Thursday, September 7, 2023

The Syrian thief

                                 So, when does your flight depart?  Photo source: FIKRA Forum
 

The Syrian Democratic Forces—the Kurds in Syria, fighting the dictatorial President Bashar al-Assad—last week bounced their liaison to the Arab tribes, Abu Khawla, head of the military council of Deir al Zor, the northeast province with most of Syria’s oil and water. The Kurds arrested him for a lot of things, including running drugs. But their real complaint is that he’s working with Assad. Now they've been attacking Khawla's tribal allies. More than 90 have died.

Khawla is a thief. He began his career by stealing motorbikes. But he's our thief: The Americans used him as a surrogate.  So the Kurds are basically turning on the Americans. Undoubtedly the Iranians are fomenting the Kurdish revulsion of Khawla to distract from the growing national rebellion against Assad.  The protest began against Assad’s witless doubling of fuel prices this summer but now also calls for democracy and therefore Assad’s ouster. Thanks to Russian support, Assad had been winning the 12-year civil war. But now he is even on the verge of losing his own ethnic group of Alawites, on the western coast. The Alawites were his loyal military core.   

Khawla’s loss of power bodes ill for the Americans. US troops control the oilfields of northeast Syria, ostensibly to keep them out of the hands of the Islamic State. Fighting Daesh is why a few hundred US soldiers are still in Syria. But the Arab tribes like the Akidat have long complained that US limits on oil exports out of Deir al-Zor province are robbing them—at a time when the Syrian economy is already collapsing, due to Western sanctions and the central bank’s bungling of the supply of Syrian pound, which lost two-thirds of its dollar value overnight. More than 90% of Syrians live on less than $2 per day. It would take little to turn the tribes against the Americans for good. Then there will be real trouble, and not just in the northeast.

What is the White House doing? Nothing. The National Security Council has no Syrian strategy. (The official name is “laissez faire.”) You may recall that it had no Afghanistani strategy, either. But Biden is focused on Ukraine.

So that leaves the US Army to make policy in Syria. General Matthew McFarlane, who headed the fight against Daesh, is out, to the obligatory praises of the head of Central Command, General Erik Kurilla.  Kurilla and several Republican senators visited the Syrian Democratic Forces recently, presumably to try something new. But now the Kurds are acting on their own.  In a press conference last month, McFarlane said the number of Daesh attacks in the region had dropped two-thirds over the year; that the last major attack, on Ghwaryan Prison, was in January 2022.  But observers perceive growing Daesh activity in Syria.  

The Arab tribes in the northwest of Syria were revolting against the Kurds, as they did in the northeast. What was weird was that the Russians bombed the Arabs.  It was if the Russians were siding with the Syrian Democratic Forces, even though the SDF leads the opposition to Assad, Russia's nominal ally. Perhaps the Russians figured that the Americans were organizing through the Arabs an overthrow of Assad, and they wanted to bog down the US to get concessions in Ukraine.

As of today, the Americans seemed finally to have gotten a grip on the situation in Deir al Zor, since the Syrian Democratic Forces and the Arab tribes have stopped fighting.  But the fact remains that the Russians and Iranians outmaneuvered the Americans. I don't doubt that they will try again to eject US troops.

But no matter how skillfully they exploit tensions, Assad will find a way to gum up the works. Damascus now plans to cancel subsidies of food on top of those of fuel. This will drive Syrians into a frenzy. I suspect that Tehran and Moscow can dispense with his services.

 The prospect of starving will drive many Syrians to try to flee. But the European Court of Justice has just backed Greece in deporting a Syrian refugee. The Syrians are bottled up, and an explosion is nigh. Syria remains the textbook example of a country destroyed by fraud, incompetence, and international indifference.

 Possible steps towards a solution:

 (1)   The World Food Program of the United Nations is the world’s largest food donor, unfortunately. It could develop a serious statistical program enabling it to track where to spend money and how it is spent. In exchange, the United States could restore funding of the Program, which has seen its funds fall 40% in the past year. At present, no one quite knows where the Program’s money or food goes in countries like Syria.

(2)   The central bank of Syria could publish monetary data so that investors and donors would know how many dollars it needed to prop up the vanishing Syrian pound…and the extent to which the bank truly controls the money supply.  Hyperinflation makes eating expensive for Syrians.

(3)   The United Nations could compel Damascus to lift barriers to aid in opposition areas and to re-establish subsidies of fuel and food. Of course, in principle, such subsidies are a bad idea, because they lower prices below cost at the margin, ensuring over-consumption. But this is not the time to worry about principles. Syrian families rely on the subsidies to survive.  –Leon Taylor, Baltimore tayloralmaty@gmail.com

 

 Notes

 For useful comments, I thank Annabel Benson and Mark Kennet.

 I learn a lot about Syria from Al Monitor. The New York Times is as clueless as the White House...oddly enough, since The Times broke the story about the Assad family's control of the "poor man's cocaine," Captagon, in 2021. The US media in general, except for CBS News, is out to lunch. At McFarlane’s press conference, the only question from a Western reporter was from the propaganda agency Voice of America.

 

References

Edith M. Lederer. UN says it's forced to cut food aid to millions globally because of a funding crisis | AP News . July 28, 2023.

Special Online Briefing with Major General Matthew McFarlane, Commander, Combined Joint Task Force-Operation Inherent Resolve - United States Department of State

Jared Szuba.  Syria’s Kurds struggle to contain backlash after detaining allied Arab militia leader - Al-Monitor: Independent, trusted coverage of the Middle East . September 2, 2023.

4 comments:

  1. I don't quite understand how the Russians (and Iranians) have outmaneuvered the US - by bombing the Arabs instead of the Kurds?

    But anyway, here we are again risking US lives for oil fields. It was bad enough in past decades, but these days: for fossil fuels!

    I appreciate your focus on the path forward to help the suffering Syrian people. At the same time, would be interested to hear your thoughts on the path forward for the US should we decide to actually pay attention.

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    1. Thanks for good comments. Well, the Russians are Assad's mentors. The Kurds are Assad's enemies. The Arabs are fighting the Kurds. So, on the principle that the enemy of my enemy is my friend, the Russians should side with the Arabs. And indeed there were reports of meetings between Russians and Arabs in the northeast just before the troubles. But instead of bombing the Kurds, the Russians bombed the Arabs. Weird. // On oil: Trump wanted to get out of Syria, period. The military dissuaded him by pointing out that the Americans could control the oilfields by seizing them. You know that "oil" is the magic word for Trump. Possibly the military's rationale was to justify staying in Syria for a little longer. Syria is strategic in the Middle East, as is obvious from a map. If the Americans pull out, taking their arms with them, Syria may fall to either Iran or the Islamic State -- probably Iran, because Daesh is still weakened though not as weak as we would like to think. In principle, the opposition to Assad could take power. But it is still too disorganized to topple him, I think. Give it time. So an American withdrawal would probably result in an Iranian takeover. No one except Iran wants to see Iran gaining influence in the Middle East. The Sunnis would be fighting like cats and dogs with Shiites like the Iranians. And Israel would worry about Iran's nuclear threat. // The State and Defense departments do pay attention. The White House doesn't. It's about where Trump was. The Army goofed in relying on Abu Khawla to represent the Arab tribes to the Kurds. The Syrian Democratic Forces (basically the Kurds) viewed Khawla as a traitor, a drug trafficker, and the forgiving brother of a man who raped and killed two women. Finally the Kurds arrested Khawla. This stirred the Arabs to revolt. That was the spark to the present troubles. The State head of Syrian affairs, Ethna Goldrich, and the new Army commander of the fight against Daesh, Joel Vowell, were in Syria over the weekend to reconcile the Kurds and the Arabs, who after all are supposed to cooperate against Assad. And it looks like they succeeded, at least for now. // The immediate problem is that the Syrians can't afford to eat and therefore will revolt. The US could help by restoring aid to the World Food Program under the insistence that the food go directly to the provinces and not through Assad; and if it would pressure the UN to open up routes of aid to the opposition provinces like Idlib, which are starving. At present, the UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres is balking because he doesn't want to tangle with Russia and China, who side with Assad for reasons of their own. The UN Charter, to my mind, makes clear that national sovereignty is not the only thing that matters, especially when millions of lives are at risk. // Those are my two-cents' worth, not discounted for inflation. Yours?

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    2. Oh, I don't know anything about it, so appreciate the in-depth explanation. As we've seen in other parts of the world, the situation and factions and history are far more complex and multi-faceted than we expect. I'm reminded of when Yugoslavia disintegrated after Tito, and the terrible human calamity that ensured because there was no longer a totalitarian holding all the pieces together. Only this is the Middle East, so probably the passions and the histories and the interests are even worse.

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    3. Something like Yugoslavia, yes, except that unlike Tito, Assad is not his own man. He is a student of the Russians, and it is not likely, I think, that he will survive without Russian hardware.

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