Syria in a Week (2 January 2018)

Syria in a Week (2 January 2018)

The following is a selection by our editors of significant weekly developments in Syria. Depending on events, each issue will include anywhere from four to eight briefs. This series is produced in both Arabic and English in partnership between Salon Syria and Jadaliyya. Suggestions and blurbs may be sent to info@salonsyria.com.


New Defense, Industry, and Information Ministers in Cabinet Reshuffle

1 January 2018

The first decree of 2018 named Major General Ali Abdullah Ayoub as the Minister of Defense (previously the Chief of Staff for the army and armed forces), Mazen Ali Yousef as the Minister of Industry (previously President of the Central Authority for Financial Supervision), and Imad Abdullah Sara as the Minister of Information (previously the Head of the General Authority for Radio and Television).

Three Notes:

First: Major Gen. Ali Ayoub is the third Defense Minister since the start of the Syrian crisis in 2011. He succeeds Major Gen. Jasem Al-Fraij who became Minister of Defense after the assassination of Major Gen. Daoud Rajiha (a Christian) in the “crisis unit” incident in July 2012. Al-Fraij had failed in recapturing the village of Al-Rahjan, his own hometown, in the countryside of Hama province. The reshuffle also coincided with the retreat of Syrian government forces from the Vehicles Administration post, east of Damascus, after confrontations with opposition factions, including “Islamic Ahrar Al-Sham.” Ayoub is an Alawite from the Syrian Coast, whereas Al-Fraij is a Sunni from middle Syria.

Second: According to opposition sources, the appointment of Sara as Information Minister came weeks after Prime Minister Imad Khamis’s decision to relieve him from his duties as Head of the General Authority for Radio and Television. However, pressures from the presidential palace restored Sara’s position and he has become the Minister of Information.

Third: This government change comes weeks before a conference for Syrian dialogue in Sochi at the end of this month, which is scheduled to address the formation of a committee to draft a new constitution.

 

Damascus Cham Holding Company Signs Two Hundred and Fifty Million Dollar Contracts

30 December 2017

Damascus Cham Holding Company has signed contracts with businessman Mazen Tarazi valued at one-hundred and eight billion Syrian pounds. The contracts include the investment of the central mall in Marota City (in the orchards of Mazzeh neighborhood in Damascus) on an area of one hundred and twenty thousand km2 and the investment of six buildings on an area of twenty-six thousand km2. In an unprecedented manner, the investor’s share will be greater than the “public authority’s” share, as he will receive fifty-one percent, whereas Damascus Cham Holding company will receive forty-nine percent of the total value of the two hundred and fifty million dollar contracts. It is worth mentioning that Damascus Cham Holding Company is a private, limited liability company established in accordance with Decree Number Nineteen in 2015, which authorizes it to run properties belonging to Damascus Governorate.

 

Number of Syrian Refugees in Lebanon Drops

27 December 2017

The number of Syrian refugees registered in Lebanon has dropped to less than one million (approximately nine-hundred and ninety-eight thousand) for the first time since 2014, as per the spokesperson of the UNHCR. Syrian refugees are distributed in the region, according to the UNHCR, as follows: sixty-two percent in Turkey, eighteen percent in Lebanon, twelve percent in Jordan, five percent in Iraq, and two percent in Egypt. It should be mentioned that Lebanon has stopped registering Syrian refugees since early 2015.

 

Security Council Adopts a Resolution on Providing Humanitarian Aid to Syria

19 December 2017

The Security Council adopted Resolution 2393 concerning the authorization of access of cross-border humanitarian aid for those in need inside Syrian, with twelve votes in favor and three abstentions. The resolution comes as a twelve-month extension for Resolution 2165. The Swedish ambassador welcomed the adoption of the resolution stating that it represented a vital humanitarian life-line for three million people inside the country. The new resolution requested that the General Secretary conduct, within six months, an independent review of the humanitarian cross-border operations that included recommendations on how to strengthen the Monitoring Mechanism of the United Nations, taking into account the views of relevant parties including the Syrian authorities, concerned neighboring countries, and humanitarian agencies.

This extension comes after many organizations working in cross-border humanitarian relief expressed their concern over the potential of this mechanism’s cessation under Russian pressure, especially after the expansion of the regime’s military control last year.

 

 

Syria Media Roundup (December 14-31)

Syria Media Roundup (December 14-31)

[This is a roundup of news articles and other materials circulating on Syria and reflects a wide variety of opinions. It does not reflect the views of the Media Roundup Editors or of Salon Syria. You may send your own recommendations for inclusion in each week’s roundup to info@SalonSyria.com by Monday night of every week.]

Inside Syria

Assad: Syria is ‘Looking East’ to Russia for Economic, Cultural Relations (19 December 2017) Syrian president speaks on trade relationship with Moscow and Russian-led efforts to resolve the Syrian crisis.

Local brews make comeback in Syria (19 December 2017) When war broke out in 2011, Syria’s two main breweries halted production. However, as fighting has subsided across much of the country this year, a new pair of local lagers has hit the markets.

Syria Condemns U.S. Veto Against UNSC Draft Resolution on Jerusalem (20 December 2017) The U.S. blocked a U.N. resolution calling for the withdrawal of Washington’s recognition of the city as Israel’s capital.

Salvation Govt Bans Entry of Russian Goods to Opposition Areas (20 December 2017) Statement by the Idleb-based government contradicts border administration’s move allowing the entry of Russian products

Aleppo city, one year after the final battle (21 December 2017) “As the December 22 anniversary of the end of the battle approaches, Syria Direct spoke with nine Aleppo residents both inside and outside the city. Residents inside describe a city stitched back together at the seams after a years-long divide, but still disjointed. Others evacuated one year ago are now marking a painful first anniversary of what they consider exile. All are working to rebuild their lives.”

Regional and International Perspectives

Russian soldiers in Damascus: politics isn’t everything (4 December 2017) While politics is the reason for Russian military presence in Syria, the relationship between Russian soldiers and Syrian civilians is not fundamentally about politics

How Syria’s White Helmets became victims of an online propaganda machine (18 December 2017) The Russia-backed campaign to link the volunteer rescuers with al-Qaida exposes how conspiracy theories take root: ‘It’s like a factory’

Restructuring the State: Possible Power-Sharing Agreements for Syria (20 December 2017) As world powers continue diplomatic efforts aimed at reaching a settlement to the conflict in Syria, Lebanese political science expert Imad Salamey discusses the essential elements of possible power-sharing arrangements in the war-torn country.

China Eyes Role Rebuilding Syria While Putin Spars With West (21 December 2017) Chinese firms see ‘huge business potential’ in reconstruction. U.S., EU withhold funds as they seek to keep pressure on Assad.

Pentagon: Russia intentionally violating Syria conflict agreement (21 December 2017) The Defense Department is accusing Russia of intentionally violating an agreement meant to avoid military accidents in the skies over Syria following an incident last week involving U.S. and Russian fighter jets.

What Went Wrong in Syria? (21 December 2017) In this edition of The Interview, Fair Observer talks to Ambassador Robert Ford about what went wrong with the US effort in Syria and what is next in the unresolved tragedy of the Syrian Civil War.

Insurgents Again: The Islamic State’s Calculated Reversion to Attrition in the Syria-Iraq Border Region and Beyond (21 December 2017) Hassan Hassan writes: “The border region between Iraq and Syria divided by the Euphrates River was long expected to be the Islamic State’s last stand, but many of its fighters there melted away instead.”

Is the Assad Regime Preparing for War Against the SDF? (21 December 2017) Syria’s deputy foreign minister recently conflated the Western-backed group with ISIS during a television interview.

Assad Regime Still Reliant on Fractions of the Sunni Bourgeoisie (21 December 2017) Joseph Daher argues “the complex network of relations between the power elite, and fractions of the Sunni bourgeoisie, has remained part of the regime’s tools to dominate society and build loyalties among this sector.”

Syria war winds down but tangled map belies conflict ahead (22 December 2017) Zeina Karam comments on how the Syrian war is winding down on one level, but with no foreseeable future for ending the violent future.

Russia finds neutral zones in Syria essential but tricky (22 December 2017) Moscow hopes to focus soon on rebuilding Syria’s shattered infrastructure, but first must help restore stability, which could prove much more difficult.

Policy and Reports

Al-Qaeda versus ISIS: Competing Jihadist Brands in the Middle East  (November 2017) By the close of 2017, al- Qaeda’s rebranding has successfully allowed the group to expand its footprint in a number of Middle Eastern civil wars at the cost of its central authority. ISIS, meanwhile, has lost most of its territory but retains the ideological strength to inspire attacks abroad.

A Bureaucracy of Violence in Syria’s Military Intelligence-Run Prisons (20 December 2017) Syrian military intelligence-run detention centers are responsible for some of the worst crimes committed by the security apparatus. Their highly bureaucratic operations, however, have helped build bodies of evidence against high-level officials. 

In absence of fresh military conflict, journalist killings decline again (21 December 2017) Iraq and Syria are the “deadliest” for reporters this year. At least 15 journalists were killed while covering the ongoing conflicts in these two Middle Eastern countries.

Deeply Talks: Diplomacy and Deadlock in Syria (21 December 2017) As international powers push for a settlement for the Syrian conflict, Syria Deeply talks with AUB Senior Fellow Rami Khoury and Al-Monitor Russia Coverage editor Max Suchkov about the prospects and challenges of a peace deal.

Women Face Rape as Weapon of War in Deir-ez-Zor (22 December 2017) At least five women raped by pro-government forces and Kurdish militias in recent weeks, local monitoring group reports

The Shifting Role of Women in Syria’s Economy (22 December 2017) The Syrian war has transformed women’s role in the workforce, giving way to opportunities previously reserved for men. As women take on more responsibility and autonomy, for many opportunity does not mean equality.

Congress uses Syria aid funding as Assad leverage (28 December 2017) As the war in Syria cools down, the cold war to fund Syria’s reconstruction projects is heating up and Washington is hoping to use US assistance as economic leverage to force political concessions from Damascus.

How the Security Council Failed the Syria Chemical Weapons Investigators and Victims (29 December 2017) Edmond Mulet, the former head of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons-United Nations Joint Investigative Mechanism, write about how the Security Council Failed the Syria Chemical Weapons Investigators and Victims.

Documentaries, Special Reports, and Other Media

Syria: Eastern Ghouta Situation Overview – Rural Damascus, Syria  (November 2017) “Access to Eastern Ghouta improved slightly in November. Commercial movement into the area resumed, after no commercial deliveries reportedly took place in September or October. A number of humanitarian aid deliveries took place, and aid that entered in October was distributed. However, these deliveries were insufficient to counter the unprecedented price increases in Eastern Ghouta. In November, a standard food basket was reportedly 911% more expensive than in nearby areas not considered besieged or hard-to-reach”

A “Nation in Pieces”: Views from Syrians in Exile (30 November 2017) This report showcases the voices of Syrians who left because of the war, for whom national belonging is a complex sentiment. Extended narrative interviews over the course of three months with Syrians living in Lebanon, Europe, and the United States reveal a multitude of viewpoints but a common conviction that there is no place for them in their homeland’s future.

Illustrations, Graphic Journalism Create Alternative Narratives and Historical Documents (6 December 2017) Notwithstanding the overload of photographs especially through social media, there has in recent years also been a growing use of illustration to raise awareness, inform audiences and to tell stories. NGOs have been making use of this much more artisanal medium, to capture and recount Syrian refugees’ lives. An article by Nathalie Rosa Bucher.

The Arabic version of this article can be found here: الرسوم والصحافة التصويرية تمثل روايات بديلة ووثائق تاريخية

Mom Don’t Worry I’ll Be a Martyr Soon (December 15 2017) The story of Malek, whose mother never wanted him to join a pro-regime paramilitary force.

The Arabic version of this article can be found here: وجه مالك المفقود (4)

مقال مصور: الغوطة الشرقية تموت ببطء والعالم يكتفي بالمشاهدة (December 20 2017)صوّر الناشط الإعلامي أسامة العمري، أحد سكان دوما، شوارع عاصمة الغوطة الشرقية وتحدث مع الأهالي الذين يستعدون لشتائهم الخامس تحت الحصار.

Roundtable: Has Bashar al-Assad won the war in Syria? (December 22 2017) More than six years of the Syrian civil war have changed the country – and the region – forever. Even if President Assad remains in power, he’ll be ruling a very different society; a nation divided. In the face of monumental violence and huge international pressure – what – or indeed who, has managed to keep him from being toppled? How secure does he now look?

Samar Yazbek’s Syrian Voices a Contribution to History  (December 25 2017) Gareth Chantler writes about Samar Yazbek’s ‘A Woman in the Crossfire: Diaries of the Syrian Revolution’ as a contribution to the history of the Syrian Uprising.

Berlin’s Syrian poet: ‘More than just a refugee’ (December 29 2017) Acclaimed poet Widad Nabi speaks about her journey from Aleppo to Germany, the struggles she faced, and the power of writing.

Maps

Syria Conflict Mapping Project Reports

Weekly Conflict Summary- December 14-20, 2017.

The ISIS-held pocket in northern Hama governorate continues to grow, with both ISIS and government forces advancing northward into the Idleb pocket. Though political conflict continues between the opposition’s alternate civilian structures – the Salvation Government and the Syrian Interim Government (SIG), armed opposition groups in the Idleb pocket have begun to implement elements of a reconciliation agreement. In southern Syria, fighting has erupted throughout much of Daraa and Quneitra governorates, with government forces advancing in the Beit Jinn pocket near the Golan Heights. In response to mounting violence, opposition armed groups in the south have formed a new joint operations room.

Arabic Links:

للاجئون السوريون في روسيا يستميتون لتحصيل حقوقهم (December 12 2017)ينشر هذا النص ضمن ملف يتناول تداعيات التدخل الروسي في الحرب السورية على المستوى اﻻجتماعي واﻻقتصادي في كلا البلدين، وهو ينشر بالتعاون مع أوبن ديموكراسي روسيا.

الملابس المستعملة بديل عن الحطب والمازوت في شمال غرب سوريا  (December 12 2017) يلجأ أهالي مناطق شمال غرب سوريا، الخاضعة لسيطرة المعارضة، إلى حرق الملابس المستعملة للحصول على التدفئة كبديل أقل تكلفة من الحطب والمازوت، في الشتاء.

الأكراد يكرّسون الفدراليّة بدعمها في انتخابات محلّيّة(December 13 2017) يستعدّ الأكراد في سوريا إلى تشكيل اتّحاد فدراليّ لشمال سوريا بإجراء انتخابات محلّيّة، تشمل البلديّات ومجالس المحافظة، في جغرافيا تسيطر عليها قوّات سوريا الديمقراطيّة يقودها مقاتلون أكراد. بينما يعلن مجلس سوريا الديمقراطيّة عن مشاركة أحزاب مختلفة ومكوّنات متعدّدة في الانتخابات، ويغيب عن المشاركة المجلس الوطنيّ الكرديّ كطرف مناهض للسلطات المحلّيّة، مع اعتراض من قبل المعارضة السوريّة التي تتّهم حزب الاتّحاد الديمقراطيّ بالهيمنة على المنطقة، وبالتزامن مع رفض إقليميّ في موقف تركيا التي هدّدت أخيراً باقتحام عفرين في ريف حلب، عدا لقاءات تركيّة تجري مع روسيا وإيران لوقف التمدّد الكرديّ.

The English version of this article can be found here: Syrian Kurds press on with elections despite divisions

جدل التعليم في زمن الحرب السورية (December 14 2017) في هذا التقرير يرصد معتز الحناوي وباسيليوس زينو الجدل الذي دار حول المناهج الدراسية الجديدة وتداعياته وردود الأفعال في سورية والإعلام.

درع الفرات: مجلس مارع العسكريّ يفتتح معبراً تجاريّاً مع قوّات سوريا الديمقراطيّة (December 14 2017) افتتح المجلس العسكريّ في مدينة مارع الواقعة في منطقة درع الفرات في ريف حلب الشماليّ، معبراً تجاريّاً مع المناطق التي تسيطر عليها قوّات سوريا الديمقراطيّة في جنوب شرق المدينة في 1 كانون الأوّل/ديسمبر 2017، ويسمّى المعبر التجاريّ باسم “معبر الطويحينة”، وذلك نسبة للبلدة التي يقع في القرب منها. ويفصل المعبر يفصل بين قرى يسيطر عليها الجيش الحر في درع الفرات وبين قرى تسيطر عليها قوات سوريا الديمقراطية.

The English version of this article can be found here: FSA opens new business crossing in northern Syria

العودة إلى الصفر.. جامعات النظام لا تعترف بشهادات طلاب جامعات المعارضة (December 15 2017) أنشأت الحكومة المؤقتة في المعارضة جامعة حلب الحرة في أواخر عام ٢٠١٥، مع كليات في مدينة حلب وفروع في مناطق سوريا التي تسيطر عليها المعارضة، وقبل استعادة النظام لكامل أجزاء حلب في كانون الأول ٢٠١٦، كانت كليات الحقوق والآداب والشريعة في الجامعة تقع في المناطق الشرقية التي تسيطر عليها المعارضة.وعندما استعاد النظام السيطرة عليها، توقفت الكليات الموجودة في شرق حلب عن عملها، حينها وجد الطلاب الذين بقوا في المدينة أن شهاداتهم الممنوحة من المعارضة غير مجدية الآن.

نبكي ونضحك.. من قلب البحر والقوارب المطاطية (December 17 2017) تتنوع الأحاديث، ولسوريا حصة كبيرة منها، كما الذكريات، وتأخذ رحلة اللجوء أيضاً حيزاً متواصلاً من الحكايات التي يسردها الأصدقاء والصديقات، بما في ذلك رحلات البحر القاسية.

«رجل أعمال» متوارٍ عن الأنظار: موسم «صيد الحيتان» يبدأ في حلب؟ (December 17 2017)بتوجيهات من وزارة الداخليّة حمي في خلال الأيام الماضية وطيس التحقيقات في ملف تزوير ورشوة وإتلافٍ للآثار في حلب القديمة. تعود جذور الملف إلى ما قبل الحرب، لكنّ ملابساته بدأت في التكشف قبل شهر فحسب. المتهمون كثرٌ، وأشهرهم «رجل أعمال» ذاع صيتُه في العامين الأخيرين. وتعرض «الأخبار» خلاصات ضبوطات التحقيقات الجارية، وتفاصيلها، وبعض ما يدور في الكواليس

 يواجه النازحون شتاء قاسياً في مخيّمات ريف حلب الشماليّ (December 18 2017) خلال الأشهر الماضية، وصل الآلاف من النازحين المدنيّين من مختلف المدن السوريّة من جرّاء المعارك التي دارت في مدينة الرقّة، والتي تدور في محافظة دير الزور وفي ريف حماه الشرقيّ، إلى مخيّمات اللجوء في ريف حلب الشماليّ كون المنطقة تعتبر آمنة نسبيّاً، لكنّ القدرة الاستيعابيّة للمخيّمات في شمال مدينة حلب لم تتمكّن من استيعاب جميع هؤلاء النازحين، الأمر الذي اضطرّ العديد منهم إلى التجمّع في الأراضي الزراعيّة المحيطة بالمخيّمات المنظّمة وإنشاء مخيّمات عشوائية لا تمتلك أدنى مقوّم من مقوّمات الحياة، إذ تنعدم مياه الشرب ووسائل التدفئة، مع غياب تامّ للمنظّمات الإنسانيّة

The English version of this article can be found here: Syria’s internally displaced in dire need of aid

“خفض التوتر” جنوبي سوريا.. 4 مصالح أردنية يهددها تحديان (December 19 2017) لعب الأردن دوراً واضحاً في رسم الخطوات الأولى، التي مهدت الطريق لتطبيق “مناطق خفض التوتر”، بعد الاتفاق الذي أعلنه مع الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية وروسيا، في يوليو/تموز الماضي، والقاضي بوقف إطلاق النار بين قوات النظام وقوات المعارضة جنوب غربي سوريا.

إيقاف برنامج مراقبة الاحتياجات والسكان في سوريا: الحرمان من المعلومات كأداة تجويع  (December 20 2017) تشغلُ مسألة النزوح واللجوء موقعاً أساسياً في خطاب «النصر الكبير» لدى النظام وحلفائه، ويبدو أن لها دوراً مركزياً في تسويق رواية «المنتصرين» في الحرب السورية، وعلى وجه الخصوص رؤيتهم لما يُفترَض أن يكون عليه «الحل السياسي».

هل سيعرقل خفض القوّات الروسيّة في سوريا الحلّ السياسيّ؟ (December 21 2017) في 11 ديسمبر/ كانون الأول أعلنت روسيا، للمرّة الثانية، نيّتها تقليل عدد قوّاتها العسكريّة العاملة في سوريا بعدما بدأت تدخّلاً عسكريّاً في 30 أيلول/سبتمبر 2015. المرّة الأولى كانت في آذار/مارس 2016 أي بعد حوالى ستّة أشهر على بدء الحملة الجوّيّة، لكنّ كثافة الغارات في ما بعد عبر القاذفات الاستراتيجيّة والصواريخ على المناطق التي تسيطر عليها المعارضة، والمكاسب التي حقّقها النظام جرّاء ذلك على الأرض، أثارت الشكوك لديها ولدى المجتمع الدوليّ، حول جدّيّة هذا الانسحاب.

The English version of this article can be found here: Syrian opposition skeptical of Russian troop pullout

هدوء حذر في عفرين على وقع تهديدات تركية (December 22 2017) بحسب تقارير إعلامية، أرسل الجيش التركي مزيدا من الحشود العسكرية على طول الحدود مع سوريا المقابلة لمنطقة عفرين، في حين تأخذ القوى السياسية الكردية والعسكرية التهديدات التركية على محمل الجد.

هيئة تحرير الشام تفرغ القطع الأثرية من متحف إدلب وتنقلها إلى جهة مجهولة (December 24 2017) ذكرت مصادر خاصة لشبكة “شام” الإخبارية، أن هيئة تحرير الشام أفرغت كامل القطع الأثرية والمقتنيات الموجودة في متحف مدينة إدلب خلال الأيام الماضية ونقلتها إلى جهة مجهولة، تم ذلك بشكل سري دون علم الموظفين في المتحف أو أي جهة أخرى.

لا شيء سورياً في هذه الحرب سوى القتلى (December 25 2017) النظام ليس بخير، ولن يتمكن من حكم السوريين إلا إذا كانت الحرب أفقاً لتنظيم علاقته بهم. الانسحاب من الحرب ومن المفاوضات، هو انسحاب أيضاً من النظام بصفته مستقبل سورية. لا يبدو أن في يد السوريين ورقة أخرى.

أربع معلومات عن بيت جن.. آخر معاقل المعارضة في الغوطة الغربية (December 26 2017) على الرغم من نفي الفصائل العسكرية العاملة في المنطقة القبول باتفاق الخروج إلى إدلب، قالت وسائل إعلام النظام إن الجيش أوقف عملياته العسكرية كخطوة أولى لتنفيذ اتفاق الخروج.

سقوط منطقة بيت جن: قرى جبل الشيخ بيد دمشق (December 27 2017) سقط جيب بيت جن، آخر معاقل المسلحين في غوطة دمشق الغربية، بيد الجيش السوري. نحو مئة يوم من المعارك الضارية، أفضت إلى استسلام مسلحي المنطقة، ومطالبتهم بالتفاوض للخروج. المشروع الإسرائيلي في محيط جبل الشيخ سقط. فمن دعمهم العدو بكل ما استطاع، باتوا اليوم يعدّون أنفسهم للخروج بشروط الدولة السورية

الحكومة: صرفنا 36 مليار ليرة لتأهيل خدمات حلب (December 28 2017) كشف تقرير حكومي أن عدد المنشآت المنتجة حالياً في المدينة الصناعية الشيخ نجار بلغ 430 منشأة بطاقة إنتاجية تتجاوز 75% من الطاقة الإنتاجية التصميمة لهذه المنشآت بعد أن كانت 25% في العام الماضي إضافة إلى تخصيص 285 مقسماً وتسليم 267 مقسماً في جميع الفئات.

تركيا: إزالة لافتات المحال السورية في أضنة لأنها تعرقل عملية الحفاظ على اللغة التركية (December 28 2017) أزالت قوات الشرطة، التابعة لبلدية محافظة أضنه الكبرى، اللافتات والملصقات العربية، الخاصة بمطاعم، ومحال السوريين التجارية المنتشرة في المدينة.

سوريا 2017: «تجميد» القتال وتلاشي «داعش» بانتظار الحل الروسي (December 29 2017) تبدأ سنة 2018، باجتماعين. الأول، مفاوضات جنيف في 21 يناير (كانون الثاني). الثاني، مؤتمر الحوار الوطني السوري في سوتشي يومي 29 و30 يناير. موسكو تضغط على المعارضة كي تحضر سوتشي بشروط موسكو وقبول الرئيس الأسد واقتصار الحديث عن تشكيل لجنة دستورية كي يشكل هذا نصراً كبيراً لبوتين قبل انتخاباته في 28 مارس (آذار) للبناء على لقـــــاءيه الأسد في سوتشي وحميميم الأسابيع الماضية، ولقــــــائه (بوتين) مع نظيريه التركي والإيراني في نوفمبر.

كليات جامعة الفرات في الحسكة مغلقة: «لا لتدخّل الإدارة الكردية» (December 29 2017) أغلق فرع جامعة الفرات في الحسكة، كليات طب الأسنان، والهندسة الزراعية، والعلوم، والهندسة المدنية، والاقتصاد، وعلّق الدوام والامتحانات في كليتَي الآداب والتربية، مبرراً ذلك باعتداءات «شبيبة روج آفا» على الكليات، وانتهاكها لاتفاقات سابقة بين إدارة الجامعة و«الإدارة الذاتية» الكردية.

الجيش السوري يصل إلى «أبو دالي» في ريف إدلب (December 29 2017) بينما تنشط موسكو في تحضيراتها لمؤتمر «الحوار الوطني» المقرر في سوتشي، يواصل الجيش السوري عملياته في ريفي حماة وإدلب، وصولاً إلى بلدة أبو دالي في ريف إدلب الجنوبي الشرقي، بعد أكثر من شهرين على انسحابه منها

ام سقوط «داعش»: تحولات عسكريّة كبرى… و«ستاتيكو» سياسي (December 30 2017) شهد العام المنصرم حدثاً مفصليّاً في سوريا، هو تقويض الوجود العسكري لتنظيم «داعش». ما أسفر في الوقت نفسه عن ازدياد المساحة الخاضعة لسلطة الحكومة السورية، وازدياد رقعة سيطرة «قسد». في مقابل انحسار كبير لمناطق سيطرة المجموعات المسلّحة وانخفاضٍ ملحوظٍ لتأثيرها العسكري. على أنّ التطورات العسكريّة لم تواكب بتحول يُذكر في المشهد السياسي، ليبقى الملف السوري مفتوحاً على احتمالاتٍ كثيرة لا سيّما في شمال وشرق البلاد

 

[This article is published jointly in partnership with Jadaliyya.]

سورية في أسبوع، ٢ كانون الثاني

سورية في أسبوع، ٢ كانون الثاني

العدد الأول

تغيير حكومي في سوريا يطال وزارات الدفاع والصناعة والإعلام

1 كانون الثاني 2018

نص المرسوم رقم 1 للعام 2018 على تعيين كل من العماد علي عبد الله أيوب وزيراً للدفاع (كان يشغل منصب رئيس هيئة الأركان العامة للجيش والقوات المسلحة). كما تم تعيين محمد مازن علي يوسف وزيراً للصناعة (كان يشغل منصب رئيس «الجهاز المركزي للرقابة المالية. وعماد عبد الله سارة وزيراً للإعلام (مدير الهيئة العامة للإذاعة والتليفزيون).

ثلاث ملاحظات:

الأولى، العماد علي أيوب هو ثالث وزير دفاع منذ الأزمة السورية بداية 2011، حيث جاء بعد العماد جاسم الفريج الذي أصبح وزيرا للدفاع بعد اغتيال العماد داود راجحة “خلية الازمة” في يوليو( تموز) 2012.  الفريج فشل في استعادة قرية الرهجان مسقط رأسه في ريف حماة. كما تزامن التغيير مع تراجع قوات الحكومة السورية في موقع إدارة المركبات شرق دمشق امام فصائل معارضة بينها “أحرار الشام الاسلامية”. العماد علي أيوب ينحدر من الساحل السوري، فيما الفريج ينحدر من وسط البلاد.

الثانية، تعيين سارة وزيراً للإعلام جاء بعد أسابيع على قرار رئيس الوزارء عماد خميس باعفائه من منصبه مديراً للهيئة العامة للإذاعة والتلفزيون الحكومية. لكن تدخلات من القصر الرئاسي أعادت سارة إلى منصبه وبات الآن وزيراً للإعلام (بحسب نشطاء معارضين).

الثالثة، أن هذا التعديل الوزاري جاء قبل أسابيع من مؤتمر الحوار السوري في سوتشي نهاية الشهر الجاري الذي من المقرر أن يتناول تشكيل لجنة لصوغ دستور جديد.

شركة دمشق الشام القابضة توقع عقودا بقيمة  250 مليون دولار

30 كانون الأول 2017

وقعت شركة دمشق الشام القابضة عقوداً مع رجل الأعمال مازن ترزي بقيمة 108 مليارات ليرة سورية. والعقد لاستثمار المول المركزي في مدينة ماروتا سيتي (منطقة بساتين المزة) على مساحة 120 ألف م2، واستثمار ست أبنية طابقية بمساحة 26 ألف م2. ولأول مرة تكون حصة المستثمر أكبر من حصة “الجهة العامة” حيث كان له 51% وشركة دمشق الشام القابضة 49 % والقيمة الإجمالية هي 250 مليون دولار. علماً بأن شركة دمشق الشام القابضة هي شركة خاصة محدودة المسؤولية تم تأسيسها وفق المرسوم 19 للعام 2015 والذي يخولها إدارة أملاك محافظة دمشق.

تراجع عدد اللاجئين السوريين في لبنان

27 كانون الأول 2017

تراجع عدد اللاجئين السوريين المسجلين في لبنان إلى أقل من مليون شخص (حوالى 998 ألف) للمرة الأولى منذ عام 2014، وفق الناطقة باسم مفوضية الأمم المتحدة لشؤون اللاجئين. ويتوزع اللاجئون السوريون في المنطقة حسب المفوضية وفق ما يلي 62% في تركيا و18% في لبنان و12% في الأردن و5% في العراق و2% في مصر. يذكر أن لبنان توقف عن تسجيل اللاجئين السوريين منذ مطلع عام 2015.

مجلس الأمن يعتمد قراراً بشأن توصيل المساعدات الإنسانية إلى سورية

19 كانون الأول 2017

اعتمد مجلس الأمن الدولي القرار 2393 المتعلق بوصول المساعدات الإنسانية إلى المحتاجين في سورية عبر الحدود، بتأييد 12 عضوا وامتناع ثلاثة عن التصويت. ويعد القرار تمديداً لقرار المجلس رقم 2165 لمدة اثني عشر شهراً.  ورحب السفير السويدي رحب باعتماد القرار وقال إنه يمثل شريان حياة إنسانيا حيويا لثلاثة ملايين شخص في سورية. وطلب القرار الجديد من الأمين العام إجراء استعراض مستقل، في غضون ستة أشهر، للعمليات الإنسانية التي تقوم بها الأمم المتحدة عبر الحدود وأن يتضمن الاستعراض توصيات بشأن سبل تعزيز آلية الرصد، ويأخذ بعين الاعتبار آراء الأطراف المعنية بما فيها السلطات السورية والبلدان المعنية المجاورة والوكالات الإنسانية.

ويأتي هذا التمديد بعد قلق العديد من المنظمات العاملة في الإغاثة الإنسانية عبر الحدود من إمكانية توقيف هذه الآلية بضغط روسي خاصة مع توسع سيطرة النظام العسكرية خلال العام المنصرم.

Essential Readings: The Syrian Uprising (by Raymond Hinnebusch)

Essential Readings: The Syrian Uprising (by Raymond Hinnebusch)

“[The Essential Readings series is sponsored by the Middle East Studies Pedagogy Initiative (MESPI) team at the Arab Studies Institute. MESPI invites scholars to contribute to our Essential Readings Modules by submitting or suggesting an “Essential Readings” topic pertinent to the Middle East. Articles such as this will appear permanently on both www.MESPI.org and www.Jadaliyya.com.]

The Syrian uprising precipitated an explosion in publications on what had hitherto been an understudied country. The conflict has, however, produced a more limited number of high quality works that present a wealth of empirical findings, take theoretically innovative approaches, or both.

Several volumes provide general context for the uprising:

Flynt Leverett, Inheriting Syria (Brookings Institution, 2005) and David Lesch, The New Lion of Damascus: Bashar al-Asad and Modern Syria (Yale University Press, 2005) provide sympathetic but insightful glimpses of the dilemmas facing Bashar al-Asad during his early years in power.

Radwan Ziadeh, Power and Policy in Syria: Intelligence Services, Foreign Relations and Democracy in the Modern Middle East (I.B Tauris, 2011) provides a broad background: it examines Hafiz Assad’s power consolidation around personal loyalty to the president and based on pillars of civil bureaucracy, the security organs and the Baath party; also it looks at the succession of Bashar al-Asad and repression of the Damascus spring; isolation brought on by Bashar’s foreign policy in Lebanon and Iraq; and the role of the Muslim Brotherhood as a moderate Islamic opposition.

Raymond Hinnebusch and Tina Zintl, Syria from Reform to Revolt, Vol. 1: Political Economy and International Relations (Syracuse University Press, 2015) brings together senior and younger scholars doing cutting edge research in Syria in the first decade of Bashar al-Asad’s rule. It explores the ways in which Asad’s domestic and foreign policy strategies during his first decade in power safeguarded his rule and adapted Syria to the age of globalization. The volume’s contributors examine multiple aspects of Asad’s rule in the 2000s, from power consolidation within the party and control of the opposition to economic reform, co-opting new private charities, and coping with Iraqi refugees. The Syrian regime temporarily succeeded in reproducing its power and legitimacy, in reconstructing its social base, and in managing regional and international challenges. At the same time, contributors detail the shortcomings, inconsistencies, and risks these policies entailed, illustrating why Syria’s tenuous stability came to an abrupt end during the Arab uprisings of 2011. In a companion volume, Christa Salamandra and Leif Stenberg, Syria from Reform to Revolt, Vol. 2: Culture, Society and Religion focuses on key arenas of Syrian social life, including television drama, political fiction, Islamic foundations, and Christian choirs and charities, demonstrating the ways in which Syrians worked with and through the state in attempts to reform, undermine, or sidestep the regime. 

Three studies provide the political economy context of the uprising:

Bassam Haddad, Business Networks in Syria; the Political Economy of Authoritarian Resilience (Stanford University Press, 2012). This political economy analysis of the impact of Bashar al-Asad’s reforms in the late 2000’s shows how regime favoritism toward investors was paralleled by a decline in the living standards of the state-employed middle class and the regime’s former plebeian constituency—arguably an element in the 2011 Uprising. But the regime’s move toward a more formal state-business alliance deterred business from joining the opposition. Thus, state-business networks both contributed to and detracted from authoritarian resilience.

Linda Matar, Political Economy of Investment in Syria (Palgrave, 2016) takes the determinants of investment and the agency of class, as an analytical lens to understand Syria’s failure to promote employment-generating investment prior to the uprising. Matar argues that neoliberal reforms under Bashar al-Asad failed to build productive capacity and instead enriched a few through short-term speculative and mercantile ventures. The proponents of the free market justified policies which exacerbated unequal income distribution, thus contributing to the social explosion in 2011.

Jamil Baroutt, The Past Decade in Syria: the Dialectics of Stagnation and Reform (Arab Centre for Research and Policy Studies, 2011) is a political economy analysis by a Syrian scholar that examines the formation of a bureaucratic capitalist class and authoritarian liberalization to understand economic stagnation and the regime’s inadequate strategies for overcoming it. The gap between economic growth and population growth, resulting in growing youth unemployment, concentrated in neglected rural provinces, provided the tinder for the uprising. 

The following studies expose the religious, social and cultural context of the uprising:

Thomas Pierret, Religion and State in Syria: The Sunni Ulama from Coup to Revolution (Cambridge University Press, ) focuses on Syria’s ulama and their changing relationship to power. His main argument is that the ulama were more readily co-opted than were Islamist movements when the regime gave them concessions reinforcing their religious authority, notably in conflicts with secularists, or expanded their freedom for non-political dawa. This enabled the regime to divide and rule these two wings of the Islamist movement; he also shows how the erosion of this game helped prepare the way for some ulama to back the opposition after the uprising.

Pierret’s volume is usefully read together with Line Khatib, Islamist Revivalism in Syria: The Rise and Fall of Secularism in Ba’thist Syria (Routledge, 2011), which shows how the regime played off secularists and Islamists. Indeed, it viewed the secular opposition as a potentially greater threat than the Islamists, hence fostered and co-opted the latter against the former. In doing so, it inadvertently spread the ideology that would be used to mobilize the Islamist movements that came to dominate the opposition to the regime.

Raphael Lefevre, Ashes of Hama: the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria (Hurst, 2013). While much of the book recounts the 1978-92 uprising from the point of view of the Muslim Brothers, to whom Lefevre had exceptional access, it is quite relevant to the current Syrian Uprising. The earlier insurgency generated a jihadi tradition whose remnants went to Afghanistan, morphed into transnational jihadis, played a role in the founding of al–Qa’ida and returned to fight in Syria after 2011. As part of a 1990s deal with Islamists, the regime had allowed a substantial Islamization of society, at the expense of secularism that grew the potential base of Islamist opposition activated as the post 2011 Uprising became militarized. The current Uprising has been shaped by memories of Hama: the desire for revenge motivates some of the insurgents while the memories of the Ikhwan assassinations of Alawis and of its sectarian discourse forged the solidarity of the regime in the face of the current uprising. However, by contrast to Egypt and Tunisia, where the organized Ikhwan filled the gap after the quick fall of presidents, the protracted struggle in Syria has generated sectarian hostility to the advantage of radical jihadis.

Charles Lister The Syrian Jihad: Evolution of an Insurgency (Hurst, 2015) takes up the story, which looks at the jihadists who came to dominate the uprising, including al-Qaida avatars, Jabhat al-Nusra and Islamic State.

Michael Kerr and Craig Larkin (eds.), The Alawis of Syria: War, Faith and Politics in the Levant (Hurst, 2015) examines the role of the key pro-regime minority community in Syria.  This edited collection examines Syria’s Alawi community, a key constituency of the Asad regimes. Several chapters examine the historical emergence of the community (Aslam Farouk Ali), their experiences under the Ottomans (Stephan Winter) and the French mandate and early independence (Max Weiss) Two look at the complex relation of regime and sect: their prominent role in the Ba’th party and army (Raymond. Hinnebusch) and their demographic spread to the cities, especially Damascus under Ba’th rule (Fabrice Balanche). Leon Goldsmith examines their implication in the regime; Aron Lund the Shabiha phenomenon and Reinoud Leenders the regime’s strategy of repressions

The roots and trajectory of the uprising are more specifically addressed in these studies:

Carsten Wieland, Syria: A Decade of Lost Chances: Repression and Revolution from Damascus Spring to Arab Spring (Cune Press, 2012).

This book provides a valuable and detailed examination of Bashar al-Asad’s rule, particularly of what Wieland considered the opportunities missed by the president to carry out political reforms that might have headed off revolution. The traditional opposition was loyal and moderate and its political incorporation could have enabled a gradual and peaceful transition to a more democratic and legitimate regime. In Wieland’s view, Asad could have won a free election in 2011 had he embraced the demands of the opposition, portrayed himself as the solution rather than the problem, and led the transition to democracy. Most Syrians would have welcomed this. Instead Asad played the sectarian and security cards, destroying his status as a secular popular leader while the violent response to protestors only further propelled the uprising. Wieland believes the security solution was decided by a special committee that concluded that the Tunisian and Egyptian regimes had fallen because they had used insufficient repression. The author benefited from extended discussions with the secular “traditional opposition,” notably Michel Kilo.

David W. Lesch, Syria: the Fall of the House of Assad (Yale University Press, 2012).

How, David Lesch muses, did Bashar al-Asad, a man who had appeared to him as “a relatively ordinary person,” quite different from the princelings in other authoritarian regimes, become drenched in blood? The book ably summarizes the structural factors against and for an uprising in Syria: on the one side there was the Asad’s nationalist stature and relatively good image as a youthful reformer, the substantial stake in preventing Islamic fundamentalism by minorities the secular middle class and the bourgeoisie—who could account for half the population in Lesch’s calculation; and the fragmentation of opposition. On the other hand, the rapid growth of unemployed educated youth that the economy could not absorb; the shaving of social safety nets and growing inequality. Given this relative balance, Asad’s approach to the protests could have made a big difference. Lesch explains his resort to repression by their belief in foreign conspiracies and that any concession seen to be made from weakness only encourages enemies. Once the killing reached a certain point, there was no way back. The regime hunkered down, counting on creating a favourable stalemate to survive.

Samer Abboud, Syria (Polity Press, 2016).

This volume focuses on the uprising years, particularly examining the anti-regime side.  Abboud charts the emergence of protest movements, the external opposition, the “civilianization” of violence, the militarization of the uprising and the war economy. A main thrust of his analysis is how the fragmentation of the opposition prevented it from coordinating around a common political and diplomatic strategy and obstructed the emergence of military formations able to defeat the regime. The emergence of Islamists, themselves ideologically divided, further fragmented the opposition despite periodic efforts to bring the multitude of jihadists groups together in “fronts.” Formations large enough to hold and expand territory could not be sustained and fighting groups, rather, were satisfied with profiting from local fiefdoms; as they became warlords they lost their popularity. Abboud’s analysis goes far toward explaining the failure of the Uprising.

Illuminating the conflict from the point of view of its victims, ordinary people, is Wendy Pearlman, We Crossed that Bridge and it TrembledVoices from Syria (Harper-Collins, 2017), while Yassin al-Haj Salah, The Impossible Revolution: Making Sense of the Syrian Tragedy (Hurst, 2017) examines what went wrong from the point of view of a prominent anti-regime activist

The international context of the uprising is most ably charted in:

Christopher Phillips, The Battle for Syria: International Rivalry in the New Middle East (Yale University Press, 2016).

While Phillips acknowledges the domestic roots of Syria’s conflict, his main argument is that without external interference the fragmented opposition had little chance of prevailing. Importantly, this interference was driven by miscalculations, most importantly the delusion of anti-Asad forces that his regime was fragile and would soon fall, and, if not, that US intervention would tip the balance against him. Miscalculations by the regional opposition to Asad led them to follow inflexible policies in Syria. Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia were convinced that US intervention was coming and they conveyed their confidence to the exiled opposition, thereby discouraging any compromise with the regime. As for the West, its main mistake was to make uncompromised-able demands on the Asad regime, convinced it was on the way out, even while it had no intention of intervening militarily. On the other side, however, Iran and later Russia were determined to prevent regime collapse. The resulting “balanced intervention” by anti- and pro-Asad powers tipped Syria into protracted civil war.

Philips’ analysis could be usefully read in tandem with Nikolaos Van Dam, Destroying a Nation: The Civil War in Syria (I.B Taurus 2017), by a diplomat-scholar with decades of experience of studying Syria. He similarly examines the mistakes of the West in its expectation that the regime would easily be swept away.

John McHugo, From the Great War to the Civil War (Saqi Books, 2014) provides a wider historical sweep regarding the deleterious impact of foreign powers on Syria, seeing its very founding as a modern state under French tutelage as sewing the seeds of the uprising.

For a broad overview of the uprising:

Raymond Hinnebusch and Omar Imady, The Syrian Uprising: Domestic Origins and Early Trajectory (Routledge, 2018).

This major edited collection provides a uniquely comprehensive examination of the uprising. The book consists of nineteen chapters, each addressing an aspect of the Uprising. The chapter cases are located within a framework that poses a series of key questions or issues raised in the scholarship and debates on the Syrian uprising. Chapters 2-8 focus on the structural vulnerabilities and strengths of the regime that help explain the origins of the uprising (causes, grievances, and opportunity structure); how such mass protests became possible but also why they did not initiate a democratic transition; why the protests were militarized and sectarianism instrumentalized, resulting in civil war; and how the regime survived and how it was able to keep support of key constituencies, including the military, business, and the minorities. It takes the view that the structure goes far to explain the roots and early trajectory of the uprising, with chapters looking at regime formation (A Saoul) and practices (S. Valter), e.g., how “Sultanism” precluded democratic transition (Soren Schmidt), the military-business complex that backed it (Salam Said); the political economy context (F Lawson); regime divide and rule strategies e.g. Islamism vs secularists (L Khatib); Sufis vs Islamists (O Imady) and the role of the Alawis (L. Goldsmith). Agency also mattered and subsequent chapters examines Asad’s decisions (D. Lesch), the emergence of civil society as a base of opposition (T al-Om), the role of notions of dignity (J. Harkin) and the social media (B Brownlee) in mobilization; the role of the Muslim Brotherhood (N. Ramirez Diaz); the sectarianization of the conflict (E Bartolomeni; O. Rifai); the emergence of salafist jihadists (I Eido), and the roles of the Druze (M. Kastrinou), the Left (F Arslanian) and the Kurds (D. Cifci). Subsequent volumes in this series will examine the external role in the uprising, and its later evolution.

In addition to these works, students of contemporary Syria may wish to consult the only scholarly journal devoted entirely to Syria, Syria Studies; the valuable reports of the International Crisis Group; and in-depth news and analysis websites such as Syria Deeply; and the Carnegie Middle East Centre.”

[This article is published jointly in partnership with Jadaliyya.]

Syria Media Roundup (December 1-13)

Syria Media Roundup (December 1-13)

[This is a roundup of news articles and other materials circulating on Syria and reflects a wide variety of opinions. It does not reflect the views of the Media Roundup Editors or of Salon Syria. You may send your own recommendations for inclusion in each week’s roundup to info@SalonSyria.com by Monday night of every week.]

Inside Syria

Israeli missiles hit army base near Damascus: Reports (02 December 2017) Israeli missiles attacked a military position near Damascus overnight and Syria’s air defence system thwarted them.

More than fabric: Mansour Omari and Syria’s secret prisons (7 December 2017) Rosiland Jordan discusses Mansour Omari’s idea to memorialise his detention and that of his fellow political prisoners.

Syrian army and Iranian-backed militias push towards Idlib province (10 December 2017) The Syrian army and Iranian-backed militias backed by Russian air power stepped up a military campaign against rebels in eastern Hama province in a push towards the rebel stronghold of Idlib province in northwestern Syria, rebels and witnesses said.

Vladimir Putin makes triumphant visit to Syria airbase (11 December 2017) President Assad tells Russian leader Syrian people will never forget Russia’s help in driving Islamic State from country.

Russian, Syrian jets hit Aleppo, Damascus countryside (12 December 2017) Russian and Syrian fighter jets have launched attacks in southern Aleppo province and the Damascus countryside, causing civilian casualties in both locations.

Russia will keep bases in Syria to strike at insurgents: Kremlin (12 December 2017)Russia will keep a naval and an air base in Syria capable of carrying out strikes against insurgents if required after a partial military pull-out announced by President Vladimir Putin.

Syrian opposition urges Russia to rescue UN peace talks (12 December 2017) Vladimir Putin needs to apply decisive pressure on Bashar al-Assad at Geneva, says leading member of Syrian opposition.

 

Regional and International Perspectives

Free Syrian Police are courageous and selfless people (5 December 2017) Panorama’s programme ‘Jihadis You Pay For’ was hugely misleading, writes Dr Henry Smith.

Kill British Isis fighters, says the defence secretary. It’s not that simple (8 December 2017) Gavin Williamson’s remarks might score cheap points, but to understand what is right, we must look to the law. No country can kill its way out of the problem.

Assad’s false victory must be rejected  (9 December 2017) Bahia al-Mardini writes: “A choice between the barrel bombs and chemical weapons of Assad’s military and the beheadings, rape and torture of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant is no choice at all.”

Pentagon not yet ready to declare victory over ISIS in Iraq (11 December 2017) The Pentagon stopped short of endorsing the weekend declaration from Iraq’s leader that final victory over the Islamic State has been achieved in his country.

Algerian Foreign Minister: IS foreign fighters moving toward Libya (11 December 2017) lgerian Foreign Minister Abdelkader Messahel revealed that security reports have detected movements by foreign nationals from Syria and Iraq towards Libya.

Drumpf to Let Assad Stay Until 2021, as Putin Declares Victory in Syria (11 December 2017) Despite the deaths of as many as half a million people, dozens by chemical weapons, in the Syrian civil war, the Drumpf Administration is now prepared to accept President Bashar al-Assad’s continued rule until Syria’s next scheduled Presidential election, in 2021, according to U.S. and European officials.

Kazakhstan to hold new Syria talks next week (11 December 2017) The talks will focus on freeing prisoners, the delivery of humanitarian aid and the functioning of de-escalation zones.

The Guardian view on Putin in Syria: victory and desolation (12 December 2017) The Russian president has been on a victory lap to Syria and the Middle East, intent on showing that he has outplayed the US in the region.

Return of defeated IS fighters ‘real threat’ to Russia: RIA cites FSB chief (12 December 2017) Former militants from “bandit units” in Syria are now a real threat after the defeat of Islamic State, as many of them may be now planning to return to Russia.

 

Policy and Reports

UN seeks $22.5bn for war, humanitarian crises victims (1 December 2017) The UN has launched a record appeal for $22.5bn to help victims of conflict and humanitarian crises around the world from South Sudan to Syria and from Afghanistan to the refugees from Myanmar.

UN says 400,000 civilians trapped in Syrian enclave (4 December 2017) The UN says about 400,000 civilians who remain trapped in Eastern Ghouta are facing a “complete catastrophe” because the government has blocked aid deliveries.

Children bear ‘disproportionate lethal impact’ of Syrian war, warns study (7 December 2017) Questions raised over legality of airstrikes and shelling as figures show a quarter of all civilians killed in Syria in 2016 were under 18.

Drumpf lifts refugee ban, but admissions still plummet, data shows (8 December 2017) As Drumpf lifted a temporary ban on most refugee admissions, he instituted new rules for tougher vetting of applicants and also effectively halted, at least for now, the entry of refugees from 11 countries deemed as high risk.

U.S. has begun fully implementing Drumpf travel ban: State Dept. (8 December 2017) The U.S. State Department said it began fully implementing President Donald Drumpf’s travel ban targeting six Muslim-majority countries on Friday, four days after the Supreme Court ruled the order could be enforced while legal appeals continue.

Top Lafarge executives, including former CEO, indicted on terror financing charges (9 December 2017) Two senior executives at French-Swiss cement maker LafargeHolcim, including its former CEO, were charged over claims that top management turned a blind eye to payments to jihadists in Syria, a judicial source said.

Thousands of Russian private contractors fighting in Syria (12 December 2017) Nataliya Vasilyeva explores how many Russians are fighting in Syria in a private capacity after the Kremlin and the Defense Ministry have stonewalled questions about private military contractor.

The battle between Syrian secular activists and feminists: we all lose (12 December 2017) Zaina Erhaim writes: “Yet another pushback for Syrian women to leave the public spaces for the powerful men who behave as if these spaces are their ownership.”

Lafarge paid 13 million euros to armed groups to keep operating in Syria: rights group (12 December 2017) French cement group Lafarge paid close to 13 million euros ($15.2 million) to armed groups including Islamic State militants to keep operating in Syria from 2011-2015, human rights lawyers said on Tuesday.

Exclusive: Tracing ISIS’ Weapons Supply Chain—Back to the US (12 December 2017) This report investigates ISIS weapons factories and ordnance in Mosul and Tal Afar and traces the origins of their contents back to to the US.

 

Documentaries, Special Reports, and Other Media

An Education in Fear Growing up in the Assad regime’s Syria (27 November, 2017) An interactive persoanl narrative by Lina Ghaibeh about growing up in Syria in the 1970s and 1980.

Opposition Media Activists Face Uncertain Future (28 November, 2017) The war in Syria significantly increased the number of so-called opposition media activists who documented alleged human rights abuses and war crimes. But as pro-government forces regain control of rebel-held territory, they fear for their future.

BBC in row over ‘false claims’ of cash for Syrian police being paid to jihadists (2 December, 2017) Panorama accused of jumping on anti-aid bandwagon even as Foreign Office halts funding scheme.

Syrian refugee rescued from tiny dinghy off Libyan coast (4 December, 2017) Rescue ship chief reports that man who worked as a nurse fled because he feared he could be killed by Islamist militias.

Bosnian museum of wartime childhood aims to go global, wins top prize (8 December, 2017) The War Childhood Museum in Sarajevo won a best European museum prize and decided to go global. It has started collecting personal items from children affected by other wars, such as those in Syria and Ukraine.

Perfect match: website gives academic refugees chance to connect (9 December, 2017) German professor Carmen Bachmann used template of a dating site to allow users to network with other people in their field

Has ISIL been defeated in Iraq? (10 December, 2017) Ali Al Dabbagh, Tallha Abdulrazaq, and Ahmed Rushdi discusses the questions: Has ISIL been defeated in Iraq? What does this mean for Iraq’s future?

Who invented hummus? (12 December 2017) Everyone from the Greeks to the Turks to the Syrians have tried to claim it.

 

Maps

Syrian Civil War Map This is a live and interactive map of the conflicts in Syria and Iraq.

Defeating ISIL (10 December 2017) At its peak, ISIL controlled vast expanses of territory on both sides of the Iraq-Syria border. But over the past year, the group has been driven out of all major cities including its self-declared capital Raqqa and Deir Az Zor.

Syria: Military situation in Quneitra and Daraa Governorates  (11 December 2017) This map  shows in details the military situation in southern Syria.

 

Arabic Links:

رزان زيتونة ورفاقها.. 4 سنوات من التغييب القسري In the fourth anniversary of the disappearance of  four activists —Razan Zeitouneh, her husband Wael Hamada, Samira Khalil and Hazem Hammadi — who worked at the Violations Documentation Center, Amnesty International launched a campaign to shine a light on those who have faced enforced disappearance and abduction in Syria and help families in their efforts to find their loved ones.

المعركة التالية في سوريا With the war on the Islamic State winding down, other tensions in Syria are dialing up as Israel and Turkey worry over forces amassing on their borders.

The English version of this article can be found here:The next battle in Syria

فدوى محمود… من المعتقل إلى المطالبة بتحرير المعتقلين Fadwa Mahmoud discusses the Freedom Bus Initiative and the challenges of advocating for detainees, missing persons and forcibly disappeared persons in Syria.

خمس شركات مسجلة في المناطق الحرة الإمارات العربية المتحدة ضمن ملف المغسلة الروسية .. فواتير متناقضة وإيران تستخدم إحدى هذه الشركات للتهرب من العقوبات This investigative report shows the role of five UAE Companies in the “Russian Laundromat”.

الغارديان: “ماعز لكل شهيد”: المسرحية الساخرة عن التكلفة السريالية للحرب الأهلية في سورية Goats is a play by poet and playwright Liwaa Yazji. It is set in a small Syrian village where the eponymous animals are handed out by authorities to families who lose fathers, sons and husbands in the endless civil war.

The English version of this article can be found here: A goat for every martyr: the bitterly funny play about the surreal cost of Syria’s civil war

أهالي الشمال السوري يرحبون بـ “فوائد” التدخل التركي This article claims that people in Idlib Governorate and Aleppo Governorate are enjoying the “benefits” of Turkish intervention like opening centers of PPT (Posta ve Telgraf Teşkilatı) a post and telegraph service.

الكويت تقدم مساهمة للمنازل لصالح أكثر من 50،000 لاجئ سوري في الأردن خلال فصل الشتاء Kuwait contributed US$5 million to UNHCR which will help 50,000 vulnerable Syrian refugees in Jordan which hosts more than 655,000 registered Syrian refugees.

The English version of this article can be found here: Kuwaiti contribution brings essential winter assistance to more than 50,000 Syrian refugees in Jordan

خلف كواليس إدلب: رأس الجولاني مطلوبٌ «قاعديّاً»Tension is escalating between al-Qaeda  and Abu Mohammad al-Julani, the commander-in-chief of the Syrian militant group Tahrir al-Sham (formerly known as Jabhat al-Nusra).

قوّات الشرطة التابعة إلى المعارضة في أعزاز تخرّج دفعة من الشرطة النسائيّة للعمل في منطقة درع الفرات “With the help of Turkish trainers, the first batch of policewomen graduated from the opposition’s National police and Public Security Forces in the areas liberated during Operation Euphrates Shield in the countryside of Aleppo”

The English version of this article can be found here: Women join opposition police forces in Aleppo’s liberated areas

 

[This article is published jointly in partnership with Jadaliyya.]

Alia Malek, The Home That Was Our Country: A Memoir of Syria – A Review

Alia Malek, The Home That Was Our Country: A Memoir of Syria – A Review

“The Syria war continues to deform the world we live in. Incessant reports about urban guerilla warfare or airstrikes, civilian massacres or chemical weapons attacks suffuse the mediascape even as war “fatigue” seems to have set in around the world, especially in the United States. Over the past few years, a number of first-person narratives have been published that exceed or complicate military or geostrategic analysis of the ongoing conflicts; they successfully, often powerfully, bring the personal tolls of the conflict to the fore. The diaries of Janine di Giovanni, Jonathan Littell, and Samar Yazbek, just to name a few of the most prominent voices, help to focus attention on human-scale aspects of the Syria War. Where political analysis and war reporting stops, memoirs and essays shed light on some of the poignant social and individual dimensions of everyday life for Syrians both inside the country and in the diaspora.

In The Home that Was Our Country, Syrian-American lawyer and journalist Alia Malek presents a fresh and gripping account of her own family’s history. Narrated with style and grace, the book is not only a deeply felt and richly textured memoir, but also a bracing introduction to Syrian history, politics, and everyday life, from the late Ottoman period to the present. Indeed, the book is noteworthy and distinctive for being a splendid interweaving of historical narratives that link individual and family, nation and imagination, place and memory. Malek paints a kaleidoscopic picture of the conditions of Syria both before and after the uprising in 2011 as well as the multifarious journeys Malek took as lawyer and journalist, around the Middle East and Europe. From Damascus to Homs and Beirut, from Egypt to Armenia and Germany, Malek has trodden some of the same unstable terrain as many Syrians who are fleeing unceasing violence and trying to survive the seemingly interminable chaos into which the country has fallen.

After the marriage of Malek’s maternal grandmother, Salma, who hailed from Hama, and her maternal grandfather, who was from Homs, the couple moved to a modest apartment in the Ain al-Kirish neighborhood, near Sarouja, just outside the old city of Damascus during the early days of Syrian independence in the late 1940s. In her narration of her family’s experience in the cataclysmic experience of World War, Armenians who had fled the genocidal program of the Ottoman military authorities in Anatolia took refuge in the family home, and some became veritable members of the family. In a move that was more of a financial decision than a humanitarian one, the family house in Damascus was subsequently rented to acquaintances when Malek’s family moved to North America. The house, in turn, serves as the material fulcrum at the heart of Malek’s memoir. Syrian law protects the rights of subletters, thus awkwardly preventing Malek’s family from reclaiming their apartment when they wished to refurbish the property, to carve out a space in Syria to which they could return when they were finally ready to do so.

Malek grew up primarily in Baltimore, Maryland, though she spent substantial periods of time during her childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood in Syria, Lebanon, and the occupied West Bank, whether that was in the context of visiting family and friends, or gaining work experience with Palestinian and other regional legal organizations. Malek lived in Syria from April 2011 until May 2013, working on this book about her family history while also experiencing first-hand and chronicling the emergence of the nonviolent Syrian uprising. She soon witnessed it devolve into a bloody civil war that has now been raging for upwards of seven years. Towards the end of her narrative journey, Malek somberly relates how she “thought with sadness again of how all this had started—with Syrians simply asking to be included in their own governing—and looked up at the sky and hoped nothing would explode” (311).

Malek paints a vivid picture of her own family history: her great-grandfather Abdeljawwad al-Mir (1889-1970), whose family were Antiochian Orthodox Christians in the village of Suqaylabiyah. In the context of early post-Ottoman Syria under French Mandate control, Abdeljawwad, who as an only son thus escaped conscription into the miserable seferberlik, came into contact with nationalist resistance leaders Shaykh Salih al-ʿAli and Ibrahim Hanano, among others. Just after the arrival of the French Mandate authorities, Abdeljawwad moved his family to Hama, where Malek’s maternal grandmother, Salma, was born in 1924. After Salma’s older brother defied Abdeljawwad’s wishes and eloped to Damascus, Salma visited and fell in love with a man named Ameen, with whom she moved to Damascus in 1949, to the family apartment in question where they became the first occupants. Colorful stories of the original inhabitants of the building bespeak the diversity and dynamism of Damascus during the 1950s and 1960s. In 1970, Salma decided to rent out the apartment to make some much-needed cash, and she did so to a man named Hassan, who would live in the house until the 2000s, and with whom Malek would maintain a personal relationship for a long time to come. “I was writing about Salma and the house,” Malek writes, “a house that my grandmother, my mother, they, and now I had lived in. Its history included all of us, and they had been in it for forty years. Even if it was at the expense of my family, I didn’t want to erase their lives from it” (319).

With the fate of the family house in limbo, Salma was facing her own health challenges. After Salma had a stroke and was consigned to a catatonic condition, Malek described her as being “locked in,” which is the same term she uses to describe Syria under dictatorship: “To be locked in is to be completely alive—to be there fully—inside a body that is wholly paralyzed” (106). This arresting image of a country still alive, still subject to thoughts and emotions and aspirations and memories even as it is held captive to the ravages of illness or authoritarian rule is profoundly troubling. Malek bleakly connects the two as she recalls of life in Syria during the heyday of Hafiz al-Asad’s reign. ““To my evolving consciousness, still that of a child, Syria was like my grandmother Salma—suspended between life and death. There and not there” (110). Given her diasporic crossings from Beirut to Cairo, from Damascus to Baltimore, it is hardly surprising that Malek would have an evolving relationship to the home that was her country, to her native Syria. “Although both had once been very real to me, all I had of Salma and Syria were memories, and both topics in our house were tinged with sadness” (110). Her grandmother Salma died in August 1987.

Many Syrian activists who were mobilized during the early days of the Syrian uprising in 2011 and who continued to animate the inspiring pockets of nonviolent organizing in order to build another Syria, a new Syria, would speak of how they “discovered” or “rediscovered” their country during that initial mobilization. Taking shelter in mosques and other houses of worship where the state security services were unlikely to suspect they had gathered, these activists found like-minded men and women who came from diverse segments of Syrian society, from all manner of sectarian, ethnic, class, and regional backgrounds. Not only does her family recognize the significance of religious and ethnic diversity first-hand—as her family is part Christian—but the cast of characters Malek meets along the way in her own memoir represent the gamut of Syrian diversity: Kurds, Jews, Sunni and Shiʿi Muslims, Christians of multiple denominations, ʿAlawis, and Armenians. Much like thousands of other Syrians, Malek seems to have “re-discovered” Syria through her return to her family’s fascinating history as well as through her frantic attempt to keep up with the challenges and the dangers of the war in Syria as it raged around the country and spilled out into the region and around the world. One particularly poignant moment in the book concerns a series of gatherings that Malek attended with her cousin Tala, a “psychodrame” organized by Jesuits in Damascus in August 2011, which was meant to serve as a venue for self-expression, dialogue, and collective soul-searching about the situation in a therapeutic and performative mode. One of Malek’s takeaways is that previously “Syrians had no forum in which they could talk directly to each other about what was happening in their country,” that adults had been “infantilized” by decades of authoritarian rule (207). Even as Malek seeks to understand the perspective of her fellow Syrians amid these cataclysmic events, she is by no means willing to hide her own politics. “I was angry at those who supported Assad out of conviction—those who actually believed in him. But I felt a kind of skin-crawling embarrassment at the nonbelievers who nonetheless chose to be obsequious, and even theatrical, in supporting him” (228). This anger and embarrassment notwithstanding, Malek shows grace and determination in directly engaging with the diversity and differences percolating in Syrian society and culture during a time of profound destabilization and uncertainty.

The Home that Was our Country is a marvelous achievement, a first-hand testimony of one Syrian-American coming to terms with the tragedy of Syria. But the book is so much more than this: history lesson, social tableau, cultural analysis, and highly specific personal memoir. In her concise and accessible account of the making of modern Syria, Malek is as comfortable evoking the terror and thrill of the Syrian revolution and its aftermaths as she is at deftly describing and analyzing centuries of Syrian history. She is interested in “all the little and big things Syrians all over the country had left behind, thinking they were coming back” (xvi). Her depiction of local culture—food, smells, handicrafts, everyday family life—add texture to the dry historical narrative and political analysis that has all too often saddled the shelves of the library of modern and contemporary Syria.

The Home that Was our Country holds out modest hopes for a future Syria beyond the current catastrophe. When her father fell ill in the spring of 2013, Malek decided to return to the U.S. in order to spend time with him, and her sense of being caught between her ancestral homeland and her Syrian-American family is powerfully rendered here, as throughout the book. Malek raises important questions about the nature and diversity of Syrian society, about the possibilities for reconciliation and reconstruction in the wake of such terrifying and traumatic dislocation and devastation. As she notes, the only way for the country to begin down the path of reconciliation and reconstruction is for foreign powers—especially Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, the Gulf monarchies as well as the United States—to contribute more robustly to creating the conditions of possibility for that outcome. Whatever optimism is left for those concerned with the fate of Syria will be nourished by the beautiful stories being created, told, and related by Alia Malek and her generation of Syrians, both inside the country and in the sprawling—and tragically ballooning—Syrian diaspora.”

[This article is published jointly in partnership with Jadaliyya.]