The Geopolitics of the
Syrian Civil War, by Reva Bhalla
International
diplomats will gather Jan. 22 in the Swiss town of Montreux to hammer out a
settlement designed to end Syria's three-year civil war. The conference,
however, will be far removed from the reality on the Syrian battleground. Only
days before the conference was scheduled to begin, a controversy threatened to
engulf the proceedings after the United Nations invited Iran to participate,
and Syrian rebel representatives successfully pushed for the offer to be
rescinded. The inability to agree upon even who would be attending the
negotiations is an inauspicious sign for a diplomatic effort that was never
likely to prove very fruitful.
There are good reasons
for deep skepticism. As Syrian President Bashar al Assad's forces continue
their fight to recover ground against the increasingly fratricidal rebel forces, there
is little incentive for the regime, heavily backed by Iran and Russia, to
concede power to its sectarian rivals at the behest of Washington, especially
when the United States is already negotiating with Iran.
Ali Haidar, an old classmate of al Assad's from ophthalmology school and a
long-standing member of Syria's loyal opposition, now serving somewhat
fittingly as Syria's National Reconciliation Minister, captured the mood of the
days leading up to the conference in saying "Don't expect anything from
Geneva II. Neither Geneva II, not Geneva III nor Geneva X will solve the Syrian
crisis. The solution has begun and will continue through the military triumph
of the state."
Widespread pessimism
over a functional power-sharing agreement to end the fighting has led to
dramatic speculation that Syria is doomed either to break into sectarian
statelets or, as Haidar articulated, revert to the status quo, with the
Alawites regaining full control and the Sunnis forced back into submission.
Both scenarios are flawed. Just as international mediators will fail to produce
a power-sharing agreement at this stage of the crisis, and just as Syria's
ruling Alawite minority will face extraordinary difficulty in gluing the state
back together, there is also no easy way to carve up Syria along sectarian
lines. A closer inspection of the land reveals why.
The Geopolitics of Syria
Before the 1916
Sykes-Picot agreement traced out an awkward assortment of nation-states in the
Middle East, the name Syria was used by merchants, politicians and warriors
alike to describe a stretch of land enclosed by the Taurus Mountains to the
north, the Mediterranean to the west, the Sinai Peninsula to the south and the
desert to the east. If you were sitting in 18th-century Paris contemplating the
abundance of cotton and spices on the other side of the Mediterranean, you
would know this region as the Levant -- its Latin root "levare"
meaning "to raise," from where the sun would rise in the east. If you
were an Arab merchant traveling the ancient caravan routes northward from the
Hejaz, or modern-day Saudi Arabia, you would have referred to this territory in
Arabic as Bilad al-Sham, or the "land to the left" of Islam's holy
sites on the Arabian Peninsula.
Whether viewed from
the east or the west, the north or the south, Syria will always find itself in an unfortunate position surrounded
by much stronger powers. The rich, fertile lands straddling Asia Minor and
Europe around the Sea of Marmara to the north, the Nile River Valley to the
south and the land nestled between the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers to the
east give rise to larger and more cohesive populations. When a power in control
of these lands went roaming for riches farther afield, they inevitably came
through Syria, where blood was spilled, races were intermixed, religions were
negotiated and goods were traded at a frenzied and violent pace.
Consequently, only
twice in Syria's pre-modern history could this region claim to be a sovereign
and independent state: during the Hellenistic Seleucid dynasty, based out of
Antioch (the city of Antakya in modern-day Turkey) from 301 to 141 B.C., and
during the Umayyad Caliphate, based out of Damascus, from A.D. 661 to 749.
Syria was often divided or subsumed by its neighbors, too weak, internally
fragmented and geographically vulnerable to stand its own ground. Such is the
fate of a borderland.
Unlike the Nile
Valley, Syria's geography lacks a strong, natural binding element to overcome
its internal fissures. An aspiring Syrian state not only needs a coastline to
participate in sea trade and guard against sea powers, but also a cohesive
hinterland to provide food and security. Syria's rugged geography and patchwork
of minority sects have generally been a major hindrance to this imperative.
Syria's long and
extremely narrow coastline abruptly transforms into a chain of mountains and
plateaus. Throughout this western belt, pockets of minorities, including
Alawites, Christians and Druze, have sequestered themselves, equally
distrustful of outsiders from the west as they are of local rulers to the east,
but ready to collaborate with whomever is most likely to guarantee their
survival. The long mountain barrier then descends into broad plains along the
Orontes River Valley and the Bekaa Valley before rising sharply once again
along the Anti-Lebanon range, the Hawran plateau and the Jabal al-Druze
mountains, providing more rugged terrain for persecuted sects to hunker down
and arm themselves.
Just west of the
Anti-Lebanon mountains, the Barada river flows eastward, giving rise to a
desert oasis also known as Damascus. Protected from the coast by two mountain
chains and long stretches of desert to the east, Damascus is essentially a
fortress city and a logical place to make the capital. But for this fortress to
be a capital worthy of regional respect, it needs a corridor running westward
across the mountains to Mediterranean ports along the ancient Phoenician (or
modern-day Lebanese) coast, as well as a northward route across the semi-arid
steppes, through Homs, Hama and Idlib, to Aleppo.
The saddle of land
from Damascus to the north is relatively fluid territory, making it an easier
place for a homogenous population to coalesce than the rugged and often
recalcitrant coastline. Aleppo sits alongside the mouth of the Fertile
Crescent, a natural trade corridor between Anatolia to the north, the
Mediterranean (via the Homs Gap) to the west and Damascus to the south. While
Aleppo has historically been vulnerable to dominant Anatolian powers and can
use its relative distance to rebel against Damascus from time to time, it
remains a vital economic hub for any Damascene power.
Finally, jutting east
from the Damascus core lie vast stretches of desert, forming a wasteland
between Syria and Mesopotamia. This sparsely populated route has long been
traveled by small, nomadic bands of men -- from caravan traders to Bedouin
tribesmen to contemporary jihadists -- with few attachments and big ambitions.
Demography by Design
The demographics of
this land have fluctuated greatly, depending on the prevailing power of the
time. Christians, mostly Eastern Orthodox, formed the majority in Byzantine
Syria. The Muslim conquests that followed led to a more diverse blend of
religious sects, including a substantial Shiite population. Over time, a series
of Sunni dynasties emanating from Mesopotamia, the Nile Valley and Asia Minor
made Syria the Sunni-majority region that it is today. While Sunnis came to
heavily populate the Arabian Desert and the saddle of land stretching from
Damascus to Aleppo, the more protective coastal mountains were meanwhile
peppered with a mosaic of minorities. The typically cult-like minorities forged
fickle alliances and were always on the lookout for a more distant sea power
they could align with to balance against the dominant Sunni forces of the
hinterland.
The French, who had
the strongest colonial links to the Levant, were masters of the minority
manipulation strategy, but that approach also came with severe consequences
that endure to this day. In Lebanon, the French favored Maronite Christians,
who came to dominate Mediterranean sea trade out of bustling port cities such
as Beirut at the expense of poorer Sunni Damascene merchants. France also
plucked out a group known as the Nusayris living along the rugged Syrian coast,
rebranded them as Alawites to give them religious credibility and stacked them
in the Syrian military during the French mandate.
When the French
mandate ended in 1943, the ingredients were already in place for major demographic and sectarian upheaval,
culminating in the bloodless coup by Hafiz al Assad in 1970 that began the
highly irregular Alawite reign over Syria. With the sectarian balance now
tilting toward Iran and its sectarian allies, France's current policy of supporting the Sunnis alongside Saudi Arabia against
the mostly Alawite regime that the French helped create has a tinge of irony to
it, but it fits within a classic balance-of-power mentality toward the region.
Setting Realistic Expectations
The delegates
discussing Syria this week in Switzerland face a series of irreconcilable
truths that stem from the geopolitics that have governed this land since
antiquity.
The anomaly of a
powerful Alawite minority ruling Syria is unlikely to be reversed anytime soon.
Alawite forces are holding their ground in Damascus and steadily regaining
territory in the suburbs. Lebanese militant group Hezbollah is meanwhile
following its sectarian imperative to ensure the
Alawites hold onto power by defending the traditional route from Damascus
through the Bekaa Valley to the Lebanese coast, as well as the route through
the Orontes River Valley to the Alawite Syrian coast. So long as the Alawites
can hold Damascus, there is no chance of them sacrificing the economic
heartland.
It is thus little
wonder that Syrian forces loyal to al Assad have been on a northward offensive
to retake control of Aleppo. Realizing the limits to their own military
offensive, the regime will manipulate Western appeals for localized
cease-fires, using a respite in the fighting to conserve its resources and make
the delivery of food supplies to Aleppo contingent on rebel cooperation with
the regime. In the far north and east, Kurdish forces are meanwhile busy trying
to carve outtheir own autonomous zone against
mounting constraints, but the Alawite regime is quite comfortable knowing that
Kurdish separatism is more of a threat to Turkey than it is to
Damascus at this point.
The fate of Lebanon
and Syria remain deeply intertwined. In the mid-19th century, a bloody civil
war between Druze and Maronites in the densely populated coastal mountains
rapidly spread from Mount Lebanon to Damascus. This time around, the current is
flowing in reverse, with the civil war in Syria now flooding Lebanon. As the
Alawites continue to gain ground in Syria with aid from Iran and Hezbollah, a
shadowy amalgam of Sunni jihadists backed by Saudi Arabia will become more
active in Lebanon, leading to a steady stream of Sunni-Shiite attacks that
will keep Mount Lebanon on edge.
The United States may
be leading the ill-fated peace conference to reconstruct Syria, but it doesn't
really have any strong interests there. The depravity of the civil war itself
compels the United States to show that it is doing something constructive, but
Washington's core interest for the region at the moment is to preserve and advance a negotiation with Iran.
This goal sits at odds with a publicly stated U.S. goal to ensure al Assad is
not part of a Syrian transition, and this point may well be one of many pieces
in the developing bargain between Washington and Tehran. However, al Assad
holds greater leverage so long as his main patron is in talks with the United
States, the only sea power currently capable of projecting significant force in
the eastern Mediterranean.
Egypt, the Nile
Valley power to the south, is wholly ensnared in its own internal problems. So
is Turkey, the main power to the north, which is now gripped in a public and
vicious power struggle that leaves little room for Turkish adventurism in
the Arab world. That leaves Saudi Arabia and Iran as the main regional powers
able to directly manipulate the Syrian sectarian battleground. Iran, along with
Russia, which shares an interest in preserving relations with the Alawites and
thus its access to the Mediterranean, will hold the upper hand in this
conflict, but the desert wasteland linking Syria to Mesopotamia is filled with bands of Sunni militants eager for Saudi
backing to tie down their sectarian rivals.
And so the fighting
will go on. Neither side of the sectarian divide is capable of overwhelming the
other on the battlefield and both have regional backers that will fuel the
fight. Iran will try to use its relative advantage to draw the Saudi royals
into a negotiation, but a deeply unnerved Saudi Arabia will continue to resist
as long as Sunni rebels still have enough fight in them to keep going. Fighters
on the ground will regularly manipulate appeals for cease-fires spearheaded by
largely disinterested outsiders, all while the war spreads deeper into Lebanon.
The Syrian state will neither fragment and formalize into sectarian statelets
nor reunify into a single nation under a political settlement imposed by a
conference in Geneva. A mosaic of clan loyalties and the imperative to keep
Damascus linked to its coastline and economic heartland -- no matter what type
of regime is in power in Syria -- will hold this seething borderland together,
however tenuously.
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