Tuesday, May 10, 2011

The Moral Dissonance of the Syrian Regime Apologists

The Syrian regime is claiming victory in its battle with its own people or rather, as they would say, the battle against the insurrection by armed terrorist gangs.  I hope they are wrong but I frankly don't know.  They have managed to choke off almost completely the trickle of images escaping from Syria, arrested thousand of activists and continued their brutal crackdown.  Does that mean that the protests have diminished and will stop?  I doubt it.

If the fragmentary information over the past eight weeks has left many in doubt about the course of the events,  there are certain things I have become certain of. The regime's ruling elite is brutal, incorrigible and  unreformable and willing to take the country down with it rather than surrender or share power. I always thought that some opponents of the regime engaged in hyperbole when describing the regime as a mafia. But how else can you describe a regime led by a leader who inherited the presidency and that is rife with nepotism. Brother Maher controls the most powerful division in the army, a cousin is the wealthiest monopolist businessman in Syria and various lesser Assads control a freelance militia, the so-called Shabiha, used to kill and intimidate unruly citizens.  In fact , the Corleones' behavior pales compared to the Assads.

The last eight weeks have also acutely heightened my distaste for those, who despite everything that has transpired, continue to provide cover for the president and his regime.  After several hundred unarmed protesters are killed, many more injured and thousands of activists and ordinary citizens incarcerated and tortured, there is no room for moral hand-wringing.  The regime has clearly shown  what it is capable and willing to do to its own people.  If the protests are suppressed, the apologists will say that it is because the president has many more supporters than detractors among the Syrian citizens, as if the blood of those who died was worth spilling if the protests represented only 20% of the Syrian people.

Surely the same regime apologists will think my moral arguments naive.  They will tell me that I don't understand the complex nature of the Machiavellian politics of the Middle East and how events are interconnected by nefarious conspiracies.  I am happy to be the naive one along with all the common people whose Arab Spring has debunked all the stupid assumptions and political theories. It turns out -surprise, surprise- Arabs are like everyone else and long first and foremost for dignity, respect and freedom.  Until individuals in our part of the world are given those basic rights they will continue to be expandable pawns in power games played by a few and we will never be able to build stable, progressive societies that achieve the potential of their people.

The Syrian regime might temporarily put out the fires but the embers of dissent will continue to burn.

4 comments:

Yazan said...

Akh ya Abu Kareem.

To think of the fantastic window of opportunity these bastards let slip. But for how long?

qunfuz said...

your writing on this, Abu Kareem, has been consistently intelligent and moral. more than I can say for many, unfortunately.

Off the Wall said...

I am finding where the have the decent voices gone. Thank you Sir for sticking to the moral argument. U second qunfuz.

The Syrian Brit said...

'they will continue to be expandable pawns'
I trust you mean 'expendable'?..
That notwithstanding, what you so eloquently say is, as ever, what I and many feel...
The embers of dissent will continue to burn, and will soon rage to cremate the fossils of this defunct discredited regime...
On a (somewhat) lighter note, the comparison between the Assads and the Corleones is an interesting one:
Hafez: Vito Corleone.. Ruthless, cold and calculating, feared by all...
Basel: Sonny Corleone.. The playboy heir-apparent.. equally ruthless and feared.. dies unexpectedly...
Maher: Fredo Corleone.. Impulsive, dim-witted, and knows no loyalty except to his own ambitions...
Bashar: Michael Corleone.. the reluctant heir to the most coveted position in the Family.. Nevertheless, quickly masters the game of murder and subjugation...
And for extras, Rami is Tom Hagen: soft-spoken and articulate, but underneath it all, totally without scruples...
Food for thought?..