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Go Home Have We Learned Nothing From the Nineties? Syria is the...

WORLD MARCH 22, 2012

Have We Learned Nothing From the Nineties? Syria is the Balkans All Over Again

As the international community continues to debate high-minded principles of national sovereignty, Syria continues its downward spiral into unmitigated chaos. The bitter truth is that the longer this situation continues, the deeper the scars will be once the nation has been freed of Bashar Al-Assad. Increasingly, crimes against humanity are being committed by both sides, as the Free Syria Army struggles to incorporate and maintain control over its armed rebel brigades.

But as harrowing as the details of the current situation are, the basic principles at stake are very clear. Indeed, the United States, and other countries in the West, ought to reflect on the Syrian conflict’s strong resemblance to the situation in Yugoslavia in the 1990s. That would clarify, if the events on the ground have not already, that the international community has a responsibility to intervene. More than that, it would underscore that the main source of regret, years from now, will be that it delayed so long in doing so. 

The most obvious, and sobering, comparison that presents itself is between Bashar Al Assad and former Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic. Both are guilty, of course, of wide-scale crimes against humanity. Indeed, the military strategies of these two dictators also bear strong resemblances to one another. Assad’s siege of Homs clearly recalls Milosevic’s bombardment of Sarajevo.

But these two men also shared a similarly cynical political sensibility: Any and all ideologies were subordinate to their desire to establish personal power. Both had a record of supporting unity when it was in their interests, only to switch to supporting virulent sectarian nationalism when circumstances changed. In short, they are leaders who acquire influence in the least sustainable of fashions, by constantly manipulating their own people. 

There are also more personal resemblances between the two leaders. Heads of state who met with Milosevic leader frequently noted that he had a mercurial personality, which fluctuated between uncompromising public positions and a relaxed and removed private demeanor. Bashar al-Assad seems to have a similar cast of mind. Leaked emails sent to and from Bashar’s personal account that were acquired by The Guardian show that, in his consultations with his small circle of advisors, he often flip-flops on his positions without much semblance of independent thought or decision-making.

(Those emails also show a disconcerting similarity in their cultural tastes: Both dictators seemed to eschew high culture for (sometimes crude) popular art. Milosevic’s colleagues have recalled his affinity for Disney comics and Frank Sinatra tunes, while Bashar’s emails show him to be a fan of Chris Brown, LMFAO, and Harry Potter.) 

The Free Syria Army, for its part, invites parallels to the Kosovo Liberation Army. Like Milosevic once did with the KLA, Bashar has tried to label the FSA a terrorist group. The United States should have the foresight, as it did then, to resist such propaganda.

That is not to say that any of these groups are entirely innocent: Indeed, the KLA committed deplorable acts in the 1990s, like enlisting children, just as the FSA has been recently accused of committing crimes in a report by Human Rights Watch. But this serves only to highlight the importance of international assistance to the FSA, in order to ensure that they comply with international human rights standards and war conventions. Of course, the considerations here are not only humanitarian, but strategic: The reason that the KLA was militarily successful in the 1990s was that it received military, intelligence, and tactical assistance from Germany, and possibly from the intelligence agencies of the United States, Britain, and Switzerland.

Fortunately, prominent U.S. congressmen are rising to the occasion now with their support for the FSA, as they did then with the KLA. Representative Dana Rohrabacher was outspoken in opposing ground troops in Kosovo, but he passionately advocated arming the KLA. Senator John McCain, for his part, has gone even further in his statements regarding the FSA, saying that arming and supporting them is necessary, but insufficient at this point. McCain has suggested that, “at the request of the Syrian National Council, the Free Syrian Army, local coordinating committees inside the country, the United States should lead an international effort to protect key population centers in Syria, especially in the north, through air strikes on Assad’s forces.” This is the type of leadership that history justly tends to reward.

There is, however, one potential similarity that we should desperately hope does not recur: further delay. President Bill Clinton’s notorious reluctance to act in the Balkans came at the expense of many lives. Unfortunately, President Obama has displayed a similar reticence toward Syria. Now, as then, oppressed populations are being asked to invest their hopes in a U.N. envoy. It is at times like these that history’s tendency to repeat itself has the perverse and horrific effect of forcing us to relive a nightmare. 

Radwan Ziadeh is a spokesperson for the Syrian National Council and executive director of the Syrian Center for Political and Strategic Studies in Washington.

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27 comments

TNR has yet another new explanation for why we need to involve ourselves in yet another Middle East war? Even while it is lamenting the chaos we will leave behind in Afghanistan? The argument that one need only change the names and Syria is Serbia is not at all convincing. Pass.

- roidubouloi

March 22, 2012 at 12:21am

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Agree with roid on this front. The analogies the author draws have the resolution of a colouring book. Yes, like McCain and many others, I would like for this mess to be over and for Assad to be out. But if we can't do it by peeling Russia off of Syria and leaving Syria in a better end-state than current Libya, then I don't see how we can be a part of it. The worst thing is that Russia seems to know innately that this is our betting line and, to this point, hasn't lost much credibility by hanging out at "Free Parking". The next corner stop is "Go to jail", so as long as there are no direct repercussions to them, they can watch Assad slowly and painfully shut the window of intervention.

- chaitless

March 22, 2012 at 12:52am

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The comparison between Syria and the former Yugoslavia is absurd on its face, not least because the latter had actual, if new, states with armies rather than undefined factions; and a large part of the population was Westernized with a real affinity for and experience in countries like Germany, France, and the US. One thing most Syrians have always agreed on is hatred for the US and Israel, which many see as undifferentiated. If you liked Iraq 2004-2006, you'll love Syria any time in the foreseeable future.

- Robert Powell

March 22, 2012 at 6:23am

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The conflict in Syria is a civil war; the conflict in Bosnia and Herzegovina was not. Sure, the Serbs believed the latter conflict was a civil war (what else would the aggressor say), but the Bosniaks and, most importantly, western human rights organizations believed it was a war of Serbian and Croatian aggression (the Bosnian Serb army was under the de facto command of the Yugoslav army), the latter view confirmed by UN recognition of an independent Bosnia-Herzegovina. Do such distinctions matter? Yes, if the case for intervention is being predicated on similarities to prior conflicts.

- rayward

March 22, 2012 at 7:34am

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How wonderful for Radwan to have learned such a valuable lesson from Yugoslavia. Apparently the lessons of Iraq and Afghanistan aren't worth looking into just yet. "If you liked Iraq 2004-2006, you'll love Syria any time in the foreseeable future" Great line, Robert.

- Tristan

March 22, 2012 at 8:17am

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If Syrians hate USA, why are those opposing eye doctor Basher al Assad for American help and military intervention? Well if you use Greek syllogisms, you conclude that rebels in Syria are not syrians. As a matter of fact nobody has been able to identify the rebels in Syria. All sources describe them as many groups w/o any unified leadership. It is imperative that TNR should form a new committee to discuss the identification of the rebels in Syria. And another for Afghanistan.

- JAIMECHUCH

March 22, 2012 at 9:33am

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Should have read asking for support and military help from the USA.

- JAIMECHUCH

March 22, 2012 at 9:35am

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Off topic, but one tiny bit of good news this morning after a heatbreaking tragedy: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/23/world/europe/mohammed-merah-toulouse-shooting-suspect-french-police-standoff.html?_r=1&hp

- Tristan

March 22, 2012 at 9:40am

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I don't pay to read the NYT. I prefer the Washington Post http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/mohammed-merah-shooting-suspect-wants-to-die-fighting-official-says/2012/03/22/gIQAJkYCTS_story_1.html

- JAIMECHUCH

March 22, 2012 at 9:50am

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As a very small aside, Milošević's name is Milošević. Computers can now deal with this.

- jonrysh

March 22, 2012 at 10:47am

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"How wonderful for Radwan to have learned such a valuable lesson from Yugoslavia. Apparently the lessons of Iraq and Afghanistan aren't worth looking into just yet." Exactly. Reluctance to engage in military interventions abroad is a virtue in a President, not a fault. Obama has demonstrated that he *is* willing to intervene--see Libya--but only once he is satisfied that there is a clear path to accomplish a desired goal. Rushing into war without knowing exactly what your objective is, or how you plan to achieve it, is criminal folly.

- Dausuul

March 22, 2012 at 11:20am

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I agree with pretty much everyone here. Robert Powell's last sentence hits the bullseye. The analogy in Ziadeh's piece is so weak it's almost on a respirator. It's not at all clear whether Syria itself is Serbia, Yugoslavia, or the wider region, in his perspective. I'm not forgetting the savage killings and mass ethnic cleansing of the Yugoslavian wars, but there were internationally recognized states there that could be dealt with, either already in existence or potentially so, with ethnic and historical boundaries that could could conceivably justify a new territorial entity. The Muslim population of Bosnia was the victim in the 1990s, rather than the perpetrator, but in any case they represented an old southeastern European version of Islam that had possibly less problems with secular modernity than the Orthodox Church does. If there was a religious component to the Yugoslavian wars, it was more of a refraction of ethnic and national animosities, rather than the other way around. Bosnia might be a closer analogy but it's still unconvincing.

- ironyroad

March 22, 2012 at 12:24pm

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Oh, please mentally delete last sentence -- I forgot to. It doesn't belong in the comment as it stands.

- ironyroad

March 22, 2012 at 12:26pm

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Irony, Robert, et. al, great posts (as per usual). I can't pass by this from the article though: "(Those emails also show a disconcerting similarity in their cultural tastes: Both dictators seemed to eschew high culture for (sometimes crude) popular art. Milosevic’s colleagues have recalled his affinity for Disney comics and Frank Sinatra tunes, while Bashar’s emails show him to be a fan of Chris Brown, LMFAO, and Harry Potter.)" If only they were patrons of the Met, all could be forgiven...

- Yossarian

March 22, 2012 at 1:20pm

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The Syrian National Council is dominated by the Muslim Brotherhood and other Sunni Islamists. It is sponsored by the Islamist regime in Turkey. Why should we help them?

- amidut

March 22, 2012 at 1:20pm

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Halas. The Saudis are, or will be, providing arms to the rebels, whoever they are. Erdogan the Turkish Islamist is verbally, only verbally, opposing the eye doctor Basher al Assad. Erdogan prefers to attack, verbally mind you, Israel; his four drones were recently repaired by Israel; and now he will continue killing Kurds. And oihy oihy, he was testy when France recognized the massacre of Armenians by the Turks as a crime against humanity. Turkish coffee with baklava ain't bad. Belly dancers neither. And as Mel Brooks used to say in Spring for the infamous one, a little piece of Greece and a little piece of Turkey.

- JAIMECHUCH

March 22, 2012 at 3:24pm

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Halas. The Saudis are, or will be, providing arms to the rebels, whoever they are. Erdogan the Turkish Islamist is verbally, only verbally, opposing the eye doctor Basher al Assad. Erdogan prefers to attack, verbally mind you, Israel; his four drones were recently repaired by Israel; and now he will continue killing Kurds. And oihy oihy, he was testy when France recognized the massacre of Armenians by the Turks as a crime against humanity. Turkish coffee with baklava ain't bad. Belly dancers neither. And as Mel Brooks used to say in Spring for the infamous one, a little piece of Greece and a little piece of Turkey.

- JAIMECHUCH

March 22, 2012 at 3:24pm

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Or was it Charlie Chaplin in the great dictator.

- JAIMECHUCH

March 22, 2012 at 3:28pm

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Or when Turkey was quarreling with Israel about Gaza apologies, and the Israelis were not returning their repaired drones. Erdogan or his 2nd in command, was telling Israel not to mix business, already paid apparently, with superficial feelings. And then Erdogan, back from his chemotherapy, sits down with the Hamas top honcho, gives him all the sympathy/support and refuses him to settle in Ankara or Istanbul, now that he has fled Damascus. What is going on here? Just Islamic business as usual. Can you imagine USA or Israel getting involved militarily in Syria or Iran. Let the Sunnis and Turkey and the UN do it. Let them do the right thing. BTW, Hamas has 10,000 missiles, and Hezbollah has 55,000 missiles. Let them help the Syrian Sunni rebels. That will teach them , both Syria and Iran, it is not such a meshugash.

- JAIMECHUCH

March 22, 2012 at 3:48pm

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In the meantime Syria receives military advise/assistance from Iran and buys arms from Russia. India, China and Japan receive 20% of their oil , or so from Iran. India just recently signed a new commercial agreement with Iran to increase commerce from the present 12 billion USD to 25 billion USD ,if I am right, in future. in the meantime they were paying with rice. Now Iran was asking to be paid in gold. Yes the USA and Israel have been playing the role of patsies . BTW. India, China, Russia, Japan are having big trade with Israel. I hope BHO and his smart Sec of State are aware of all of what is going on. BTW, who makes the drones? How much they cost? Who profits from them? There was an article somewhere, it passed me. They ain't cheap. Israel has a gigantic one that can reach.., you guessed right...Iran. Is that fueled with Egyptian oil? It appears that we have a whatshmacallit? A dysfunctional family.

- JAIMECHUCH

March 22, 2012 at 4:10pm

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In the meantime at any minute the king du boulois will bring up the legality of accelerated construction of liberated territories. Done all by Palestinian construction workers paid at 1.4 billion USD. The 100 million USD collected taxes are given to the Palestinian Authority so they can survive. Is not as complicated as Mathematics Chaos and Fractals, that I am starting to study. TNR has to organize a symposium with the subject Patsies Their Use And Misuse. And now we are in Spring here and in the Middle East. It was 2011, now it is 2012.

- JAIMECHUCH

March 22, 2012 at 4:24pm

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It is called ADD/ADHD , attention deficit disorder. You read one thing you understand another. Most of the time you have your face right up your ass. For old farts is also called dementia, but that is putting it up mildly. But basically is an ignorant schlimazel spilling the soup on a schlemiel.

- JAIMECHUCH

March 22, 2012 at 4:41pm

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The last time I looked at a map, Syria was located in the Middle East, which right now is a tinderbox and slowly turning into a proxy war. Russian ships are docked there providing "materiel" and also has a contingent of Russian military "advisers" in country. China and Russia have blocked the Security Council at the UN on what to do in Syria. The last time they acted as proxies was in a little sleepy country in Southeast Asia called Vietnam. Let's take this crisis one day at time before we commit yourselves to another quagmire, as if Iraq and Afghanistan weren't enough sobering object lessons for us to adopt a cautious foreign policy when it comes to intervention in foreign countries. To all the writers and editors at TNR who want to intervene in Syria: perhaps you should form your own company of committed soldiers modeled after the Lincoln Brigade in the Spanish Civil War and sneak into Syria to fight along with the rebels. I would certainly denote to this cause. Just set up the account. I'm just dying to whip out my credit card. You could call ourselves The Policy Wonks Brigade.

- rewiredhogdog

March 22, 2012 at 9:03pm

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The reluctance of the administration to flex its military muscles to help topple the Assad gangsters is understood due to the presidential campaign and its focus on jobs and the economy. Also, the populist distaste for another military adventure in Syria after the defeat in Iraq and Afghanistan is understood from its simplistic perspective. As you all recall, the Iraq experience was very popular and very wrong. Intervention is Syria is unpopular but is the absolutely correct and timely course of action. National security and international leadership are not beauty contests. The US does not want to topple Assad because the US does not truly support democracy.

- freesyrian

March 22, 2012 at 9:07pm

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With all due respect freesyrian, the Assad regime has been an overt enemy of the US from the beginning. There's nothing many of us would like better than to see it overthrown. The problem is, Syria as I'm sure you know is a real country, with a real military that's equipped with the latest Russian gear and apparently still quite willing to defend the regime. We don't really know what would be the consequences of an invasion, which is what it would take to topple the regime, but from the looks of things these consequences would most likely involve tremendous destruction and loss of life all around. Then comes the really unknown part--what happens next? Again, the likely consequences would almost certainly be dire for years into the future, with a potentially catastrophic outcome in both human and geopolitical terms. This is not just about the election. I've always been a big fan of the Powell Doctrine--great name. It stipulated that before committing US troops to combat we should have a clear, acheivable goal; good knowledge of who's who (the enemy, allies, the population); the clear, informed support of the American people and their representatives in Congress; and the determination to use overwhelming force to acheive the goal as quickly as possible. As near as I can tell, not a single one of those condiditons could be met in the case of Syria.

- Robert Powell

March 23, 2012 at 5:54am

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Every year, more people are being murdered in Mexico and parts of the USA in the 'war on drugs' than in Syria. and, until all hand-wrining writers on Syria start including the battle over offshore natural gas, which is part of what has drawn Russia and Turkey into naval positions in the eastern Med, well, enough, Syria is NOT post-Tito Yugoslavia. Amazing that people get paid to "work" on dredging for historical metaphors...my TNR word limit expires.

- K2K

March 23, 2012 at 11:51am

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This is something that was under discussion last year in connection with Libya: where are the demonstrations protesting the repression and violence of the Syrian government? Where are the rallies in London and Paris and Rome, demanding Assad stop the terror and the killing? Where are the delegations of Syrian-Americans to their senators and congresspeople, appealing for some kind of action? I don't see 'em.

- ironyroad

March 23, 2012 at 12:29pm

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