[lit-ideas] To Help Israel, Help Syria

  • From: "Stan Spiegel" <writeforu2@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 05 Aug 2006 10:00:58 -0400

Here's a helpful idea I came across in the conflict between Israel and 
Hezbollah. - SS

August 5, 2006
Op-Ed Contributor
To Help Israel, Help Syria 
By ANDREW TABLER
Damascus, Syria 

IT is hardly surprising that when discussing the Lebanon crisis, President Bush 
tends to couple Syria's role with Iran's. After all, Damascus and Tehran have 
spent the better part of the last year deepening their ties, culminating in a 
June military cooperation agreement. But the United States may well have 
leverage in Syria that it lacks in Iran. If it is true, as it is reported to 
be, that Washington seeks to drive a wedge between Hezbollah's two backers, the 
Bush administration would do well to modify its democracy agenda to include 
support for Syrian reform.

Syria has long used its influence to make or break political deals in Lebanon, 
and the proposed international cease-fire plan will be no exception. In all 
likelihood, the Israeli offensive in southern Lebanon will not disarm 
Hezbollah, which, even under the noses of vulnerable peacekeepers and a weak 
and untested Lebanese army, could easily redeploy its long-range rockets north 
and into the Bekaa Valley, near the Syrian border. From there the missiles 
could still reach Israel, and Hezbollah could be re-supplied through the 
smuggler's den that is the 233-mile-long Lebanese-Syrian frontier. 

Only an Israeli pullout from the Golan Heights would entice Damascus to help 
seal off Hezbollah-controlled areas and ensure that the fighters are eventually 
disarmed. But negotiations for that could take years. Meanwhile, hard-liners, 
buoyed by Syria's recent alliance with nuclear-hungry Iran, are now in favor in 
Damascus, while reformers scramble for cover and hope that the assistance their 
programs receive from the European Union, the United Nations and the World Bank 
won't cast doubt on their loyalty.

If Washington wants to break President Bashar al-Assad from Tehran, it should 
promote economic liberalism as the thin end of the wedge. It should support 
efforts to combat corruption, cut red tape, and promote transparency and the 
activities of nongovernmental organizations. Germany has already adopted a 
similar approach. And here is why an American version might work. 

Syria's economic future - and that of the Assad regime - is in jeopardy. The 
country is weighed down by old-style state socialism and plagued by issues that 
breed Islamic extremism, including high birth rates, growing unemployment and 
one of the lowest productivity rates in the world.

State expenditures - most notably military spending - are financed by oil 
production, which is in rapid decline. High oil prices have given the regime a 
temporary lease on life, but the reprieve won't last: Syria will be a net 
importer of oil within four years. That is likely to change the state's 
relationship with its growing private sector. 

At the moment, tax rates are high, but the private sector seldom pays them, and 
in return accepts not having a say in how it is governed. When oil revenues dry 
up, the state will need to spread its tentacles into the private sector in 
search of cash, at which point it will undoubtedly face a trade-off that will 
force it to cede some political rights to its citizens. 

Unlike in Iran, with which the United States does not have diplomatic 
relations, there is an American Embassy in Damascus that can coordinate 
assistance to Syria's reformers. Given the mistrust between the two 
governments, however, America's vibrant private sector should lead the way. It 
can do this by sharing its expertise in building a strong and transparent 
market economy. 

This would increase American credibility in Syria without violating American 
sanctions, which ban American exports, certain banking transactions and direct 
flights to Syria, but not the exchange of knowledge. If Damascus demonstrates 
its ability to rein in and disarm Hezbollah, American economic aid could follow.

Yes, American support for Syrian reform might perpetuate President Assad's grip 
on power in the short term, but over time it would erode Syria's reasons for 
backing Iran and Hezbollah. It would undermine the widespread and increasingly 
corrosive suspicion in the region that Washington's democracy agenda is a cover 
for an Israeli-inspired plan to spread chaos in the Arab world, so as to break 
up Arab states and neuter their threat to Israel. And it would finally 
demonstrate that the United States is committed to spreading liberty, even in 
the face of great adversity.

Andrew Tabler is a fellow of the Institute of Current World Affairs and the 
editor in chief of Syria Today magazine.



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