The United States and allies are preparing for a possibly imminent
series of limited military strikes against Syria, the first direct U.S.
intervention in the two-year civil war, in retaliation for President
Bashar al-Assad’s suspected use of chemical weapons against civilians.
If you found the above sentence kind of confusing, or aren’t exactly
sure why Syria is fighting a civil war, or even where Syria is located,
then this is the article for you. What’s happening in Syria is really
important, but it can also be confusing and difficult to follow even for
those of us glued to it.
Here, then, are the most basic answers to your most basic questions.
First, a disclaimer: Syria and its history are really complicated; this
is not an exhaustive or definitive account of that entire story, just
some background, written so that anyone can understand it.
Read
award-winning novelist Teju Cole’s funny and insightful parody of this
article, “9 questions about Britain you were too embarrassed to ask
1. What is Syria?
Syria is a country in the Middle East, along the eastern shore of the
Mediterranean Sea. It’s about the same size as Washington state with a
population a little over three times as large – 22 million. Syria is
very diverse, ethnically and religiously, but most Syrians are ethnic
Arab and follow the Sunni branch of Islam. Civilization in Syria goes
back thousands of years, but the country as it exists today is very
young. Its borders were drawn by European colonial powers in the 1920s.
Syria is in the middle of an extremely violent civil war. Fighting
between government forces and rebels has killed more 100,000 and created
2 million refugees, half of them children.
2. Why are people in Syria killing each other?
The killing started in April 2011, when peaceful protests inspired by
earlier revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia rose up to challenge the
dictatorship running the country. The government responded — there is no
getting around this — like monsters. First, security forces quietly
killed activists. Then they started kidnapping, raping, torturing and
killing activists and their family members, including a lot of children,
dumping their mutilated bodies by the sides of roads. Then troops began
simply opening fire on protests. Eventually, civilians started shooting
back.
Fighting escalated from there until it was a civil war. Armed
civilians organized into rebel groups. The army deployed across the
country, shelling and bombing whole neighborhoods and towns, trying to
terrorize people into submission. They’ve also allegedly used chemical
weapons, which is a big deal for reasons I’ll address below. Volunteers
from other countries joined the rebels, either because they wanted
freedom and democracy for Syria or, more likely, because they are
jihadists who hate Syria’s secular government. The rebels were gaining
ground for a while and now it looks like Assad is coming back. There is
no end in sight.
3. That’s horrible. But there are protests lots of places.
How did it all go so wrong in Syria? And, please, just give me the short
version.
That’s a complicated question, and there’s no single, definitive
answer. This is the shortest possible version — stay with me, it’s worth
it. You might say, broadly speaking, that there are two general
theories. Both start with the idea that Syria has been a powder keg
waiting to explode for decades and that it was set off, maybe
inevitably, by the 2011 protests and especially by the government’s
overly harsh crackdown.
Before we dive into the theories, you have to understand that the
Syrian government really overreacted when peaceful protests started in
mid-2011, slaughtering civilians unapologetically, which was a big part
of how things escalated as quickly as they did. Assad learned this from
his father. In 1982, Assad’s father and then-dictator Hafez al-Assad
responded to a Muslim Brotherhood-led uprising in the city of Hama by leveling entire neighborhoods.
He killed thousands of civilians, many of whom had nothing to do with
the uprising. But it worked, and it looks like the younger Assad tried
to reproduce it. His failure made the descent into chaos much worse.
Okay, now the theories for why Syria spiraled so wildly. The first is what you might call “sectarian re-balancing” or “the Fareed Zakaria case”
for why Syria is imploding (he didn’t invent this argument but is a
major proponent). Syria has artificial borders that were created by
European colonial powers, forcing together an amalgam of diverse
religious and ethnic groups. Those powers also tended to promote a
minority and rule through it, worsening preexisting sectarian tensions.
Zakaria’s argument is that what we’re seeing in Syria is in some ways
the inevitable re-balancing of power along ethnic and religious lines.
He compares it to the sectarian bloodbath in Iraq after the United
States toppled Saddam Hussein, after which a long-oppressed majority
retook power from, and violently punished, the former minority rulers.
Most Syrians are Sunni Arabs, but the country is run by members of a
minority sect known as Alawites (they’re ethnic Arab but follow a
smaller branch of Islam). The Alawite government rules through a
repressive dictatorship and gives Alawites special privileges,
which makes some Sunnis and other groups hate Alawites in general,
which in turn makes Alawites fear that they’ll be slaughtered en masse
if Assad loses the war. (There are other minorities as well, such as
ethnic Kurds and Christian Arabs; too much to cover in one explainer.)
Also, lots of Syrian communities are already organized into ethnic or
religious enclaves, which means that community militias are also
sectarian militias. That would explain why so much of the killing in
Syria has developed along sectarian lines. It would also suggest that
there’s not much anyone can do to end the killing because, in Zakaria’s
view, this is a painful but unstoppable process of re-balancing power.
The second big theory is a bit simpler: that the Assad regime was not
a sustainable enterprise and it’s clawing desperately on its way down.
Most countries have some kind of self-sustaining political order, and it
looked for a long time like Syria was held together by a cruel and
repressive but basically stable dictatorship. But maybe it wasn’t
stable; maybe it was built on quicksand. Bashar al-Assad’s father Hafez
seized power in a coup in 1970 after two decades of extreme political
instability. His government was a product of Cold War meddling and a
kind of Arab political identity crisis that was sweeping the region. But
he picked the losing sides of both: the Soviet Union was his patron,
and he followed a hard-line anti-Western nationalist ideology that’s now
mostly defunct. The Cold War is long over, and most of the region long
ago made peace with Israel and the United States; the Assad regime’s
once-solid ideological and geopolitical identity is hopelessly outdated.
But Bashar al-Assad, who took power in 2000 when his father died, never
bothered to update it. So when things started going belly-up two years
ago, he didn’t have much to fall back on except for his ability to kill
people.
4. I hear a lot about how Russia still loves Syria, though. And Iran, too. What’s their deal?
Yeah, Russia is Syria’s most important ally. Moscow blocks the United
Nations Security Council from passing anything that might hurt the
Assad regime, which is why the United States has to go around the United
Nations if it wants to do anything. Russia sends lots of weapons to
Syria that make it easier for Assad to keep killing civilians and will
make it much harder if the outside world ever wants to intervene.
The four big reasons that Russia wants to protect Assad, the
importance of which vary depending on whom you ask, are: (1) Russia has a
naval installation in Syria, which is strategically important and
Russia’s last foreign military base
outside the former Soviet Union; (2) Russia still has a bit of a Cold
War mentality, as well as a touch of national insecurity, which makes it
care very much about maintaining one of its last military alliances;
(3) Russia also hates the idea of “international intervention” against
countries like Syria because it sees this as Cold War-style Western
imperialism and ultimately a threat to Russia; (4) Syria buys a lot of
Russian military exports, and Russia needs the money.
Iran’s thinking in supporting Assad is more straightforward. It
perceives Israel and the United States as existential threats and uses
Syria to protect itself, shipping arms through Syria to the
Lebanon-based militant group Hezbollah and the Gaza-based militant group
Hamas. Iran is already feeling isolated and insecure; it worries that
if Assad falls it will lose a major ally and be cut off from its
militant proxies, leaving it very vulnerable. So far, it looks like Iran is actually coming out ahead: Assad is even more reliant on Tehran than he was before the war started.
5. This is all feeling really bleak and hopeless. Can we take a music break?
Oh man, it gets so much worse. But, yeah, let’s listen to some music from Syria. It’s really good!
If you want to go old-school you should listen to the man, the legend, the great Omar Souleyman (playing Brooklyn this Saturday!). Or, if you really want to get your revolutionary on, listen to the infectious 2011 anti-Assad anthem “Come on Bashar leave.” The singer, a cement mixer who made Rage Against the Machine look like Enya, was killed for performing it in Hama
6. Why hasn’t the United States fixed this yet?
Because it can’t. There are no viable options. Sorry.
The military options are all bad. Shipping arms to rebels, even if it
helps them topple Assad, would ultimately empower jihadists and worsen
rebel in-fighting, probably leading to lots of chaos and possibly a
second civil war (the United States made this mistake during
Afghanistan’s early 1990s civil war, which helped the Taliban take power
in 1996). Taking out Assad somehow would probably do the same, opening
up a dangerous power vacuum. Launching airstrikes or a “no-fly zone”
could suck us in, possibly for years, and probably wouldn’t make much
difference on the ground. An Iraq-style ground invasion would, in the
very best outcome, accelerate the killing, cost a lot of U.S. lives,
wildly exacerbate anti-Americanism in a boon to jihadists and
nationalist dictators alike, and would require the United States to
impose order for years across a country full of people trying to kill
each other. Nope.
The one political option, which the Obama administration has been
pushing for, would be for the Assad regime and the rebels to strike a
peace deal. But there’s no indication that either side is interested in
that, or that there’s even a viable unified rebel movement with which to
negotiate.
It’s possible that there was a brief window for a Libya-style
military intervention early on in the conflict. But we’ll never really
know.
7. So why would Obama bother with strikes that no one expects to actually solve anything?
Okay, you’re asking here about the Obama administration’s
not-so-subtle signals that it wants to launch some cruise missiles at
Syria, which would be punishment for what it says is Assad’s use of
chemical weapons against civilians.
It’s true that basically no one believes that this will turn the tide of the Syrian war. But this is important: it’s not supposed to.
The strikes wouldn’t be meant to shape the course of the war or to
topple Assad, which Obama thinks would just make things worse anyway.
They would be meant to punish Assad for (allegedly) using chemical
weapons and to deter him, or any future military leader in any future
war, from using them again.
8. Come on, what’s the big deal with chemical weapons? Assad
kills 100,000 people with bullets and bombs but we’re freaked out over
1,000 who maybe died from poisonous gas? That seems silly.
You’re definitely not the only one who thinks the distinction is
arbitrary and artificial. But there’s a good case to be made that this
is a rare opportunity, at least in theory, for the United States to make
the war a little bit less terrible — and to make future wars less
terrible.
The whole idea that there are rules of war is a pretty new one: the
practice of war is thousands of years old, but the idea that we can
regulate war to make it less terrible has been around for less than a
century. The institutions that do this are weak and inconsistent; the
rules are frail and not very well observed. But one of the world’s few
quasi-successes is the “norm” (a fancy way of saying a rule we all agree
to follow) against chemical weapons. This norm is frail enough that
Syria could drastically weaken it if we ignore Assad’s use of them, but
it’s also strong enough that it’s worth protecting. So it’s sort of a
low-hanging fruit: firing a few cruise missiles doesn’t cost us much and
can maybe help preserve this really hard-won and valuable norm against
chemical weapons.
You didn’t answer my question. That just tells me that we can
maybe preserve the norm against chemical weapons, not why we should.
Fair point. Here’s the deal: war is going to happen. It just is. But
the reason that the world got together in 1925 for the Geneva Convention
to ban chemical weapons is because this stuff is really, really good at
killing civilians but not actually very good at the conventional aim of
warfare, which is to defeat the other side. You might say that they’re
maybe 30 percent a battlefield weapon and 70 percent a tool of terror.
In a world without that norm against chemical weapons, a military might
fire off some sarin gas because it wants that battlefield advantage,
even if it ends up causing unintended and massive suffering among
civilians, maybe including its own. And if a military believes its
adversary is probably going to use chemical weapons, it has a strong
incentive to use them itself. After all, they’re fighting to the death.
So both sides of any conflict, not to mention civilians everywhere,
are better off if neither of them uses chemical weapons. But that
requires believing that your opponent will never use them, no matter
what. And the only way to do that, short of removing them from the
planet entirely, is for everyone to just agree in advance to never use
them and to really mean it. That becomes much harder if the norm is
weakened because someone like Assad got away with it. It becomes a bit
easier if everyone believes using chemical weapons will cost you a few
inbound U.S. cruise missiles.
That’s why the Obama administration apparently wants to fire cruise
missiles at Syria, even though it won’t end the suffering, end the war
or even really hurt Assad that much.
9. Hi, there was too much text so I skipped to the bottom to find the big take-away. What’s going to happen?
Short-term maybe the United States and some allies will launch some
limited, brief strikes against Syria and maybe they won’t. Either way,
these things seem pretty certain in the long-term:
• The killing will continue, probably for years. There’s no one to
sign a peace treaty on the rebel side, even if the regime side were
interested, and there’s no foreseeable victory for either. Refugees will
continue fleeing into neighboring countries, causing instability and an
entire other humanitarian crisis as conditions in the camps worsen.
• Syria as we know it, an ancient place with a rich and celebrated
culture and history, will be a broken, failed society, probably for a
generation or more. It’s very hard to see how you rebuild a functioning
state after this. Maybe worse, it’s hard to see how you get back to a
working social contract where everyone agrees to get along.
• Russia will continue to block international action, the window for
which has maybe closed anyway. The United States might try to pressure,
cajole or even horse-trade Moscow into changing its mind, but there’s
not much we can offer them that they care about as much as Syria.
• At some point the conflict will cool, either from a partial victory
or from exhaustion. The world could maybe send in some peacekeepers or
even broker a fragile peace between the various ethnic, religious and
political factions. Probably the best model is Lebanon, which fought a
brutal civil war that lasted 15 years from 1975 to 1990 and has been
slowly, slowly recovering ever since. It had some bombings just last week.
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