Institute

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    Patrick
    Patrick
    15 years ago

    Robert Satloff: U.S.-Syria Relations and the Peace Process I am starting to wonder if the washington institute is a zionist organisation. Now let me try to figure this one out a bit. The USSR places missiles in Cuba so the USA is ready to go to war and that is OK. However, the USA places 200,000 soldiers on Syrias border in Iraq and constantly arms israel who is at war with Syria and occupies its lands in the Golan but Syria is expected to play ball? “W” and many other leadres including chirac and blair tried to isolate and ignore… Read more »

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