EFTA01770685.pdf
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From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
Sent: Friday, February 24, 2012 3:40 PM
Subject: February 24 update
Articl= 2. <https://mail.google.com/mail/./0/html/compose/static_filesiblank_quirks.htmItth>
Wall Street Journal
America's Alibis for Not Helping S=ria
Fouad Ajami <http://online.wsj.com/searchAerm.html?KEYWORDS=FOUAD+AJAMIStbylinesearch=true>
Articl= 4. <https://mailgoogle.com/mailhi/0/html/compose/static_filesiblank_quirks.htmItld>
NYT
How to Halt the Butchery in Syriaaspan>
Anne-Marie Slaughter
Articl= 6. <https://mail.google.com/mail/40/html/compose/static_filesiblank_quirks.html#f>
Agence Global
Russia's Return to the Middle Ea=t
Patrick Seale
Article 7.
The Atlantic Monthly
AIPAC and the Push Toward War
Robert Wright
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Ar=icle 1.
The Economist
Bombing Iran<=span>
Feb 25th 2012 -- FO= years Iran has practised denial and deception; it has blustered and playe= for time. All the while, it
has kept an eye on the day when it might be a=le to build a nuclear weapon. The world has negotiated with Iran; it has
balanced the pain of economic sanctions w=th the promise of reward if Iran unambiguously forsakes the bomb. All the
=hile, outside powers have been able to count on the last resort of a milit=ry assault. Today this stand-off looks as if it is
about to fail. Iran has continued enriching uranium. It =s acquiring the technology it needs for a weapon. Deep
underground, at For=ow, near the holy city of Qom, it is fitting out a uranium-enrichment plan= that many say is
invulnerable to aerial attack. Iran does not yet seem to have chosen actually to procur= a nuclear arsenal, but that
moment could come soon. Some analysts, especi=lly in Israel, judge that the scope for using force is running out. When
i= does, nothing will stand between Iran and a bomb. The air is thick with the prophecy of war. Leon Pan=tta, America's
defence secretary, has spoken of Israel attacking as earl= as April. Others foresee an Israeli strike designed to drag in
Barack Oba=a in the run-up to America's presidential vote, when he will have most to lose from seeming weak. A
decision t= go to war should be based not on one man's electoral prospects, but on =he argument that war is warranted
and likely to succeed. Iran's intentio=s are malign and the consequences of its having a weapon would be grave. Faced
by such a regime you should never pe=manently forswear war. However, the case for war's success is hard to ma=e. If
Iran is intent on getting a bomb, an attack would delay but not stop=it. Indeed, using Western bombs as a tool to
prevent nuclear proliferation risks making Iran only more determ=ned to build a weapon—and more dangerous when it
gets one.
A shadow over the M=ddle East Make no mistake, an Iran armed with the bomb would p=se a deep threat. The country
is insecure, ideological and meddles in its =eighbours' affairs. Both Iran and its proxies—including Hizbullah in Lebanon
and Hamas in Gaza—might act even more brazenly than=they do now. The danger is keenly felt by Israel, surrounded by
threats an= especially vulnerable to a nuclear bomb because it is such a small land. =ran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, recently called the "Zionist regime" a "cancerous tumour t=at must be cut out". Jews, of all people, cannot
just dismiss that as so=much rhetoric. Even if Iran were to gain a weapon only f=r its own protection, others in the
region might then feel they need weapons too. Saudi Arabia has said it will arm—and Pakist=n is thought ready to supply
a bomb in exchange for earlier Saudi backing =f its own programme. Turkey and Egypt, the other regional powers, might
co=clude they have to join the nuclear club. Elsewhere, countries such as Brazil might see nuclear arms as vital =o
regional dominance, or fear that their neighbours will. Some=experts argue that nuclear-armed states tend to behave
responsibly. But im=gine a Middle East with five nuclear powers riven by rivalry and sectarian feuds. Each would have its
fingers permanen=ly twitching over the button, in the belief that the one that pressed firs= would be left standing. Iran's
regime gains legitimacy by demonising fo=eign powers. The cold war seems stable by comparison with a nuclear Middle
East—and yet America and the Soviet =nion were sometimes scarily close to Armageddon.
No wonder some peop=e want a pre-emptive strike. But military action is not the solution to a =uclear Iran. It could
retaliate, including with rocket attacks on Israel f=om its client groups in Lebanon and Gaza. Terror cells around the
world might strike Jewish and American targe=s. It might threaten Arab oil infrastructure, in an attempt to use oil pri=es
to wreck the world economy. Although some Arab leaders back a strike, m=st Muslims are unlikely to feel that way,
further alienating the West from the Arab spring. Such costs of =n attack are easy to overstate, but even supposing they
were high they mig=t be worth paying if a strike looked like working. It does not. = Striking Iran would be much harder
than Israel's successful solo missions against the weapons programmes of Iraq= in 1981, and Syria, in 2007. If an attack
were easy, Israel would have go=e in alone long ago, when the Iranian programme was more vulnerable. But l=an's sites
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are spread out and some of them, hardened against strikes, demand repeated hits. America has more =ilitary options
than Israel, so it would prefer to wait. That is one reaso= why it is seeking to hold Israel back. The other is that, for either
air =orce, predictions of the damage from an attack span a huge range. At worst an Israeli mission might fail a=together,
at best an American one could, it is said, set back the programm= a decade (see articl=
<http://www.economist.com/node/21918228> ).
But uncertainty wou=d reign. Iran is a vast, populous and sophisticated country with a nuclear=programme that began
under the shah. It may have secret sites that escape =nscathed. Even if all its sites are hit, Iran's nuclear know-how
cannot be bombed out of existence. Nor can =ts network of suppliers at home and abroad. It has stocks of uranium in
va=ious stages of enrichment; an unknown amount would survive an attack, whil= the rest contaminated an
unforeseeable area. Iran would probably withdraw from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Trea=y, under which its uranium
is watched by the International Atomic Energy A=ency. At that point its entire programme would go underground—
literally =nd figuratively. If Iran decided it needed a bomb, it would then be able to pursue one with utmost haste an= in
greater secrecy. Saudi Arabia and the others might conclude that they,=too, needed to act pre-emptively to gain their
own deterrents. =Perhaps America could bomb Iran every few years. But how would it know when and where to strike?
And how would it ju=tify a failing policy to the world? Perhaps, if limited bombing is not eno=gh, America should be
aiming for an all-out aerial war, or even regime cha=ge. Yet a decade in Iraq and Afghanistan has demonstrated where
that leads. An aerial war could dramatically raise =he threat of retaliation. Regime change might produce a government
that th= West could do business with. But the nuclear programme has broad support =n Iran. The idea that a bomb is
the only defence against an implacable American enemy might become stronge= than ever.
That does not mean =he world should just let Iran get the bomb. The government will soon be st=rved of revenues,
because of an oil embargo. Sanctions are biting, the fin=ncial system is increasingly isolated and the currency has
plunged in value. Proponents of an attack argue that =ilitary humiliation would finish the regime off. But it is as likely to
ra=ly Iranians around their leaders. Meanwhile, political change is sweeping =cross the Middle East. The regime in
Tehran is divided and it has lost the faith of its people. Eventually, =opular resistance will spring up as it did in 2009. A
new regime brought a=out by the Iranians themselves is more likely to renounce the bomb than on= that has just
witnessed an American assault.
Is there a danger t=at Iran will get a nuclear weapon before that happens? Yes, but bombing mi=ht only increase the
risk. Can you stop Iran from getting a bomb if it is =etermined to have one? Not indefinitely, and bombing it might make
it all the more desperate. Short of occupation, =he world cannot eliminate Iran's capacity to gain the bomb. It can only
=hange its will to possess one. Just now that is more likely to come about =hrough sanctions and diplomacy than war.
Articl= 2.
Wall Street Journal=/span>
America's Ali=is for Not Helping Syria
Fouad Ajami <http://o=line.wsj.com/search/term.html?KEYWORDS=FOUAD+AJAM l&bylinesearch=3Dtrue>
February 23, 2012 -= There are the Friends of Syria, and there are the Friends of the Syrian R=gime. The former, a large
group—the United States, the Europeans and the=bulk of Arab governments—is casting about for a way to end the
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Assad regime's assault on its own people. In their ra=ks there is irresolution and endless talk about the complications
and the =niqueness of the Syrian case.
No such uncertainty detains the Friends of the Syrian Regime=97Russia, Iran, Hezbollah and to a lesser extent China. In
this camp, ther= is a will to prevail, a knowledge of the stakes in this cruel contest, and material assistance for the
Damascus dic=atorship.
In the face of the barbarism unleashed on the helpless people=of Homs, the Friends of Syria squirm and hope to be
delivered from any mea=ingful burdens. Still, they are meeting Friday in Tunis to discuss their options. But Syrian
dictator Bashar al-As=ad needn't worry. The Tunisian hosts themselves proclaimed that this convo=ation held on their
soil precluded a decision in favor of foreign military=intervention.
Syria is not Libya, the mantra goes, especially in Washington= The provision of arms to the Syrian opposition is
"premature," =en. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, recently stated. We don't know the Syrian
opposition, another al=bi has it—they are of uncertain provenance and are internally divided. O=r weapons could end
up in the wrong hands, and besides, we would be "=ilitarizing" this conflict.
Those speaking in such ways seem to overlook the disparity in=firepower between the Damascus ruler with his tanks
and artillery, and the=civilian population aided by defectors who had their fill with official terror.
The borders of Syria offer another exculpation for passivity.=Look at the map, say the naysayers. Syria is bordered by
Lebanon, Iraq, Jo=dan, Turkey and Israel. Intervention here is certain to become a regional affair.
Grant the Syrians sympathy, their struggle unfolds in the mid=t of an American presidential contest. And the incumbent
has his lines at =he ready for his acceptance speech in Charlotte, N.C. He's done what he had promised during his first
presidenti=l run, shutting down the war in Iraq and ending the American presence. Thi= sure applause line precludes the
acceptance of a new burden just on the o=her side of the Syria-Iraq frontier.
The silence of President Obama on the matter of Syria reveals=the general retreat of American power in the Middle
East. In Istanbul some=days ago, a Turkish intellectual and political writer put the matter starkly to me: We don't think
and talk muc= about America these days, he said.
Yet the tortured dissertations on the uniqueness of Syria's s=rategic landscape are in fact proofs for why we must thwart
the Iran-SyriarHezbollah nexus. Topple the Syrian dictatorship and the access of Iran to the Mediterranean is severed,
leaving the brigan=s of Hamas and Hezbollah scrambling for a new way. The democracies would d=monstrate that
regimes of plunder and cruelty, perpetrators of terror, hav= been cut down to size.
Plainly, the Syrian tyranny's writ has expired. Assad has imp=icated his own Alawite community in a war to defend his
family's reign. Th= ambiguity that allowed the Assad tyranny to conceal its minority, schismatic identity, to hide behind a
co-opted Su=ni religious class, has been torn asunder. Calls for a jihad, a holy war, =gainst a godless lot have been made
in Sunni religious circles everywhere.
Ironically, it was the Assad tyranny itself that had summoned=those furies in its campaign against the American war in
Iraq. It had prov=ded transit and sanctuary for jihadists who crossed into Iraq to do battle against the Americans and the
Shiites; =t even released its own Islamist prisoners and dispatched them to Iraq wit= the promise of pardon. Now the
chickens have come home to roost, and an A=awite community beyond the bounds of Islam is facing a religious war in
all but name.
This schism cannot be viewed with American indifference. It i= an inescapable fate that the U.S. is the provider of order
in that region= We can lend a hand to the embattled Syrians or risk turning Syria into a devil's playground of religious
extre=ism. Syria can become that self-fulfilling prophesy: a population abandone= by the powers but offered false solace
and the promise of redemption by t=e forces of extremism and ruin.
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We make much of the "opaqueness" of the Syrian rebe=lion and the divisions within its leadership. But there is no great
myster= that attends this rebellion: An oppressed people, done with a tyranny of four decades, was stirred to life and
conquered its=fear after witnessing the upheaval that had earlier overtaken Tunisia, Egy=t, Libya and Yemen.
In Istanbul this month, I enrountered the variety, and the normalcy, of this rebellion in extended disc=ssions with
prominent figures of the Syrian National Council. There was the senior diplomat who had grown weary of bei=g a
functionary of so sullied a regime. There was a businessman of means, =rom Aleppo, who was drawn into the opposition
by the retrogression of his =ountry.
There was a young prayer leader, from Banyas, on the Syrian c=ast, who had taken up the cause because the young
people in his town had pressed him to speak a word of truth in the face of evil. Even the leader of the Muslim
Brotherhood, Riad al•Shagf=, in exile for three decades, acknowledged the pluralism of his country an= the weakness of
the Brotherhood, banned since 1980.
We frighten ourselves with phantoms of our own making. No one=is asking or expecting the U.S. Marines to storm the
shores of Latakia. Th=s Syrian tyranny is merciless in its battles against the people of Homs and Zabadani, but its army is
demoraliz=d and riven with factionalism and sectarian enmities. It could be brought =own by defectors given training
and weapons; safe havens could give disaff=cted soldiers an incentive, and the space, to defect.
Meanwhile, we should recognize the Syrian National Council as=the country's rightful leaders. This stamp of legitimacy
would embolden th= opposition and give them heart in this brutal season. Such recognition would put the governments
of Lebanon and I=aq on notice that they are on the side of a brigand, lawless regime. There=is Arab wealth that can
sustain this struggle, and in Turkey there is a sy=pathetic government that can join this fight under American leadership.
The world does not always oblige our desires for peace; some =truggles are thrown our way and have to be taken up. In
his State of the U=ion address last month, President Obama dissociated himself from those who preach the doctrine of
America's declin=.
Never mind that he himself had been a declinist and had risen=to power as an exponent of America's guilt in foreign
lands. We should tak= him at his word. In a battered Syria, a desperate people await America's help and puzzle over its
leader's passi=ity.
Mr. Ajami is a s=nior fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution and co-chairman of=the Working Group on
Islamism and the International Order.
Articl= 3.
NYT
After a Year,=Deep Divisions Hobble Syria's Opposition
Neil MacFarquhar
<http://t=pics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/neil_madarquhar/index=html?inlinernyt-per>
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February 23, 2012 -= BEIRUT, Lebanon — Syria
<http://topics.nytimes.comitopinews/international/countriesandter=itories/syria/index.html?inline=nyt-geo> 's
downward spiral into more hellish conflict in cities like Hom= has provoked a new surge of outrage around the world,
with Arab and many =estern countries searching for new ways to support protesters and activist=groups coming under
the government's increasingly lethal assault.
But as diplomats fr=m about 80 countries converge on Tunisia
chttp://topics.nytimes.com/topinews/international/countriesandter=itoriesitunisiatindex.html?inline=nyt-geo> on
Friday in search of a strategy to provide aid to Syria's b=leaguered citizens, they will find their efforts compromised even
before t=ey begin by the lack of a cohesive opposition leadership.
Nearly a year after=the uprising began, the opposition remains a fractious collection of polit=cal groups, longtime exiles,
grass-roots organizers and armed militants, a=l deeply divided along ideological, ethnic or sectarian lines, and too
disjointed to agree on even the rudimen=s of a strategy to topple President Bashar al-Assad's government.
The need to build a=united opposition will be the focus of intense discussions at what has bee= billed as the inaugural
meeting of the Friends of Syria. Fostering some s=mblance of a unified protest movement, possibly under the umbrella
of an exile alliance called the Syrian National Council, will be a theme hovering in the background. </=pan>
The council's int=rnal divisions have kept Western and Arab governments from recognizing it =s a kind of government in
exile, and the Tunis summit meeting will probabl= not change that. Russia, Syria's main international patron, is avoiding
the meeting entirely.
The divisions and s=ortcomings within the council were fully on display last week when its 10-=ember executive
committee met at the Four Seasons Hotel in Doha, Qatar —=its soaring lobby bedecked with roses and other red flowers
left over from Valentine's Day.
The council has bee= slow on critical issues like recognizing the transformation of the Syrian=uprising from a nonviolent
movement to an armed insurrection, according to=members, diplomats and other analysts.
Aside from represen=ing only about 70 percent of a range of groups opposing Mr. Assad, the cou=cil has yet to seriously
address melding itself with the increasingly inde=endent internal alliances in Horns and other cities across Syria trapped
in an uneven battle for survival, they s=id, warning that the council runs the risk of being supplanted.
"They were in a c=nstant, ongoing struggle, which delayed anything productive and any real w=rk that should be done
for the revolution," said Rima Fleihan, an activi=t who crawled through barbed wire fences to Jordan from Syria last
September to escape arrest. She was representing=Syria's Local Coordination Committees, an alliance of grass-roots
activi=ts, on the council until she quit in frustration this month.
"They fight more =han they work," Ms. Fleihan said. "People are asking why they have fai=ed to achieve any
international recognition, why no aid is reaching the pe=ple, why are we still being shelled?"
Even by comparison =ith Libya, where infighting among rival militias and the inability of the =ransitional National Council
to exert authority fully created turmoil afte= the successful uprising there, Syria's opposition appears scattered.
Well before NATO in=ervened in Libya, groups hostile to Col. Muammar el•Qaddafi leveraged the =uge chunk of eastern
Libya they held around Benghazi into the attempt to c=aim the whole country. A unified focus on the rebellion
submerged most overt political differences for a time. </=pan>
The United States a=d other Western governments are also wary of the uncertain role of Islamis=s in Syria. The Muslim
Brotherhood and other organized Islamist groups wer= more thoroughly suppressed in Syria than in Egypt, and their
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leaders are less well known. Some diplomats fear =hat Syrian Islamists could ride to power amid the turmoil, imposing
an age=da that might clash with Western goals.
That may be one rea=on the United States is hoping the Syrian National Council can overcome it= divisions and
shortcomings. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, in a press conference in London<=a>, moved the United States
a step closer to recognizing the council. <http://www.state.govisecretary/rm/2012/02/184577.htm>
"They will have a=seat at the table as a representative of the Syrian people," Mrs. Clinto= said. "And we think it's
important to have Syrians represented.=And the consensus opinion by the Arab League and all the others who are
working and planning this conference is that the S.=.C. is a credible representative."
Council members des=ribe opposition divisions as a natural result of trying to forge a working=organization that
encompasses wide diversity from a complex society that h=s known only oppression.
Indeed, the men at =he Four Seasons in Doha ranged from the various Islamist representatives w=th suits, ties and
neatly trimmed beards to the one Christian on the execu=ive committee, a longtime university professor in Belgium who
wandered around in flip-flops.
The council members=contend that progress has been made among a group of people who were virtu=l strangers when
they first gathered in Istanbul in September, and that sn=ping about their unrepresentative nature is mostly a
disinformation campaign by Damascus.
"This is a manufa=tured problem," said Burhan Ghalioun, the council president, in a brief =nterview outside an executive
committee meeting last week. "Some indepen=ent people don't want to join the S.N.C., but there is no strong
opposition power outside the national council." <=span>
He said lack of mon=y was the group's most acute problem. Although the Qatari government pic=ed up the bill for the
Doha meeting and for frequent travel, council membe=s said that no significant financial support from Arab or Western
governments had materialized despite repeated=promises, so they must rely on rich Syrian exiles. They hope Friday's
me=ting in Tunis will begin to change that.
After communicating=via Skype with activists in embattled cities like Homs, Hama and Idlib, co=ncil members admitted
sheepishly that those activists just flung accusatio=s at them, demanding to know why they seemed to swan from one
luxury hotel to the next while no medical supplies=or other aid flowed into Syria.
The bickering takes=place in plain sight. "Is this any way to work?" yelled Haithem al-Mal=h, an 81-year-old lawyer and
war horse of the opposition movement, as he c=me barreling out of one Doha meeting, only to be corralled back in.
"They are all stupid and silly, but what can I =o?"
The 310-member coun=il remains Balkanized among different factions; arguments unspool endlessl= over which groups
deserve how many seats. The mostly secular, liberal rep=esentatives and those from the Islamist factions harbor mutual
suspicions.
No one from Syria=92s ruling Alawite community, the small religious sect of Mr. Assad, sits =n the executive committee,
despite repeated attempts to woo a few prominen= dissidents. The fight over Kurdish seats remains unsettled even
though Massoud Barzani, a leading Kurd in neighbori=g Iraq, tried to mediate.
The council has als= not reconciled with members of another opposition coalition, the Syrian N=tional Coordination
Committee, some of whom remain in Syria and who have g=nerally taken a softer line about allowing Mr. Assad to
shepherd a political transition.
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"Time is running =ut for the Syrian opposition to establish its credibility and viability as=an effective representative of
the uprising," said Steven Heydemann, who=focuses on Middle East issues at the United States Institute of Peace, a
research group financed partly by Congress. <=span>
Even the council'= diplomatic efforts remain troubled. The council has yet to appoint an off.cial envoy in Washington,
and jockeying over who should lobby the United N=tions Security Council earlier this month was so intense, diplomats
and analysts said, that the council sent an unwi=ldy delegation of some 14 members who continued arguing in New York
over w=o would meet which ambassador.
The key issue the c=uncil is grappling with right now is how to coordinate an increasingly arm=d opposition. The council
says it supports the defensive use of weapons.
But exiled Syrian A=my officers who formed the Free Syrian Army, based in Turkey, have stayed =Ioof from the council,
and even they do not really control the many local =ilitias that adopt the army's name alone.
Steven Lee Myers=contributed reporting from London, and an employee of The New York Times f=om Beirut.
Articl= 4.
NYT
How to Halt t=e Butchery in Syria
Anne-Marie Slaughte=
February 23, 2012 -= FOREIGN military intervention in
<http://topics.nytimes.comflopinews/international/countrie=andterritories/syria/index.html?inline=nyt-geo> offers the
best hope for curtailing a long, bloody and destabilizing civil=war. The mantra of those opposed to intervention is "Syria
is not Libya.=94 In fact, Syria is far more strategically located than Libya, and a leng=hy civil war there would be much
more dangerous to our interests. America has a major stake in helping Syria's=neighbors stop the killing. Simply arming
the opposition, in many wa=s the easiest option, would bring about exactly the scenario the world sho=ld fear most: a
proxy war that would spill into Lebanon, Turkey, Iraq and Jordan and fracture Syria along sectarian I=nes. It could also
allow Al Qaeda and other terrorist groups to gain a foo=hold in Syria and perhaps gain access to chemical and biological
weapons.
There is an alterna=ive. The Friends of Syria, some 70 countries scheduled to meet in Tunis to=ay, should establish "no-
kill zones" now to protect all Syrians regard=ess of creed, ethnicity or political allegiance. The Free Syrian Army, a
growing force of defectors from the government's=army, would set up these no-kill zones near the Turkish, Lebanese
and Jord=nian borders. Each zone should be established as close to the border as po=sible to allow the creation of short
humanitarian corridors for the Red Cross and other groups to bring food, w=ter and medicine in and take wounded
patients out. The zones would be mana=ed by already active civilian committees.
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Establishing these =ones would require nations like Turkey, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Jordan to =rm the opposition
soldiers with anti-tank, countersniper and portable anti=ircraft weapons. Special forces from countries like Qatar, Turkey
and possibly Britain and France could offer t=ctical and strategic advice to the Free Syrian Army forces. Sending them i=
is logistically and politically feasible; some may be there already. Cruc=ally, these special forces would control the flow of
intelligence regarding the government's troop moveme=ts and lines of communication to allow opposition troops to
cordon off pop=lation centers and rid them of snipers. Once Syrian government forces were=killed, captured or allowed
to defect without reprisal, attention would turn to defending and expanding the no-k=ll zones.
This next step woul= require intelligence focused on tank and aircraft movements, the placemen= of artillery batteries
and communications lines among Syrian government f=rces. The goal would be to weaken and isolate government units
charged with attacking particular towns; this wou=d allow opposition forces to negotiate directly with army officers on
truc=s within each zone, which could then expand into a regional, and ultimatel= national, truce. The key condition for
all such assistance, inside or outside Syria, is that it be used defen=ively — only to stop attacks by the Syrian military or
to clear out gove=nment forces that dare to attack the no-kill zones. Although keeping inter=ention limited is always
hard, international assistance could be curtailed if the Free Syrian Army took the offensive. =he absolute priority within
no-kill zones would be public safety and human=tarian aid; revenge attacks would not be tolerated.
Syria's president= B=shar al-Assad
thttp://topics.nytimes.comitopireferenceitimestopics/peo=le/a/bashar_al_assad/index.html?inline=nyt-per> , is
increasingly depe=ding on government-sponsored gangs and on shelling cities with heavy artil=ery rather than
overrunning them with troops, precisely because he is conc=rned about the loyalty of soldiers forced to shoot their
fellow citizens at point-blank range. If government =roops entered no-kill zones they would have to face their former
comrades.=Placing them in this situation, and presenting the option to defect, would=show just how many members of
Syria's army — estimated at 300,000 men — were actually willing to fight for M=. Assad.
Turkey and the Arab=League should also help opposition forces inside Syria more actively throu=h the use of remotely
piloted helicopters, either for delivery of cargo an= weapons — as America has used them in Afghanistan — or to attack
Syrian air defenses and mortars in order t= protect the no-kill zones. Turkey is rightfully cautious about depl=ying its
ground forces, an act that Mr. Assad could use as grounds to decl=re war and retaliate. But Turkey has some of its own
drones, and Arab League countries could quickly lease others. A= in Libya, the international community should not act
without the approval=and the invitation of the countries in the region that are most directly a=fected by Mr. Assad's war
on his own people. Thus it is up to the Arab League and Turkey to adopt a plan of=action. If Russia and China were
willing to abstain rather than exercise a=other massacre-enabling veto, then the Arab League could go back to the
Un=ted Nations Security Council for approval. If not, then Turkey and the Arab League should act, on their
own=authority and that of the other 13 members of the Security Council and 137=members of the General Assembly
who voted last week to condemn Mr. Assad=92s brutality. The power of the Syrian protesters over the past 11months
has arisen from their determination to =ace down bullets with chants, signs and their own bodies. The internationa=
community can draw on the power of nonviolence and create zones of peace =n what are now zones of death. The
Syrians have the ability to make that happen; the rest of the world mu=t give them the means to do it.
Anne-Marie Slaughter <http://www=princeton.edu/%C2%98slaughtrk , a professor of politics and international affairs
at Princeton, was director of policy planning at the State Departm=nt from 2009 to 2011.
Articl= 5.
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The Independent (Lo=don)
US raises ale=t over possible chemical weapons arsenal as world leaders meet<=b>
Charlotte Mcdonald-=ibson
February 24, 2012&n=sp; -- World leaders struggling to force Syria's President from power will=gather in Tunisia today
armed with fresh evidence that his regime ordered =rimes against humanity, including the killing of children, but calls for
military intervention remain firmly off the age=da.
Despite a growing b=dy of evidence that President Bashar al-Assad is personally culpable for t=e atrocities inflicted upon
his own people - the rationale for military in=ervention in Libya - William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, said yesterday
that a repeat of the Nato action tha= helped topple Colonel Muammar Gaddafi was unlikely.
His comments come a=id rising concern that the splintered, disunited opposition may be infiltr=ted by extremist Sunni
and al-Qa'ida fighters. American officials are also=concerned that President Assad is sitting on a cache of chemical
weapons that could wind up in extremists' hands if =is regime fell.
"We are operat=ng under many more constraints than we were in the case of Libya," Mr=Hague told BBC Radio 4's
Today programme. "Syria sits next to Lebanon= Israel, Jordan, Turkey, Iraq - what happens in Syria has an effect on all of
those countries and the consequences of any outsid= intervention are much more difficult to foresee."
Instead, he said, w=rld leaders including the US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and leader= from the Arab League
meeting under the Friends of Syria banner in Tunis t=day would focus on "tightening a diplomatic and economic
stranglehold" on the regime.
A new UN report on =yrian atrocities made public yesterday said that 500 children had been kil=ed in the violence. The
panel of UN human rights experts has also compiled=a list of Syrian officials who could face investigation for crimes
against humanity, which will be passed to th= UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. The experts have indicated that
th= list goes all the way up to the President himself.
Any move to refer S=rian officials to the International Criminal Court in The Hague, however, =ould be likely to face
opposition from Russia and China, who on 4 February=vetoed a UN resolution calling on President Assad to step aside.
Activists hope this is one area where the Friends of =yria group could have some influence, even though Russia is not
sending a =elegate.
"They need to =hink of how to exert more pressure, not just on Syria, but on its allies,&=uot; said Nadim Houry, the
Human Rights Watch deputy director for the Midd=e East. "I would hate to think the option is whether to bomb or not
to bomb."
So far, just a smal= fraction of the many armed and unarmed opposition groups has openly calle= for intervention, and
many military analysts believe it would be disastro=s.
"The great ris= is that the situation in Syria resembles that in Iraq and the entire gove=nment force and government
authority disintegrates," said Shashank Jo=hi, an associate fellow from the Royal United Services Institute. "You are
already seeing international actors star= to enter Syria from Iraq and other places, many of them are Sunni
fundame=talist and have links to al-Qa'ida."
Yesterday CNN cited=a US military report speculating that 75,0O0 ground troops could be needed=to secure Syria's
chemical weapons sites. But unlike Iraq, where the alleg=d presence of chemical weapons and al-Qa'ida was used as a
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rationale for going to war, in Syria these factors=are being used to make the case for caution. "If the ulterior motive
=ould be to justify some sort of intervention, it is operating in complete'= the other direction - it has been suggested
that the presence of al-Qa'ida means that any intervention could see the s=tuation worsen and we would be trapped in
a civil war from which we couldn=t escape," said Mr Joshi.
WHAT NEXT? THE OPTI=NS
Military interve=tion
FOR: Assad so far a=pears immune to diplomatic pressure for him to hand power to his deputy an= stop his brutal
crackdown. Military strikes could take out the tanks that=are causing dozens of deaths in the opposition stronghold of
Homs.
AGAINST: Even Syria= opposition groups are largely against any Libya-style air strikes in Syri=. The country still has
powerful backers including Russia and Iran and mil=tary action without international consensus could spark a broader
conflict that would spill into the nation's already =nstable neighbours such as Iraq and Lebanon.
Arming the rebel=
FOR: The armed oppo=ition groups are mostly made up of defecting soldiers, but they are out-gu=ned by Assad's forces.
Giving weapons to the rebels and providing training=would help them take on Assad's army and get around the
minefield of direct military intervention.
AGAINST: The rebel =roups are divided and there are reports that Islamist extremists have infi=trated the opposition.
The West remains scarred from its experience in Afg=anistan in the 1980s, when some of the men they armed to fight
the Soviet occupation turned their weapons and=training on the West.
Humanitarian cor=idor
FOR: Temporary ceas=fires and the creation of a humanitarian corridor from neighbouring countr=es would allow aid to
get to the worst-hit areas such as Horns and facilita=e the evacuation of the injured. This will be a key issue discussed at
the Tunisia summit today.
AGAINST: The Syrian=regime would need to adhere to any ceasefire or humanitarian workers would=be put at grave
risk. It is also very difficult to enforce such safe passa=e without foreign military boots on the ground for protection -
something Assad is unlikely to agree to unless=under pressure from Russia.
More economic sa=ctions
FOR: Many analysts =ay that as the regime is gradually squeezed by sanctions including an oil =mbargo, the business
community and middle class will turn against Assad as=they are hit in the pocket. One Western diplomat said yesterday
that the regime's foreign currency reserves will r=n out in three to five months.
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AGAINST: As with an= sanctions, some argue that it is the people of Syria that are hurting the=most, with crippling
inflation and power cuts every day. Thousands more ci=ilians could also be killed as diplomats wait for the sanctions to
work even as the regime continues its slaughter.=/span>
Articl= 6.
Agence Global
Russia's Re=urn to the Middle East
Patrick Seale
21Feb 2012 -- After a long absence, Russia is now demanding a =eat for itself at the top table of Middle East affairs. It
seems determine= to have its say on the key issues of the day: the crisis in Syria; the threat of war against Iran; Israel's
e=pansionist ambitions; and the rise of political Islam across the Arab worl=. These were among the topics vigorously
debated at a conference at Sochi =n Russia's Black Sea coast, held on 17.18 February in the grandiose marble halls of a
22-hectare resort -- =ith its own elevator to the beach below -- once the playground of Soviet l=aders.
Attended by over 60 participants from a score of countries, the conference =as organised by Russia's Valdai Discussion
Club on the theme of "Trans=ormation in the Arab World and Russia's Interests." Among the Russians=defending these
interests were Mikhail Bogdanov, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, Vitaly Naumkin, Director of =he Institute of
Oriental Studies at the Russian Academy of Sciences, Alexe= Vasiliev, Director of the Institute of African and Arab Studies
of the Ru=sian Academy of Sciences, and Andrey Baklanov, head of the International Affairs Department of Russia's
Feder=l Assembly.
Seen from Moscow, the Middle East lies on its very doorstep. With 20 millio= Muslims in the Northern Caucasus, Russia
feels that its domestic stabilit= is linked to developments in the Arab world, especially to the rise of Is=amist parties. If
these parties turn out to be extreme, they risk inflaming Muslims in Russia itself and i= Central Asia. Professor Vitaly
Naumkin -- the man who sits at the summit =f oriental studies in Russia -- declared that "I believe democracy will =ome
to the Arab world by the Islamists rather than by Western intervention." He admitted, however, that we woul= have to
wait to see whether Islamist regimes in Arab countries proved to =e democratic or not.
Moscow's first reaction to the Arab revolutions has tended to be wary, no=doubt because it suffered the assaults of the
Rose Revolution in Georgia, =he Orange Revolution in Ukraine, the Tulip Revolution in Kyrgyzstan, and s= forth. Yet it is
now fully aware of the need to build relations with the new forces in the Arab world. Even=s in the Middle East may
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even impinge on Russia's presidential elections= giving a boost to Vladimir Putin's ambitions. Ever since his historic v=sit
to Saudi Arabia and the Gulf in 2007 -- the first ever by a Russian leader -- Putin has claimed to know ho= to handle
Middle East affairs.
The situation in Syria is a subject of great preoccupation in Moscow. Deput= Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov was very
firm, issuing what seemed like=a warning to the Western powers: "Russia cannot tolerate open interventi=n on one side
of the conflict," he thundered. It was wrong to force Bashar al-Asad, "the President of a sov=reign state" to step down.
Russia was seeking to institute a dialogue wi=hout preconditions. It was continuing its contacts with the opposition. Bu=,
in the meantime, he cautioned, the opposition had to dissociate itself from extremists.
In thinking about Syria, the Russians are clearly much influenced by what h=ppened in Libya. The Western powers,
Bogdanov charged, had made many mista=es in the violent overthrow of Qadhafi. "There is a need," he insisted= "to
investigate the civilian casualties caused by NATO airstrikes." Professor Naumkin explained: "Russia feels=that it was
cheated by its international partners. The no-fly zone mandate=in Libya was transformed into direct military
intervention. This should no= be repeated in Syria." Arming the opposition would only serve to increase the killing. There
was now the thrrat of civil war. Reforms had to be given a chance. The majority of the Syr=an population did not want
Bashar al-Asad to stand down. External armed fo=ces should not intervene.
Although Naumkin did not say so, there were rumours at the conference that =ussia had advised Asad on the drafting of
the new Syrian Constitution, whi=h strips the Ba'th Party of its monopoly as "leader of State and socie=y." The
Constitution is due to be put to a referendum on 26 February, followed by multi-party elections.
As was to be expected, several Arab delegates at the conference were critic=l of Russia's role in protecting President
Asad, in particular of its ve=o on 4 February at the UN Security Council of the Resolution calling on hi= to step down.
Professor Naumkin put up a vigorous defence. "We are seeking a new strategy of partnership=between Russia and the
Arab world," he declared. "We are determined to=take up the challenge against those who do not respect our
interests." H= stressed that Russia's interests in the Middle East were not mercantile. It had no special relations with
anyone (=y this he seemed to mean the Asad family); it had no proxies or puppets in=the region. Russia was a young
democracy. It listened to public opinion. 1= was defending its vision of international relations based on respect for the
sovereignty of states and a rejection o= foreign armed intervention.
Of all the Arabs present, it was the Palestinians who, not surprisingly, we=e most eager for Russian support in their
unequal struggle with Israel. No= that Russia was returning to the international arena as a major player, t=ey called for it
to put its full weight in favour of the peace process and of Mahmoud Abbas, "the last mo=erate Palestinian leader."
America's monopoly of the peace process had=merely provided a cover for Israeli expansion.
Speaker after speaker deplored the ineffective peace-making of the Quartet =the United States, European Union, Russia
and UN). Indeed, an Israeli spea=er reminded the conference that the discovery of large gas reserves off th= Israeli coast
meant that Israel -- soon to be "a major partner in the energy market" once gas started =o flow next year -- would be
less motivated to talk peace. The world would=be confronted, he seemed to be saying, by a "Greater Israel with
gas!"=br> Some Palestinians called for the toothless Quartet to be dismantled altoget=er and replaced by enhanced UN
involvement. Some Israelis conceded that th=ir country had made strategic errors in expanding West Bank settlements
an= laying siege to Gaza. Nevertheless, the Israel public had turned against the peace process, while the goal of =rime
Minister Benyamin Netanyahu was to rule out the possibility of a two-state solution. This prompted Ambassador Andrey
Baklanov to argue for the n=ed to re-launch a multilateral Middle East peace process to replace the failed bilateral talks.
Indeed, perhaps the clearest message of the conference was the appeal for a=greater role for the BRICS (Brazil, Russia,
India, China and South Africa)=in establishing a new multilateral mechanism for regional security. To hal= the killing in
Syria or to ward off a U.S.-Israeli war against Iran, would Russia sponsor a mediation proc=ss in conjunction with its
BRICS partners? Would it seek to revive the mor=bund Arab-Israeli peace process by sponsoring an international
conference =n Moscow? These questions remained unanswered.
Russia's ambition to play a greater role in international affairs is clea=. But can it deliver?
Patrick Seale is a leading British writer on the Middle East. His latest=book is The Struggle for Arab Independence: Riad
el-Solh and the Makers of=the Modern Middle East (Cambridge University Press).
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Articl= 7.
The Atlantic Monthl=
AIPAC and the=Push Toward War
Robert Wright
Feb 21 2012 -- Late last week, amid little fanfare= Senators Joseph Lieberman, Lindsey Graham, and Robert Casey
introduced a =esolution that would move America further down the path toward war with Ir=n.
The good news is th=t the resolution hasn't been universally embraced in the Senate. As Ron Ka=peas of the Jewish
Telegraphic Agency reports <http://www.jta.org/news/article/2012/02/17/3091713/iran-resoluti=ns-bumpy-road-
reveals-senate-dems-war-jitters> , the resolution has "provoked jitters among Democrats anxi=us over the specter of
war." The bad news is that, as Kampeas also re=orts, "AIPAC is expected to make the resolution an 'ask' in three wee=s
when up to 10,000 activists culminate its annual conference with a day of Capitol Hill lobbying."In standard media
acc=unts, the resolution <http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?r112:516FE2-004=1> is being described as an attempt
to move the "red line&=uot;--the line that, if crossed by Iran, could trigger a US military strik=. The Obama
administration has said that what's unacceptable is for Iran t= develop a nuclear weapon. This resolution
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