The Syria Conflict and the Geopolitics of the Region

The Syria Conflict and the Geopolitics of the Region

Keys State of Play and Outlook of the Syrian Crisis Keys The Syria Conflict and the Geopolitics of the Region Jane Kinninmont* ness and ability of the US to offer the kind of secu- Senior Research Fellow and Deputy Head rity they would like. Direct military intervention by MENA Programme Western countries appeared less likely than ever, The Royal Institute of International Affairs at given the UK parliament’s refusal to authorise British Chatham House, London participation in airstrikes that were briefly mooted by the US as punishment for the use of chemical weap- ons in Syria, and the US’s subsequent decision to The Syrian civil war had forced 2.7 million Syrians to avoid airstrikes in favour of a UN-supervised disman- State of Play and Outlook of the Syrian Crisis State of Play register as refugees outside the country between tling of the Syrian government’s chemical weapons 2011 and May 2014. This is equivalent to more than stocks. The US and Europe have subsequently fo- half the number of Palestinians registered as refu- cused their efforts more on diplomacy and humani- gees as a result of the 66-year Israeli-Palestinian tarian assistance, but UN-brokered talks have made conflict. Moreover, the situation has continued to scant progress, and the Syrian government has es- worsen: the UN High Commissioner on Refugees calated its violence against opposition-held areas. estimated the number of registered Syrian refugees The crisis has also cast a shadow over the wider 48 would rise by more than one third, to 4.1 million, by Arab uprisings, as the preeminent example of how the end of the year, on top of an estimated 4.5 mil- an uprising initially concerned with social justice and lion displaced people inside the country. Altogether, an end to police brutality has been derailed by ethnic this means a third of Syria’s population is displaced. and sectarian identity politics. Most of the refugees remain within neighbouring countries, with only a few tens of thousands given homes in the European countries that have support- The International Geopolitics of the Syrian ed the Syrian opposition. The pre-existing political, Crisis: Troubles among Allies social and economic pressures troubling Syria’s neighbours, especially Iraq and Lebanon, are being The second half of 2013 saw tensions grow among exacerbated by the influx of Syrian refugees from dif- the backers of the opposition, as the opposition ferent political sides and sectarian groupings. forces made losses on the ground, and as it became As it has become more internationalised, the conflict evident that no Western powers had the appetite for has become bloodier and harder to resolve. What direct military intervention, contrary to the expecta- started as a local revolt against corruption and bru- tions of the Gulf States and Turkey. Initially, Western tality has increasingly become a theatre for regional states were the first governments to support the 2014 and international power struggles, especially a rivalry Syrian opposition when the uprising began in 2011, that has been described as a ‘cold war’ between Iran and were joined by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey and Saudi Arabia. in the latter half of the year. Meanwhile Syria’s tradi- The failure of international efforts to resolve the Sy- tional allies, Iran and Russia, have remained strong rian crisis, along with ongoing failures to stabilise supporters of the regime throughout the crisis. Iraq or achieve Israeli-Palestinian peace, has led the However, while Saudi Arabia sees the Syria conflict Mediterranean Yearbook West’s allies in the region to question the willing- partly through the prism of its regional rivalry with Med. Med. * IE This article was finalised in April 2014 (Editor’s note). What started as a local revolt in international negotiations, such as the talks that against corruption and brutality has took place in Geneva in 2014, brokered by the UN Keys envoy, Lakhdar Brahimi. These were boycotted by increasingly become a theatre for several (mainly Islamist) opposition groups and ex- regional and international power cluded all armed groups other than the Free Syrian struggles, especially a rivalry that Army (FSA); these more Islamist armed groups are has been described as a ‘cold war’ unpalatable to the West but wield significant power in practice. At the talks, which made little progress, between Iran and Saudi Arabia the SNC delegation was confronted with represent- atives of a government that may have lost control of Iran, the US has explicitly sought a rapprochement huge swathes of its former territory, but which has with Iran since the election of a new Iranian Presi- managed to maintain relative cohesion among its dent, Hassan Rouhani, in June 2013. This has raised senior ranks. questions over the extent to which the regional inter- The chronic difficulty of effectively representing the ests of the US may be beginning to diverge with its opposition raises the possibility that the best objec- longstanding Gulf Arab allies, especially since the tive for the international talks could be to secure an US is no longer directly dependent on energy sup- agreement among the external players to work to plies from the Gulf (though it retains an interest in end the conflict. (While the US insisted that Brahimi and Outlook of the Syrian Crisis State of Play the stability of global energy markets). The US and withdraw an invitation to Iran to attend the talks, the Gulf countries, especially Saudi Arabia, have there are channels of communication with Iran also generally taken different attitudes to the Arab through Iranians who are not formally part of the re- uprisings, as the Gulf countries do not look kindly on gime.) To be effective, this would need to come in the US administration’s rhetoric of supporting de- parallel with an agreement or agreements among the mocracy. They were nonetheless agreed that there local players, including local ceasefires. However, at should be political transitions in Syria, Yemen and the time of writing, the Syrian regime appeared to be 49 Libya. The Gulf countries, the US and most Europe- betting on the likelihood that it could win the civil war an powers have all said that President Bashar al- militarily; its willingness to come to the negotiating Assad has lost legitimacy and should step down. table reflected a perception that it was winning on But the Gulf and Western countries take different the ground and could thus negotiate a deal that views over the level of priority they accord to this would reduce international pressure upon it, rather goal, and the means to achieve it (see below). than any sense that political compromise was nec- A rivalry between the main regional backers of the essary to avoid military defeat or stalemate. At the opposition, Saudi Arabia and Jordan on one hand talks, government representatives tended towards and Qatar and Turkey on the other, have further offering improvements in humanitarian access as complicated the picture. These countries, which of- bargaining chips, rather than political concessions. ficially support the Syrian National Coalition (SNC), As of May 2014, formal talks had given way to track- have backed different elements of the opposition in two contacts. Meanwhile, violence on the ground practice. Competition between different backers of escalated. the opposition has exacerbated the existing fissures between different opposition groups. Syria’s oppo- 2014 sition is naturally fragmented, being a loose decen- The US Decides against Military Intervention tralised movement that has sprung up in different locales to rise up against a highly centralised state, In August 2013, following reports that chemical and encompassing a wide range of ideological, po- weapons had been used in Syria, the US administra- litical and economic motivations. Given the highly tion considered launching limited airstrikes against localised and diverse nature of the opposition, inter- Syrian regime targets, on the basis that this would national efforts to unify it, often from afar, have had be a punishment for crossing what President Barack Mediterranean Yearbook little success. This fragmentation places the opposi- Obama had previously deemed to be a “red line,” Med. Med. tion at a disadvantage when it comes to participating and that it would deter similar breaches of interna- IE tional law in the future. The UK and French leaders to provide aid to the SNC and the FSA. The US Keys expressed their readiness to join the US. At the provides the FSA with limited amounts of weapons, same time, despite the nominal US stance that “As- whereas the UK government was prevented by sad must go,” US military leaders were briefing parliament from providing anything other than non- against intervening militarily to overthrow him; the lethal aid. head of the joint chiefs-of-staff, General Martin Ironically, after being roundly criticised by its allies Dempsey, said he did not believe Syrian opposition for intervening militarily in Iraq, the US is now in the forces would support US interests if they won. Pre- unusual position of being criticised by the Gulf coun- sident Obama insisted any strikes would be strictly tries for not intervening militarily in Syria. The Saudi limited, and would not be aimed at changing the leadership in particular felt betrayed, especially after regime, speaking of “a shot across the bows.” On their Foreign Minister, Prince Saud Al Faisal bin Ab- several occasions it has been reported that Israel del-Aziz Al Saud, had taken the rare step of publicly has carried out targeted airstrikes in Syria to deter endorsing the putative US airstrikes, a stance that possible arms transfers to Hezbollah, but neither was always likely to be controversial in the region. In Syria nor Israel have acknowledged this publicly, nor October, in an apparent fit of pique at the highest has Syria retaliated against Israel.

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