Assad's
Secret Scam - Golan: Springboard for "Greater Syria"
Ambition?
Defense Update News Analysis by David Eshel
Some questions are plaguing Middle East analysts
over the sudden shift in Israeli-Syrian relations. Ehud Olmert's
attitude is quite obvious - he wishes to use every trick in the
book, to avert public attention on his looming corruption charges.
A so-called peace agreement with Syria could even convince those
skeptics, who have long ago marked him as one of Israel's worst
leaders and a political scoundrel. Even in Washington, last Wednesday,
President George W Bush was wondering whether his bosom friend
Ehud Olmert knows what he is doing. In spite of relented efforts
in Jerusalem to calm the ruffled feathers with the angry Bush
administration, Israel seems to be heading towards a cooling-off
period, if Olmert will continue his dubious steps in saving his
political hide. No doubt, Olmert's decision to go public with
Israeli-Syrian rapprochement efforts is regarded by many Israelis
as a crude gambit to distract attention from a criminal investigation
that could force him from office.
But what has brought young Bashar Assad, hitherto
regarded as virtual nincompoop and a tool in the hands of the
Syrian old guard of conservative generals and advisers and seemingly
"loyal" vassal to his Iranian mentor Ahmadinejad, to
take such an unprecedented step with Israel? Surprisingly though,
Bashar Assad could prove after all to be quite a shrewd operator,
even a chip of the old block, his father had presented for decades.
Bashar, was regarded a tool in the hands of the Syrian old guard
of conservative generals and advisers. However, quite surprisingly,
young Assad has sofar managed to survive all proceedings investigating
the assassination of former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Al-Hariri,
to draw him and his entourage into the international court hearings.
He even went as far last April, to place his brother in-law, strongman
General Assef Shawkat under heavily guarded house arrest, following
the mysterious assassination of Lebanon's Hezbollah commander
Imad Mughniyeh. The German prosecutor Detlev Mehlis had implicated
General Assef Shawkat, then Syria's intelligence chief, in the
plot to murder of Hariri. Would he be made the scapegoat, by his
brother in-law, when finally push comes to shove in this pending
murder case to name a culprit and save the president himself?
According to Israeli analysts, the strategic partnership between
Syria and Iran may be placed on less solid ground, than Israeli
intelligence had suggested in its latest assessments. Tehran appears
clearly surprised by the actions of its partner in Damascus. According
to the London-based Al-Sharq al-Awsat, reports coming out of Tehran
already indicate growing tensions between Iran and Syria, following
the talks with Israel - especially their being made public simultaneously,
in Damascus and Jerusalem. The same sources had mentioned last September,
following the alleged Israeli air force strike, which foreign media
said, had targeted a nuclear reactor in northern Syria, that the
Iranians had not been part of the secret project; President Bashar
Assad was working with North Korea.
It is no secret that an alliance with Iran is of great value for
Syria, both for its strategic implications and for its financial
benefits. Yet at the same time there is little love in Damascus
for these fundamentalist allies. Syria would much rather be embraced
again by Saudi Arabia and the Sunni Arab world and especially, the
United States. The Egyptian precedent - the American billions that
poured into Cairo after the peace accord between Egypt and Israel,
are regarded longingly in Damascus to save the miserable economy.
But the known price seems to hard to swallow, even at this stage,
in which Syria is more and more isolated by it's neighbors.
Extricating Syria from Iran, which includes petro-dollars funding
Damascus' procurement of weapons from Russia and growing Iranian
influence on Damascus, is considered a central consideration behind
Israel's decision to renew negotiations. Damascus is perceived to
be a key partner of Tehran and weakening its ties with Iran may
have far-reaching effects on militant groups heeding to instructions
from Iran, such as Hezbollah and Islamic Jihad - and to a lesser
extent, also Hamas.
Is Syria really moving towards wriggling itself from the Iranian
Shi'ite bear hug? Maybe Bashar Assad's present maneuvers are merely
a shift towards Syria's long-term strategic and national ambitions,
which could stabilize his own Alawite position within the Sunni
majority state?
Indeed, there may be more involved in the present drama than meets
the eye. If Ehud Olmert will achieve the impossible and Israel will
agree to withdraw from the strategic Golan Heights, hundreds of
thousands Syrian residents will immediately be settled in the Golan.
According to senior analysts Dr Guy Bechor, even though the Golan
Heights are presently not in Syrian hands, a presidential decree
has already been issued announcing that any Syrian resident who
moves to the Golan will receive a government allowance. This is
what the Syrians did in Lebanon in order to take it over. While
the Syrian army was forced to withdraw from Lebanon, following the
Hariri assassination in 2005, the Syrians ostensibly left 800,000
laborers behind who work in Lebanon and transfer their salaries
back to Syria. And so, the Syrian chokehold on Lebanon has remained
intact. In fact, all major political events since, have been marked
with Syrian colors.
Once the Golan Heights are under Bashar Assad control, he will
realize Syria's aspirations with no interruptions – establishing
a "resistance" against Israel in the Golan Heights. Officially,
he will argue that he has no connection to the terror attacks that
would be directed at the Galilee region and northern Israel from
the Golan, yet in practice Syrian intelligence officers will do
as they please vis-à-vis northern Israel. In fact, they already
did for years it in northern Lebanon and to a lesser extent, among
the Druze settlers in the northern Golan height.
But there is much more at stake here. In Arab-Muslim historical
geography, today's Syria and Lebanon, alongside Jordan and northern
Israel (mainly the Galilee), are all part of Greater Syria, known
in Arabic as Bilad al-Sham. Ever since its foundation by the French
mandate authorities the Syrian nationalists refused to acknowledge
independent political entities in Lebanon, or even the Galilee and
Jordan Valley, considering it the western part of Greater Syria.
Syrian
forces fought in the 1948 war to maintain hold on northern Palestine,
as soon as the British left, but were chased out by Zahal. However,
unfortunately for Israel, the so-called "Galilee Triangle",
still has a clear Arab-majority. As negotiations between Israelis
and Palestinians started in the early nineties, there is also a
strong motivation developing for autonomy among Israeli Arabs and
is gaining momentum by Islamic groups in Northern Israel. Arab Israelis
demanding a cultural and political autonomy that would enable them
to manage their own lives while disconnecting from the State of
Israel’s "Jewish" institutions. During the latest
"Earth Day" rallies, protesters already openly called
for political autonomy for Arabs in the Galilee. The quest to establish
"facts on the ground" has now shifted to the Galilee,
where there are several districts that already have a considerable
Arab majority. According to the Israeli government statistics, Arabs
comprise 18.6 percent of Israel's population, but 46 percent of
northern Israel, and many say a clear Galilee majority helped by
50,000 Arab "settlers," as some call them, from the nearby
West Bank. Many predict that the Galilee Arabs will want political
autonomy of their own.
There may well be a sinister aim behind Bashar Assad's present
motive- to negotiate a peaceful return of the Golan Heights to Syrian
sovereignty. Viewed by sheer topgraphical features, the Golan Heights
are dominating the Israeli Jordan valley, the so-called Panhandle,
which is barely five to seven kilometers wide. On it's western side,
the Galilee mountains, bordring with Lebanon, are topgraphically
controlling the same Panhandle, making any attempt to defend this
sensitive region virtually impossible. Thus, once the Golan Heights
are bak on Syrian hands, the way towards gaining access to northern
Israel is wide open.
Such a bold move could not only enhance Syria's prestige in the
Arab world and to further its greatest national cause: but realize
the age old dream of a "greater Syria" in the Middle East.
Restoring the Golan Heights has become an inalienable principle
in Syrian foreign policy. Control of this strategic and topographic
area, will enable Syria to a re-assert it's control, not only over
South Lebanon, but strive toward gaining political access to influence
an Israeli-Arab autonomy, if such will come into effect. From there
a Greater Syria, also known (in a historic context) as Syria, or
Bilad ash-Sham is only a stone throw away.
There
is also another aspect to the present Syrian aspirations, which
should not be overlooked, even if at present somewhat far fetched.
For years, Al Qaeda has envisioned creating an Islamist state in
the Greater Syria region. This strategy would create a keystone
for operations at the nexus of three continents, create a large
recruiting base, and allow for attacks on Israel. The opening of
the Greater Syrian jihad shows intent to adopt a quasi-nationalistic
approach to the Global Jihad and exploits the religious, cultural,
and political divides in the area. The history of Islamist organizations
in Greater Syria indicates that Salafist organizations are able
to maintain operations and have recently begun to grow. Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi, the former head of Al Qaeda in Iraq was instrumental
in linking Greater Syrian Islamist groups to the larger Al Qaeda
Global Jihad network.
Politicized Islamic ideologies have appeared in Greater Syria throughout
history, but the most noteworthy has been in recent years. Within
the past year, Fatah al-Islam has risen from a low-level group to
a preeminent terrorist organization. Other terrorist organizations
in the region are likely enjoying attention from the transnational
Islamist community.
Two Islamist ideologies have thrived in the Greater Syria region
throughout history. Wahhabism has made appearance with groups connected
to the Saudis in the eastern Arabian Peninsula. Salafism has lingered
in areas of Greater Syria, but has grown in recent years. Salafism
is often considered the most extreme and violent of all Islamist
ideologies. In 1918, Abd el Kader el Jesairi, of Algerian decent,
was placed as de facto rulers of Damascus by the Ottoman Empire.
Abd el Kader was a known Salafist and promoted Islamism as a means
of controlling Greater Syria. More recently, Islamism, especially
Salafism, has developed in Greater Syria. In the 1980’s, Islamist
terrorism began with the formation of Asbat al Ansar. The group
was created in the Ain al-Hilwah Palestinian refugee camp near Sidon.
The use of "ash-Sham", or Greater Syria, may be an attempt
to hijack the Pan-Syrian ideology, which centered on the recentralization
of Greater Syria after the division of the Sykes- Picot Agreement.
The Arab Republic of Syria had been the standard bearer of Pan-Syrianism,
but more recently has focused on regime survival. If Al Qaeda is
able to exploit the ideology, it may gain more support for the elimination
of current regimes in the region.
Taking all this sinister prophesy in account should warn the Israelis,
that their prime minister Ehud Olmert is actually playing with a
highly contagious fireball.