Reflections on the fall of Bashar al-Assad
Last week the 53-year-old Assad dynasty in Syria was finally overthrown by one of the rebel militias which had broken out of Idlib, a city near the Turkish border in the north-west, two weeks or so before. This brings to an end a civil war which began at the time of the Arab Spring, 12 years ago, where mass popular demonstrations led to long-standing dictatorships in Egypt and Tunisia ending, though as we have seen since, only briefly. Bashar al-Assad and some of his close family have fled to Russia, though others have been captured and some already killed. The forces that now rule the country opened up all of Assad’s prisons when they liberated a city; the liberation of Damascus itself was accompanied by that of the infamous Sednaya prison north of the city, where people had been held in some cases for over 40 years, in one case for beating an Assad family member in an equestrian competition and in another for refusing to bomb civilians in Hama following the 1982 uprising, where some of the female prisoners had borne children after having been raped by guards and where some of the prisoners had been massacred as the rebels closed in. (The equally infamous Tadmor prison, in the desert east of Damascus, had been destroyed by ISIS in 2015.) While ordinary Syrians celebrate in the streets, overseas supporters of the Assad regime spout the usual conspiracy theories about the former rebel fighters being “al-Qa’ida”, backed by Israel or the US, or both, and accusing Muslim supporters of the revolution of being concerned only for “the supremacy of their sect” and discarding Palestine as soon as this was achieved.
Three things differentiate the fall of Assad from other recent regime changes that happened in the Arab world in the past 20 years or so. First, unlike most of the Arab Spring revolutions, Assad was defeated in a war. He did not beat a tactical political retreat, with the president resigning and allowing a free election or two while the old guard remained in positions of power, such as the top ranks of the military, the judiciary and in political parties that were allowed to contest elections. The forces that drove him out (after his former Iranian and Russian allies deserted him) are now in full control, albeit with Israel strengthening their occupation of the Golan region, and can set the conditions by which any future political parties operate. It is possible that some senior officials from the old regime that were unable to flee will be killed; given the enormity of some of their crimes, this is no bad thing. Second, unlike in Libya and, in the more distant past, Afghanistan and Somalia, it was one faction which secured the major cities in the west of the country (Kurdish factions already controlled most of the east), which makes it less likely that Syria will become a “failed state” warred over by the former rebel factions with no recognisable government. Third, the defeat of Assad was a Syrian-led affair; it was not made possible by a foreign invasion, unlike the removal of Saddam Hussain (and an invasion with no forward planning, at that).
The liberation of Syria comes in the midst of the ongoing Israeli genocide of Palestinian people in Gaza. 80% of Syrians and the vast majority of Gaza Palestinians are Muslims. In many western countries, a lot of the politicians and activists who appeared sympathetic to Muslims’ interests, and who were the most supportive of us when we were under attack here, were also sympathetic to the Assad regime because they regarded it as ‘socialist’, independent of western ‘imperialist’ domination, and anti-Zionist. (As we now know, the Syrian regime participated in the “extraordinary rendition” programme during the 2000s and tortured people on the Americans’ behalf.) Many of us joined coalitions to oppose the war on Iraq, most of us not out of sympathy for Saddam Hussain but because we did not want a Muslim country invaded by a country seeking to kill Muslims, any Muslims, in revenge for a terrorist attack in their country. We had also seen the invasion of Afghanistan which was still at war nearly two years on at that point. As time wore on, much of the “anti-war” contingent showed its true colours, openly showing its links to the Assad regime and, like Zionists now, slandering its opponents, calling them liars, terrorists or foreign agents, and denying well-documented atrocities such as massacres and chemical weapon attacks (even after Israel released some of Assad’s chemical weapons onto the streets of Damascus in a bombing raid). Many Muslims fell into the same trap, focussing on Palestine and attaching themselves to these activists who “talked the talk” about Palestine while defending other oppressive regimes in the Muslim world as long as the oppressors were Arabs and struck an “anti-western” pose, however empty.
Others express fear that the new HTS government will turn into the Taliban. This is based only on stereotypes about Muslims and assumptions that we are all the same. Others unwittingly debunked that fear by posting footage they claimed to be of a girls’ school in Idlib where all the girls were wearing abayas and hijabs, and had their faces covered if they were older. Syria is not Afghanistan or even Pakistan; it has a high literacy rate and until the civil war produced large numbers of medics, engineers and other science/technology graduates every year, men and women, and the mothers and sisters of most of the HTS leadership would have received this education. (This is not to say there was nothing to criticise about Syrian state education; it was often militaristic and included a fair bit of propaganda, but produced a mostly literate population.) Last week in the Guardian Mona Eltahawy alleged that “the laws and lexicon of human rights do not recognise that intimate partner violence is a form of torture, because it is only what the state can do to men that is taken seriously – and what men do to women is just ‘domestic violence’”, just days after women had been released from those same prisons, some of them having given birth to children after being raped by guards, not knowing who the fathers of their children, who had been prisoners all their young lives and never seen daylight, were. Some women are sleeping in their own beds this week for the first time in years, not fearing the visit of a guard (or several), or have been reunited with husbands they had feared had been murdered, and probably starting to cook in their own kitchen again. It’s not the time for articles about women being pushed back into the kitchen after a revolution, at a time when these things are comforts, not a prison.
Because of what I knew about Assad’s regime, because I have friends who are Syrian or who are married to Syrians, I was always wary about sharing content from Assad supporters about the ongoing Gaza genocide. A lot of other Muslims are less so. Yes, they’re “good on Palestine” but often see the whole world through the prism of that one conflict; they profess to be against Islamophobia, but say nothing when Muslims are being oppressed in a Muslim country. Time and again they ask why neither HTS nor ISIS (Israeli Secret Intelligence Service, they called it) ever exchanged fire with Israel; the answer came last week, when HTS became Israel’s neighbour and the same would have been true if ISIS had ever taken Damascus. To see them mourning the overthrow of the Assad regime makes one wonder what their idea of a “free Palestine” consists of. It is not Syrians’ duty to suffer a stultifying oppressive regime in perpetuity to maintain the illusion of a “free Palestine”, or the illusion that their ruler cared about that at all, and to those who cry “free Palestine” while telling Syrians they should have carried on suffering, or denying their sufferings, I say this: a Palestine with enormous and brutal prisons like those of Assad’s Syria, with an economy geared towards enriching the ruling family and its cronies, and with state informants and thugs all over it like a rash would not be a free Palestine at all.
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