PATRICK
COCKBURN
Sunday 6
September 2015 / http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/isis-are-threatening-to-capture-a-vital-highway-in-syria--the-loss-of-which-could-push-millions-of-refugees-out-of-governmentheld-areas-10488379.html
Exclusive: Though the Assad
regime may not be about to collapse, any sign that it is weakening could
convince millions of Syrians that it is time to leave the country
Islamic
State (Isis) forces in Syria
are threatening to capture a crucial road, the loss of which could touch off a
panic and the exodus of several million refugees from government areas, in
addition to the four million who have already fled. Isis fighters have advanced
recently to within 22 miles
of the M5 highway, the only major route connecting government-held territory in
Damascus to the
north and west of the country.
The
beginnings of the latest crisis for the government of President Bashar al-Assad
came with the capture by Isis on 6 August of the strategically placed, largely
Christian town of al-Qaryatain, north-east of Damascus . Since then, Islamist units have
advanced further west, capturing two villages closer to the M5. The Syrian Army
has so far failed to retake Qaryatain, where Isis
has demolished the St Elian monastery, parts of which were 1,500 years old.
The four
million Syrians who are already refugees mostly came from opposition or
contested areas that have been systematically bombarded by government aircraft
and artillery, making them uninhabitable. But the majority of the 17 million
Syrians still in the country live in government-controlled areas now threatened
by Isis . These people are terrified of Isis
occupying their cities, towns and villages because of its reputation for mass
executions, ritual mutilation and rape against those not obedient to its
extreme variant of Sunni Islam.
Half the
Syrian population has already been displaced inside or outside the country, so
accurate figures are hard to estimate,
but among those particularly at risk are the Alawites (2.6 million), the Shia
heterodox sect that has provided the ruling elite of Syria since the 1960s, the
Christians (two million), the Syrian Kurds (2.2 million), and Druze (650,000)
in addition to millions of Sunni Arabs associated with the Syrian government
and its army. The forced flight of these communities could swiftly double the
total number of refugees to eight million.
Government forces are showing signs of
being fought out after four years of war and have recently suffered a series of
defeats at the hands of Isis, which
captured Palmyra
in May, and by a coalition led by the al-Qaeda affiliate, Jabhat al-Nusra,
which took Idlib city in March. But it would be a far more serious defeat for
President Assad if Isis cuts the M5, which is
seen as “the spinal column of the regime”. The government has never lost
control of it for an extended period, though the road has been closed to
civilian traffic by snipers hiding in the ruins of north Damascus , where whole districts have been
blown up or bulldozed by the government. On two occasions, Nusra fighters
seized the ancient Christian village
of Maaloula , just off the M5, forcing
inhabitants to escape to Damascus .
Governments and people in the EU have had
to pay horrified attention to the plight of refugees in the past few days
because of pictures of the drowned body of Aylan al-Kurdi. But there is scant
attention to the deteriorating security situation in Syria that could produce millions
more migrants fleeing for their lives.
The UNHCR says that Syria has “become the world’s top source country
of refugees, overtaking Afghanistan ,
which had held this position for more than three decades”. Out of every four
new refugees in the world today, one will be a Syrian. Commenting on this
exodus, and the likelihood that it will be exacerbated if Isis cuts the M5
highway, the online humanitarian news and analysis publication, IRIN, says that
“Europe ’s current migration crisis is
essentially the arrival of the Syrian crisis on European shores.”
Unfortunately, European concern about
ending the refugee crisis has not energised efforts to end the war in Syria which
shows every sign of getting worse. Assad’s
forces are getting weaker and he admits to a shortage of troops, but
territory lost by him is usually occupied by Isis ,
Jabhat al-Nusra or Ahrar al-Sham, all Salafi-jihadi movements with the same
violent and intolerant ideology.
Even former advocates of the “moderate”
Syrian rebels, say that today the armed opposition is dominated by extreme
fundamentalists. Their dominance makes it impossible to create any
power-sharing government in Damascus
that would be key to ending the war.
The Damascus
government and its army are unlikely to implode as happened in Libya or northern Iraq , but people in government
areas are understandably frightened by recent military reverses. Many argue
that they and their families should get out while they can. Living in
government areas does not always mean that they are in favour of Assad
remaining in power, but they fear that the alternative to the present regime
will be far worse. Isis deliberately foments
terror by showing videos of its atrocities to create panic among soldiers and
civilians, and there is also the knowledge that the Syrian Army will bombard
any place from which it retreats.
David Cameron said last week: “We think
that the most important thing is to try to bring peace and stability to that
part of the world.” But in practice, Britain ,
the US , Gulf monarchies and Turkey have
exacerbated the Syrian conflict by supporting an armed opposition that from an
early stage was led by extreme jihadis. As early as August 2012 a Defense Intelligence
Agency report states that “the Salafist, the Muslim Brotherhood, and AQI [Al-
Qaeda in Iraq ] are the major
forces driving the insurgency in Syria .”
Likely British participation in the US-led
air campaign against Isis in Syria
will make little difference unless it is directed against Isis
when it is attacking the Syrian Army and is co-ordinated with its ground
forces. These tactics worked effectively when the US
collaborated with the Syrian Kurdish YPG militia to win battles at Kobani and
Hassakah, but the US
is so far opposed to doing anything that will be seen as helping the Assad government. A price for such aid
might be an insistence that the Syrian air force stop barrel bombing civilian
areas.
Surprisingly, even the fall of Mosul in Iraq
to Isis in the summer of 2014 and the seizure of more than half of Syria by Isis over the past year, has not
prevented US and European leaders underestimating Isis .
They have claimed that it is past its peak, wishful thinking that should have
been deflated in May when Isis took Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province in Iraq , and Palmyra
in Syria
five days later. So far neither the Syrian nor the Iraqi armies have launched
counter-attacks capable of retaking either city.
The Assad government will not necessarily
collapse overnight, but any sign that it is weakening will convince millions of
Syrians that it is time to leave the country. Despite the deepening refugee
crisis brought about by the continuing civil war in Syria ,
governments in Britain , the US , France and elsewhere are doing
little to help end it. Half the Syrian people have already been displaced from
their homes and millions more may soon be desperately trying to flee their
country. The Syrian war and European refugee crisis are part and parcel of the
same thing.
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