Dara Conduit, The Muslim Brotherhood in Syria (New Texts Out Now)

Dara Conduit, The Muslim Brotherhood in Syria (New Texts Out Now)

Dara Conduit, The Muslim Brotherhood in Syria (Cambridge University Press, 2019).

Jadaliyya (J): What made you write this book?

Dara Conduit (DC): I wrote this book because I wanted to more fully understand the Brotherhood. When I started researching, I was struck by several things: First, the Brotherhood’s reputation was so polarised; inside and outside Syria, the group was seen as either really, really bad, or really, really good, but rarely something in between. Second, I was surprised by how little was known about the Brotherhood, even though it was the country’s most famous opposition movement. When I started the project in 2013, there had not been a full book published on the group in English since the early 1980s. Thankfully a few months after I started, Raphaël Lefèvre filled many of these gaps with his Ashes of Hama, but I still had questions. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, the Brotherhood was seen as central to the Syrian political milieu in 2011. This was true in that the group was a strong performer in the early uprising, at least outside the country, but this early advantage failed to translate into a sustained lead, and by 2013 the group had been sidelined by the actors and events inside Syria.

Why did the Brotherhood fail to live up to expectations, and how much can its history tell us about its role in the 2011 Syrian uprising? These were the questions that drove the research and pushed me to write the book.

J: What particular topics, issues, and literatures does the book address? 

DC: The book uses the Brotherhood’s failure to thrive after 2011 as a starting point to understand what its history can tell us about the contemporary movement. The book sits at the intersection of the literatures on contentious politics, political violence, and political organizations. Although the group could reasonably be described at various junctures in its life as an opposition group under authoritarianism, a terrorist group, or a democratic political party, none fully describe the group. The book therefore uses the three literatures to understand the Brotherhood, building an account of an ordinary political organization that over its seventy-year history has been pulled in different directions by its context and other factors.

The book is split into two parts. The first examines the group’s past, including its political platforms, political track record, use of violence (which is something that the book does not gloss over), and international connections. The second half then applies this account of its history, much of which came from interviews and extensive primary source analysis, to understand how history helped and hindered the Brotherhood’s response to the 2011 uprising.

It was quite clear to me by the time I finished writing the book that the Brotherhood carried the substantial weight of history on its shoulders. This had proven both a blessing and a curse. A blessing in that the Brotherhood had a ready-made political platform and history of political thought, an organizational tradition, international diplomatic networks, and resources far superior to any of Syria’s other opposition groups on the eve of the 2011 uprising. But history also proved an encumbrance; by 2011 the Brotherhood carried significant political baggage from its failed militarization in the 1980s (particularly related to what happened, who was to blame, and how the group had diverted so far from its original path) and its decades of opposing authoritarian regimes. These factors combined to stunt its decision-making skills and ability to build ties across the opposition. In this regard, while the Brotherhood’s history does not define who it is today, it does continue to strongly shape the group’s decision making.

J: What is your favorite chapter?

DC: The chapter I enjoyed researching the most was the chapter on the Brotherhood’s use of violence, because it is one of the most contested parts of its history. This is partially because the Brotherhood has never fully acknowledged its role in the violence, nor has it taken responsibility for the events that took place, which many senior members still dismiss as “self defense” or as having been forced upon them. Much of what happened also took place in the context of the relatively closed and repressive authoritarian Syria of the 1970s and 1980s that quashed most opportunities for independent accounts to emerge, while the regime too has maintained a no-fault narrative. For this chapter, I located old Brotherhood documents, memoirs, and archival material, and spoke to members who were involved in the Brotherhood during that period, to piece together an account of the events. Although the chapter finds that the Brotherhood was indeed involved in the violence and bears some responsibility for the enormous death and destruction inflicted on the country (particularly the Syrian civilians who bore the brunt of the regime’s violent response to the Brotherhood for decades to come), its actions were the extreme end of the popular political, socioeconomic, and geographic unrest that was taking place across the country during that period. The decision to use violence therefore did not take place in a vacuum, but was deeply rooted in the Syrian political context of the time, however foolhardy and destructive it proved to be.

J: How does this book connect to and/or depart from your previous work?

DC: The book argues that the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria must be understood in its political context, that is as a group who has spent most of its life as an opposition to authoritarian regimes. Of course, it is a complex political actor with its own agency that has made its own choices (and mistakes) over the years, but its character and actions are strongly influenced by its historical experiences and political contexts, particularly authoritarianism. In this regard, the book relates closely to my work on other opposition groups, because there are oppositions across the world challenging authoritarian regimes every day.

J: Who do you hope will read this book, and what sort of impact would you like it to have?

DC: I hope that many people will read this book. This includes academics working on Syria or authoritarianism, general readers and members of the policy community, and perhaps most importantly, Syrians, although it is only published in English so far. I hope this will change soon.

I had general readers in mind when I was writing the book, so I avoided academic jargon or theory that might obscure the importance of the Brotherhood’s wider story. As the Syrian conflict became more internecine, following the conflict as a casual reader became really difficult because of its many twists and turns. I hope this book provides an easier way to understand parts of the conflict by following one organization on its journey through the unrest.

I hope that the book will build on the work undertaken by others on the importance of context in understanding Islamist movements. Islamist groups are useful bogeymen for autocrats and the international community, and are often depicted as dogmatic, irrational actors. In contrast, this book highlights the importance of using a lens of circumstance rather than ideology to fully understand the actions of the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood, and other Islamist organizations more broadly. Although the Brotherhood proved to not be the violent or dogmatic actor that many feared would rise again in the Syrian conflict, its conduct after 2011 nonetheless won it few friends, leaving it perhaps more isolated than ever.

J: What other projects are you working on now?

DC: I am currently working on a project funded by the Carnegie Corporation that examines the role played by foreign states in the Syrian war, and I will shortly be starting a new postdoc on authoritarianism and the Syrian opposition.

 

Excerpt from the book (pp. 1-7)

As the Arab Uprisings spread across the Middle East in January 2011, the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood’s leaders gathered in a town a few hundred kilometres from Istanbul for their monthly meeting. The group had been in exile for the nearly three decades since their failed previous uprising, and its leaders and members were now scattered across the world. For the first time in many years however, the Brothers had reason to be hopeful. The swift overthrow of Tunisia’s long-reigning dictator, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, and the growing protests against the Egyptian President, Hosni Mubarak, had raised the question of revolt in Syria. The Brotherhood’s Strategic Planning chief, Molham Aldrobi, later recalled that up until that moment: ‘none of us … had imagined or dreamed or had that nightmare—however you want to describe it—that a revolution might happen in Syria because for the 30-plus years since 1980, nothing had happened’.

A new item was quickly added to the Syrian Brothers’ January meeting agenda: the leaders would discuss what to do if the wider Arab unrest spread to Syria. This was important because should the country’s nearly 50-year-old Baʿthist regime be destabilised, the group’s leaders and members might finally be able to return home. The group would need to be ready.

Molham Aldrobi was assigned to prepare a document overnight on what could happen. He presented the brief to the leadership the following day and later explained:

I drafted a Project Charter called the ‘Bashar Leave!’ project, and in that document I discussed the special situation of Syria compared to Tunisia and Egypt, and what we as the Muslim Brotherhood needed to do in case revolution erupted in Syria …We were hopeful that something might happen in Syria that would change the situation in Syria to become a democratic country. We wanted these changes to happen peacefully.

But when the unrest finally reached Syria in March 2011, Brotherhood flags or slogans were few and far between in the burgeoning protest movement. Protesters in the town of Zabadani went so far as to formally distinguish themselves from the Brotherhood, holding a placard that declared: ‘Neither Salafi nor Brotherhood, my religion is freedom’. Indeed, while the Muslim Brotherhood remained Syria’s best-known opposition group, it would face an uphill battle to rebuild a popular base in Syria.

The Muslim Brotherhood in Syria (al-Ikhwan al-Muslimun fi Suriya) has played a role in every iteration of Syrian politics since the country gained independence in 1946, including in Syria’s parliament from 1947 to 1963. Syria’s democratic era came to a close after the Arab Socialist Baʿth Party took power by coup in 1963, marking the beginning of the Brotherhood’s long struggle to return to the corridors of Syrian political power. Initially the Syrian Brothers mounted their discontent peacefully through youth groups, study circles and popular protests inside Syria. However, as repression hardened and avenues for political opportunity narrowed over the subsequent decade and a half, the Brotherhood made the fateful decision to take up arms against the Syrian government. In the violent years that followed, membership of the group would become a capital offense. The Brotherhood–government bloodletting eventually culminated in the bloody 1982 Hama uprising.…In just three weeks, up to 25,000 people were killed, and large sections of the city’s old quarters were flattened. 1,000 Syrian soldiers died in the battle. As the dust settled in Hama however, it became clear that a significant further price would be exacted from the Brotherhood and its supporters for their defiance: thousands were imprisoned or disappeared, the group’s support base was destroyed, and large numbers of the group’s followers were forced to join their leaders in a seemingly permanent exile. Exile then created a new challenge for the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood: the struggle for relevance.

Nonetheless, the Syrian state’s intolerance of almost all opposition meant that on the eve of the 2011 uprising the Brotherhood still remained one of Syria’s most resilient and best-resourced opposition political actors. As one of the few groups with salaried staff, an institutional structure and funds, it was able to use its organisational strength and resources to guarantee itself a seat at the political table. Brotherhood members went on to participate in all of the opposition conferences in the first year of the uprising, and it became a ‘king maker’ on the new opposition political bodies the Syrian National Council (SNC) and the National Coalition for Syrian Revolution and Opposition Forces (SOC – Syrian Opposition Coalition). Although the influence of these exiled political bodies diminished as the uprising militarised, the Brotherhood’s organisational skills nonetheless had endowed it with a significant advantage in early days of the revolt. The disconnect between this early advantage and the Brotherhood’s subsequent limited success in the uprising as a whole would later become quite stark.

For all the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood’s prominence as the uprising first unfolded however, questions were quickly raised about its ambitions and modus operandi. Prominent Middle East analyst Marina Ottaway queried in April 2011: ‘Has it gone underground, how quickly can it be revived, how much sympathy is there still for the Muslim Brotherhood? I have no idea and I don’t think anybody else has an idea on that’. This sense of uncertainty remained unresolved a year later, when The New York Times’ David Kirkpatrick conceded that while the Syrian Brotherhood’s violent history was well known, ‘not much more is known about the current internal dynamics of the group’. Such observations were remarkable given that the Syrian Brothers’ Egyptian counterpart is one of the most thoroughly studied Islamist groups in the Middle East.

It wasn’t as though good research didn’t exist on the Syrian Brothers: it did, although most of it had been written prior to 1982. It was that the Hama massacre remained one of the few reference points through which Syria and the Brotherhood were known and understood, with hundreds of articles published as the protests broke out reminding readers that the Brotherhood’s 1982 uprising was the last major instance of antigovernment revolt in Syria by members of the country’s Sunni Arab majority. This memory of the Hama massacre – in particular its imagery of violence, bloodshed, radicalism, Islamism, siege, destruction and tragedy – was difficult to reconcile with the group’s more moderate recent record. This led Hama to often be seen as the definitive example of the group’s character, more instructive than the nearly four decades of organisational history that preceded the event and the three decades that followed. Many observers therefore assumed that the example of the group’s violent behaviour in 1982 would be replicated in 2011, with an editorial in The Australian noting that were President al-Assad ‘to be deposed, it’s likely that Sunnis, possibly Muslim Brotherhood extremists, would take over’, while Cook declared that the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad ‘may be an implacable foe, but he is better than the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood’. Schanzer too affirmed that the al-Assad regime ‘is a very nasty regime. Of course, the idea of having the Muslim Brotherhood come in … is equally unpalatable.’ It was as though the Brotherhood’s true colours were revealed in Hama.

In some ways, this was to be expected. Hama was a watershed moment in Syria’s political history, with Leverett observing that, ‘How a contemporary Syrian feels about Hama reveals much about his political orientation; how an outside analyst interprets Hama says much about his view of Syrian political culture and of the Asad [sic] regime.’ To those who supported the government, the Hama massacre served as a grave warning about the destructive and revolutionary threat that Islamists pose to their way of life; a narrative that the Assad regime itself went to great lengths to foment. Ismail found that the Hama events played a ‘politically formative role’:

Memories of Hama are constitutive of a community of subjects of humiliation, whose lives were stifled or, in the words of Manhal al-Sarraj, “became still.” The memories, muted as they have been, feed into sentiments of grievance and a deep-rooted sense of discrimination – a sense that a historical wrong remains unrecognised and that no atonement or reparation has been attempted.

Indeed, for many, Hama represented a tragedy of history that demonstrated the brutality of their leaders and the lengths that they would go in the name of self-preservation, and also of the huge cost that the Brotherhood was willing to inflict upon the Syrian people. To the Syrian intellectual Yassin al-Haj Saleh, the significance of 1982 went further, representing ‘the end point—not to the conflict with Islamists, but to any political rights for all Syrians’. The Hama massacre continued to resonate in the 2011 Syrian uprising, with opposition groups at times strategically deploying the imagery of the Hama massacre to discredit the al-Assad regime.

But the roots of the Hama memory extend beyond Syria’s polarized political arena, drawing too from the dominant discourses that guide the understanding of Islamist groups more broadly. Cobb noted that global narratives are often ‘downloaded’ into local settings, shaping the way in which sense is made of events. In such narratives, Islamist groups are viewed as predisposed to violence or undemocratic behaviour… In this regard, the Hama massacre, the infamy of which probably dwarfs the renown of the Syrian Muslim Brotherhood itself, played into these expectations, becoming an Islamist event par excellence and confirming to some the group’s primordial propensity to violence and rebellion, which is supposed to be common to all Islamist groups. Very few commentators considered the contra; that the Hama massacre itself may have been an aberration for an otherwise mainstream group. Although the book does not seek to understate the Brotherhood’s responsibility for events, it underlines the importance of interrogating whether the Hama memory has distorted knowledge on the group.

So, as the 2011 uprising unfolded, expectations of the Brotherhood often fell into the well-worn binaries ascribed to other Islamist movements, as a group that was violent or democratic, secular or dogmatic, but rarely something in between. The Brotherhood was variously depicted as a threat to Syria’s future and its secular path, or a force for good in the fledgling opposition movement, while the Syrian uprising itself was often viewed through the lens of an existential battle between the secular Assad regime and the fanatical Brotherhood. This led to the understatement of the scale and diversity of the country’s existing and emerging opposition movement, the overstatement of the Brotherhood’s significance, and perhaps most significantly for this book’s line of enquiry: the oversimplification of the Brotherhood’s history and character, limiting the ability of observers to predict how the Brotherhood would fare as the 2011 uprising developed.

[This article was originally published by Jadaliyya on their NEWTON page on 3 June, 2020.]

Syria in a Week (22 – 29 July 2019)

Syria in a Week (22 – 29 July 2019)

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.

 

Tal al-Meleh

29 July 2019

Russia’s air force helped the Syrian army to repel two attacks carried out by militants in the Idlib governorate on Sunday, TASS news agency reported, citing a senior defense ministry official.

Militants carried out two attacks on Syrian government forces’ positions using tanks and armored vehicles on 28 July, the official was quoted as saying.

Syrian government forces and allied forces took control of a strategic village in Hama governorate in middle Syria after fierce battles with opposition militants.

A field commander fighting with government forces acknowledged the difficulty of battles that government forces fought in Tal al-Meleh and its strategic hill in the western countryside of Hama. “A number of government forces were killed and others injured in fierce battle with opposition militants, who also had fifty people killed or injured, in addition to the destruction of a number of vehicles and motorcycles,” the commander told a German news agency.

 

Airstrikes and More Airstrikes

28 July 2019

Eleven civilians were killed on Sunday in Syrian and Russian airstrikes in northwest Syria, which have been subject to almost daily airstrikes for three months, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

Since late April, Idlib governorate and surrounding areas in the governorates of Aleppo, Hama, and Lattakia have witnessed an escalation in almost daily Syrian and Russian bombardment.

On Sunday, airstrikes and artillery shelling targeted various areas in Idlib and Hama, which killed eleven civilians, according to the SOHR.

The SOHR said that five of the casualties died as a result of government airstrikes on residential areas in Ariha city in Idlib governorate, after a bloody day in this city. Three others died in other places in northwest Syria. Russian airstrikes on farming land north of the adjacent Hama governorate left three civilians dead, according to the SOHR.

Four soldiers were killed in a government attack on the Tal al-Maleh village north of Hama, in addition to nine jihadists and opposition militants.

Tahrir al-Sham (previously Nusra) controls Idlib governorate – which has a population of three million – other less influential factions are also present in the governorate.

Over the past three months, more than seven hundred and fifty civilians have been killed including more than one hundred and ninety children as a result of the Syrian-Russian bombardment, according to the SOHR.

 

A Picture is a Thousand Words

26 July 2019

A picture spread on social media showing two sisters stuck in the rubble of a building targeted by an airstrike in northwest Syria while trying to help their younger sister from falling from a high floor. One of the two elder sisters died afterwards, while the other two are fighting for their lives in the hospital.

The city of Ariha – in the southern countryside of Idlib and hometown of the three sisters Dalia (8 years), Riham (5 years), and Tuqa (7 months) – was targeted by government airstrikes on Wednesday, which hit the residential building where the three sisters live. This comes within the context of the escalation that has been going on for three months.

A photographer named Bashar al-Sheikh who works for a local news website took the photo of the girls as they were between the rubble of the destroyed but not completely collapsed building. The two elder sisters appear completely stuck under the bricks, as Riham appears holding her sister Tuqa from her torn shirt to prevent her from falling. A man stands near them screaming from terror and unable to approach them on top of the rubble to rescue them.

The AFP could not verify the identity of the man. Some activists said he is their father, whereas one of the volunteers in the White Helmets (civil defense in areas controlled by factions) said that he is one of the neighbors.

The family, which consists of six girls, was hospitalized after the airstrike. The mother and her daughter Riham died shortly after because of the wounds they sustained. On Friday, Rawan (three years) also died, according to a doctor in Idlib hospital.

Save the Children said in a statement on Thursday that the number of children killed in Idlib in the last four weeks exceeds the number of children killed in the same area in 2018.

 

Displacement and Indifference

26 July 2019

More than four hundred thousand people in northwest Syria have displaced in the last three months, as a result of military escalation by government forces and their Russian allies. The United Nations condemned on Friday the continuous attacks that have targeted civilians and service and medical facilities.

Idlib governorate and surrounding areas, where three million people live, have come under almost daily bombardment by Syrian and Russian jets since the end of April, which has not spared hospitals, schools, or markets and has been accompanied by battles mainly in the northern countryside of Hama.

The bombardment has killed more than seven hundred and forty civilians in the last three months, according to the SOHR, while humanitarian organizations say that the area is living a “nightmare” with the ongoing escalation.

 

Deep Differences

28 July 2019

The London-based Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper said on Sunday that areas in northwest Syria have been witnessing mobilization of forces and factions allied to each of the United States and Turkey after the failure of the last round of negotiations between the two countries in regards to the “safe zone”.

The newspaper said that as soon as the negotiations between the US delegation and Turkish officials in Ankara ended in failure a few days ago, each side mobilized its forces and factions on frontlines. Ankara wants to pressure Washington, and the latter wants to “deter” the Turkish army.

The newspaper also mentioned that the last round of negotiations revealed the deep gap between Washington’s position and its Kurdish-Arab Syrian Democratic Forces on one hand and Ankara on the other hand in regards to establishing a “safe zone” northeast of Syria, and to a lesser extent in regards to implementing the “road map” in Manbej north of Aleppo.

 

US Tourist

25 July 2019

A US tourist, Sam Goodwin (30 years), who was detained in Syria for two months, was released thanks to a meditation of Lebanon, according to what his family said on Friday. “Sam is healthy and with his family,” his parents Thomas and Ann Goodwin said in a statement. “We are forever indebted to Lebanese General Abbas Ibrahim and to all others who helped secure the release of our son,” who went missing in May near the Kurdish dominated city of Qamishli northwest of Syria.

Goodwin was detained by the Syrian government. He wrote on his blog that he intended to complete his trip around the world by the end of the year. His family said it would provide more information at a later time.

 

Assassination in Daraa

24 July 2019

A former military commander in the Free Syrian Army (FSA), Firas Abdul Majeed al-Masalmeh, was killed in the governorate of Daraa and his personal bodyguard Shadi al-Ghanem was seriously wounded by gunshots on their car near the town of al-Yadoodeh, west of Daraa city.

A source in the Southern Front, which is affiliated with the FSA, said, “al-Masalmeh was the leader of one of the battalions in the FSA. He reconciled with government forces one year ago,” and worked with the Fourth Brigade – headed by Maher al-Assad, the brother of the Syrian president.

“The reason behind the assassination is perhaps mutual killings between groups working with government forces,” according to the source. Almost one year ago, government forces took control of the eastern and western countryside of Daraa after reconciliation with opposition faction commanders with Russian sponsorship.

 

Iranians Killed

25 July 2019

Six Iranians of forces allied to the Syrian government were killed in Israeli strikes in southern Syria, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

The head of the SOHR Rami Abdul Rahman told the AFP that the attack killed nine fighters allied to the government, three Syrians and six Iranians.

The SOHR said on Wednesday that “reported Israeli missiles” targeted areas south of Syria near the Golan Heights, including Tal al-Harah in Daraa Governorate and Nabi’ al-Sakhr and Tal al-Ahmar in Quneitera governorate.

Since the start of the conflict in Syria in 2011, Israel has launched hundreds of airstrikes against Iranian targets and others for the Lebanese Hezbollah, in addition to positions for the Syrian army.

 

Syria in a Week (20 – 27 May 2019)

Syria in a Week (20 – 27 May 2019)

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.

Ramadan Under Bombardment

27 May 2019

Near the Turkish-Syrian border, numerous families have made their new homes amid olive fields, erecting their own tents using colored sheets tied to the trees. During the month of Ramadan, these people rely on scarce aid or simple meals they prepare on primitive stoves.

Mona (31) says as she keeps her children beside her while preparing the food, “The day only ends with great difficulty. We are spending Ramadan here against our will.”

“We used to sit under the grape orchard in our house. It was a nice place. Water and electricity were available. We were living in grace,” she said sadly remembering the previous Ramadan.

“What a difference between where we were and what we have become!” she added.

In this Ramadan evening, Mona barely managed to fry some potatoes for her children along with three dishes of yogurt and cucumber, hoping this would satisfy their hunger.

Mona, who left her home more than twenty-one days ago in the northern countryside of Hama, said: “Sometimes, there isn’t enough food. Today, I just fried potatoes.” She added that the aid is scarce and mainly made up of rice and chicken, and that four days have passed without her family receiving anything at all.

Since late April, more than two hundred thousand people have been displaced from their homes in the southern countryside of Idlib and northern countryside of Hama, according to the United Nations. They fled violent bombardment by government forces and their ally Russia, in addition to fierce clashes between Tahrir al-Sham, which controls Idlib governorate and surrounding areas, and government forces.

The displaced people did not find any better place to settle down other than the olive fields near the border town of Atmeh. There are no sanitation services in the place, to which they only brought simple belongings they could carry.

In addition to the influx of displacement, twenty medical facilities have been targeted in the ongoing bombardment since late April, rendering nineteen of these facilities inoperable, according to the United Nations. Around two hundred and ninety civilians, including more than sixty children, have died since 20 April, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

 

Bearing a Child in Prison

26 May 2019

After spending around four years in Syrian government prisons where she was suspended from her wrists and subject to beating, torture, and disease, Hasna Dbeis says she is determined to forge a new life for her and her child who was born in detention.

The road ahead is still difficult for this thirty-year-old woman, who has suffered to find a source of living, especially after she left prison last year only to find her family members dispersed, missing, or killed. The people in the area where she used to live in eastern Ghouta had gone to the northwest of the country.

Dbeis is one of tens of thousands of Syrians who spent most of the years of the conflict behind bars for participating or supporting the protests which started out peacefully and then turned into a bloody conflict.

Dbeis, who is originally from the town of Harzmma in eastern Ghouta, participated in the crowded popular demonstration in 2011, according to what she told the AFP. Then she volunteered in one of the medical points to treat people wounded during the protests, which were confronted by government forces. She was two months pregnant when she was detained in eastern Ghouta in August of 2014 and accused of “collaborating” with opposition factions, a charge which she denies.

During years of imprisonment, she was shuffled around various intelligence branches and detention centers. She remembers how she was kept in solitary confinement for forty days in a cell littered with garbage and filled with insects. Her suffering only worsened when she was transferred to an intelligence branch where “I was surprised to see my brother and father there. They were tortured right in front of me,” Dbeis said.

After she had her child Mohammed, she was transferred to al-Fayhaa prison in Damascus. “The new baby came into my life and I didn’t know what to do in the detention center,” she said.

Mohammed grew up in prison, but he was not alone, as there were other children for other female detainees charged with affiliation to ISIS.

“I used to dream of walking in the street with my child and entering a store to buy him clothes like normal mothers do,” she said

In April of 2018, the prison warden told her that she would be released, which she thought was a joke in the beginning. Mohammed was three and half years old at the time.

Dbeis thought she would be going back to her family home in eastern Ghouta. However, when she arrived there, government forces told her to go on buses carrying the last installment of people leaving Douma under an agreement to evacuate those who refused the settlement with Damascus, according to Dbeis.

She was not aware of the military operation launched at the time by government forces in eastern Ghouta and the evacuation agreements to areas in the north that came after that. She then found herself with her child in areas controlled by opposition faction in the northern countryside of Aleppo.

As for Mohammed, it was his first life experience outside the confinement of prison. Dbeis recalled how when he saw a vegetable carriage, he ran towards it and took a tomato. “He quickly started eating it. It was something he had never seen before,” she said.

Dbeis then moved from the northern countryside of Aleppo to Idlib. She managed to get in touch with one of her sisters who was living in Damascus. She learned that a third sister and their younger brother were living in nearby Idlib governorate.

After some time, the three siblings met. She never expected the answers she got for her numerous question. Her mother had died, her husband was killed “for collaborating with the opposition,” her two younger sisters were arrested two years ago, and there were no information regarding her father and brother in prison.

“After hearing about my family’s heart-wrenching fate, I decided to start a new life … and to work in order to make a living,” she said.

 

Hit and Run North of Hama

26 May 2019

On Sunday, Syrian government forces, with support from allied militants, were able to regain control of the town of Kafrnboodeh in the northern countryside of Hama, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR).

This came after targeting the town with more than six hundred and seventy-five strikes from the air and the ground by government planes, helicopters, cannons, and rocket launchers, the SOHR said in a press release.

The SOHR added that there are still fierce clashes between the two sides on the eastern and northern outskirts of the town, in an attempt by opposition factions to re-enter the town.

The SOHR mentioned heavy losses by both sides during a few hours of fierce clashes accompanied by hundreds of aerial and ground assaults, in addition to the targeting and destruction of vehicles. At least twenty-eight members of opposition factions were killed and at least sixteen members of government forces and allied militants were also killed.

Officials in the Syrian opposition and militant sources said on Saturday that Turkey provided new weapons for a group of opposition fighters to help them confront the massive Russian-supported Syrian offensive.

Russia is providing support to the Syrian army’s aerial and ground offensive in its attempt to take control of the last major area still under opposition control in the northwest. A western intelligence source said that Washington gave the moderate Turkey-supported opposition fighters the “green light” to use the TOW rockets that had been stockpiled in the last campaign.

The retreat from Kafrnboodeh was an upset to a Russian goal of a speedy military campaign to gain another slice of heavily populated Idlib governorate.

 

Lebanon Deports Syrians

24 May 2019

Five human rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, denounced Lebanon’s deportation of sixteen Syrians upon their arrival at Beirut airport and after “summarily” procedures, despite the fact that some of them were registered refugees and expressed their fear of returning to their country. They were sent back to Syria through al-Masnaa border crossing east of Lebanon.

Lebanese authorities estimate that there are currently one and a half million Syrian refugees in the country, whereas data from the UN refugee agency puts the number at less than one million. Lebanese officials have been repeatedly called for returning Syrians back to their country as the war effectively ended in several areas where the government was able to regain control in the last two years.

According to a report by organizations, seventy-four per cent of Syrians present in Lebanon have no legal residence in Lebanon and therefore they face the threat of detention.

 

Chemical Weapons Once Again

23 May 2019

The State Department said on Thursday the United States has received numerous reports that appear consistent with chemical exposure after an attack by Syrian government forces in northwest Syria, but it has made no definitive conclusion as to whether they used chemical weapons.

“We do have numerous sources including interviews with those present during the attack that did report that a number of opposition fighters were taken to local hospitals and presented symptoms that were consistent with chemical exposure,” State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus told reporters.

Rebels fighting on the mountainous western edge of Syria’s last big rebel enclave of Idlib said on Sunday that the army had shelled them with poison gas, leading some to suffer choking symptoms. They said they had not documented the attack because they were under bombardment when it occurred.

The Trump administration has twice bombed Syria over President’s Bashar al-Assad’s government alleged use of chemical weapons, in April 2017 and April 2018.

 

German Raid Against Syrians

22 May 2019

The police in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia carried out a major security raid against an Iraqi-Syrian organization called Peace 312, in the early hours of Wednesday morning.

The local Interior Minister Herbert Reul said some eight hundred police stormed forty-nine properties in the state, adding that special forces from the police participated in inspecting eight properties.

Reul said that counterfeit money, drugs, a computer, mobile phones, and data storage devices were confiscated during the raid. He said that there are thirty-four suspects, most of whom are from Syria or Iraq.

 

Syria in a Week (7 – 13 May 2019)

Syria in a Week (7 – 13 May 2019)

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.

 

Idlib Heats Up

Reuters

9 and 10 May 2019

Turkey’s defense minister said Syrian government forces need to halt attacks in northwestern Syria, state-owned Anadolu agency reported on Friday.

Syria’s army, backed by Russian air power, launched ground operations this week against the southern flank of an opposition zone consisting of Idlib and parts of adjacent governorates.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) said Syrian government forces captured the town of Qalaat al-Madiq in northwest Syria as it pushes into the biggest remaining opposition territory under a massive bombardment.

Qalaat al-Madiq was the rebel area closest to the Russian Hmeimim airbase at Lattakia, which insurgents have previously targeted with rocket fire.

On Thursday, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Vershinin said the operation was a reaction to terrorists in the area, and was being carried out “in coordination with our Turkish partners,” TASS news agency reported.

The United Nations Security Council was briefed behind closed doors on Friday on the situation in northwest Syria. Afterward, eleven of the fifteen members – including the United States, France and Britain – jointly condemned the killing of civilians and warned of a possible humanitarian catastrophe in Idlib.

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) says more than one hundred and fifty-two thousand people fled between April 29 and May 5, doubling the number of displaced in the northwest since February. Air strikes have struck twelve health facilities, killed more than eighty civilians and wounded more than three hundred, OCHA said. Shelling, air strikes, and fighting in more than fifty villages have destroyed at least ten schools and teaching is suspended. The UN regional humanitarian coordinator has said the barrel bombing is the worst for at least fifteen months.

Doctors have pulled back into cave shelters to treat the wounded and protect their patients from a government offensive that has hit health centers and hospitals. Medical services suffer from a lack of equipment and resources.

Advance in Lattakia

Enab Baladi

12 May 2019

Opposition factions repelled attempts by Syrian government forces to advance in the Akrad mountain region in the northern countryside of Lattakia. On Sunday, these forces carried out several attempts to advance towards al-Kabineh, in the Akrad mountain in the opposition-held countryside of Lattakia. This was accompanied by fierce aerial bombardment using explosive barrels, rocket launchers, and heavy artillery, seeking to achieve progress in the area overlooking the western countryside of Idlib. Government forces, backed by aerial power and intense bombardment, are trying to advance in new areas after they managed to advance in the western countryside of Hama and take control the towns of al-Madiq and Kafr Nboudeh and other villages in al-Ghab valley. Sources in Tahrir al-Sham said that they repelled attempts by government forces to advance in al-Kabineh in the northern countryside of Lattakia, and that the latter was not able to advance.

Al-Akrad mountain is controlled by the Turkestan Party and Tahrir al-Sham. It links between the northern countryside of Lattakia and Jisr al-Shoghour in the western countryside of Idlib.

Al-Joulani on the Frontlines!

Enab Baladi

12 May 2019

The general commander of Tahrir al-sham Abu Mohammed al-Joulani appeared in a photo on the frontlines in Hama countryside, amidst a fierce military escalation. Taher al-Omar, a reporter with close ties to Tahrir al-sham, published on Sunday a photo that shows him with al-Joulani wearing a military uniform and carrying a weapon. This appearance of al-Joulani coincided with the intensification of battles and continued escalation in the countryside of Hama and Idlib, which has seen government forces taking control of several towns west of Hama from opposition factions. Tahrir al-sham is fighting the battles jointly with the National Front for Liberation and al-Izza Army in various areas of Hama countryside.

The “Tahrir al-Sham” Resistance

Enab Baladi

12 May 2019

The Shura Council in Northern Syria, which was established with sponsorship from the salvation government, announced the formation of “popular resistance brigades,” to allow civilians to take part in the anticipated battles against the Syrian government. This comes in light of military escalation by the Syrian government and its Russian ally towards the countryside of Hama and Idlib, which is accompanied by aerial support and ground advance attempts, in a campaign that is regarded to be the fiercest in the area.

Torture in Prisons

Enab Baladi

12 May 2019

The New York Times published a report on the situation of detainees in Syrian prisons and their torture by the government forces. The report mentions one hundred and twenty-eight thousand civilians who forcibly disappeared and their whereabouts are unknown. They could have been killed or perhaps they are still detained. The newspaper based its report on data from the Syrian Network for Human Rights, which says that almost fourteen thousand civilians were killed under torture, while five thousand and six hundred and seven people were arbitrarily arrested last year.

The report said that kidnappings and killings by ISIS attracted the West’s attention and not the detention by the Syrian government of nearly ninety per cent of those forcibly disappeared. The Syrian government denies the presence of systematic torture. According to the report, however, government documents show that Syrian officials directly ordered mass detentions.

Kristyan Benedict, an activist in Amnesty International, said that investments in accountability and justice should be dramatically increased.

Protests Against Self-Administration

Reuters

8 May 2019

Arab inhabitants of Syria’s Deir al-Zor began a third week of protests against Kurdish rule, the largest wave of unrest to sweep the oil-rich region since the US-backed forces took over the territory from ISIS nearly eighteen months ago, residents, witnesses, and tribal figures said.

The protests which erupted weeks ago in several towns and villages from Busayrah to Shuhail have now spread to remaining areas where most of the oil fields are located in the SDF controlled part of Deir al-Zor, east of the Euphrates.

Arab residents under People’s Protection Units’ rule who have been complaining of lack of basic services and discrimination against them in local administrations run by Kurdish officials have been growing restive in recent months.

The protests took a violent turn when angry mobs took to the streets and disrupted the routes of convoys of trucks loaded with oil from nearby fields that cross into government held areas.

The stepping up of oil sales to alleviate a fuel crunch facing Damascus has infuriated the local Arab protesters, with many placards saying they were being robbed of their wealth.

The SDF has not publicly commented on the most serious challenge so far to its rule over tens of thousands of Arabs.

Trump in Golan

Enab Baladi

12 May 2019

Benjamin Netanyahu has identified the location of a new settlement to be named after US President Donald Trump as an expression of gratitude by the Israeli occupation towards Trump’s decision to acknowledge Israeli sovereignty over the occupied Syrian Golan Heights. “We have started building the settlement,” said Netanyahu.

The idea of building the settlement came on April 23rd when Netanyahu and his family were out on a picnic in the Golan during Passover. From there he pledged to name the settlement Trump in honor of the US president.

On March 25th, President Trump signed a proclamation recognizing Israeli sovereignty over the Syrian Golan Heights. Israel occupied the Golan in the 1967 war, which remained under its control in the October war of 1973. In 1982, Tel Aviv unilaterally decided to annex the plateau, which the UN Security Council considered annulled and illegal. Israel has been trying for half a century to capture the Syrian occupied Golan and change the characteristics of this region. It is also trying to impose Israeli ID on the residents and has made demographic changes, as the number of settlement has exceeded dozens.

 

Syria in a Week (13 August 2018)

Syria in a Week (13 August 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.

Victims in the North

11 August 2018

Al-Hayat

Fifty-three civilians, including twenty-six children, were killed in an air strike on Friday night that targeted areas controlled by opposition factions in northern Syria, according to a new toll from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR). The SOHR said that “forty-one civilians, including twenty-five children, were killed in a night airstrike on the town of Orm al-Kobra in the western countryside of Aleppo,” while twelve others, including one child, were killed in air raids on the governorate of Idlib. “Air raids conducted by Russian airplanes and explosive drums launched by Syrian helicopters targeted areas in southern Idlib governorate,” the SOHR said. The current escalation is the most dangerous since the announcement of the de-escalation zone in Idlib last year. (al-Hayat)  For the fourth consecutive day, Russian air defense systems brought down drones targeting Hmeimeim airbase. This escalation coincides with the beginning of government military operations in northern Hama and southern Idlib.

Another sixty-nine people were killed, including fifty-two civilians, as a result of an unexplained explosion in a weapons depot early Sunday morning in the town of Sarmada in Idlib governorate, according to a new toll from the SOHR on Monday.

“The number of people killed as a result of the explosion rose to sixty-nine, including fifty-two civilians and seventeen militants from Tahrir al-Sham (previously Nusra),” said the SOHR.

The civilian death toll includes seventeen children, according to the SOHR, which said that the majority of those killed are family members of militants from Tahrir al-Sham who were displaced from Homs.

The rescue operation has been ongoing since dawn on Sunday, according to Abdul Rahman, who said that the death toll is likely to rise because of “dozens of wounded, some in serious condition.”

The depot was located in a residential building in the town of Sarmada in the northern countryside of Idlib. The reasons behind the explosion are “still unclear.”

 

Displacement from Idlib … to Where?

8 August 2018

Reuters

The anticipated battle in Idlib could lead to the displacement of seven hundred thousand Syrians, according to reports by UN-supervised aid agencies. Many previous battles ended in agreements that provided for the departure of opposition militants and their families to Idlib, which doubled the population of the governorate to two and a half million. This potential battle could exacerbate the humanitarian situation and increase relief needs in an exceptional manner. UN regional humanitarian coordinator Panos Moumtzis said in June that the governorate’s entire population of two and a half million could be displaced and move towards the Turkish border if there was a major battle. Such a battle would be more complicated and brutal than anything seen so far in the seven-year war, he said. (Reuters) The UN has repeatedly cautioned about the dangers of an attack on Idlib. Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said in an interview with Russian media last month that Idlib governorate would be a priority for his forces.

 

The New Opposition Army

13 August 2018

Middle East Newspaper

The armed opposition in northern Syria has been working on establishing a “national army” with Turkish support, after the start of the countdown to the battle for Idlib. This means that there are two main armed groups in northern Syria: the National Army and the National Front for Liberation, in addition to Tahrir al-Sham. The main challenge is uniting the armed opposition without Tahrir al-Sham. The National Army receives financial and military support from Turkey, which also provides support for the National Front for Liberation, which in turn was formed by the merger of five groups, notably the Syrian Liberation Front, factions from the Free Syrian Army, and al-Ahrar Army faction.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan hinted at the possibility of conducting more military operations in northern Syria to establish safe zones that could accommodate Syrian refugees and prevent a new influx of displacement into his country. He added that his country has completed the necessary arrangements to establish more safe zones inside Syrian territory, as it did before during the Euphrates Shield and Olive Branch operations. (Middle East)

 

Hama’s Border Crossings are Closed

12 August 2018

Enab Baladi

The border crossings of al-Madhiq Citadel and Mork are two of the most important border crossings between areas controlled by the government and those controlled by the opposition. They represent symbols of the economies of war and exchange of interests among the warring parties from a military perspective. In the wake of repeated escalations in Idlib, the Syrian government and Russian police have closed the border crossings of al-Madhiq Citadel and Mork in Hama countryside, effectively cutting off commercial and civilian activities. The closure of the border crossings coincided with the arrival of government military reinforcements to the northern countryside of Hama on Friday. (Enab Baladi)

 

Ousting ISIS from Sweidaa’s Dessert

12 August 2018

SANA & Enab Baladi

Government forces declared their full control over Sweidaa’s administrational border in its eastern countryside as part of their campaign against ISIS. The official Syrian news agency SANA said that government forces made wide progress and were able to encircle ISIS on Sunday in Tolool al-Safa, which is located within the administrational border of Damascus Countryside governorate. On Saturday, government forces controlled the following areas: Rosoom al-Tathmooni, Khirbet al-Ambashi, Tilal al-Hibarieh, Rosoom Marroush, Souh al-Na’meh, Dharet Rashed, Zraibieh, Khirbet al-Shahrieh, Wadi al-Rmailan, Wadi Shajara, Zmlet Nasser, al-Nahyan, Tal Dhabe’, Tal al-Dhbai’ieh, and Qabr al-Sheikh Houssain. ISIS did not comment on the battles and its propaganda has been completely absent since the last attacks in Sweidaa, which left more than two hundred people dead. ISIS still holds women and children from Sweidaa as captives. (Enab Baladi)

 

Russian Pressure for the Return of Refugees

8 August 2018

Enab Baladi

Russia announced its plan for the return of Syrian refugees on 18 July, making it the first serious international initiative in this regard. It sent out applications for hosting countries to provide estimates of the number of refugees. It also opened up five border crossings and seventy-six centers to welcome returning refugees, which can accommodate three hundred and thirty-six thousand refugees. The main function of these centers is to monitor the return of refugees from foreign countries to Syria, provide necessary aid to them, and then send them to their areas of permanent residence or keep those who have no place to go in the shelter centers.

The Russia plan involves the return of 1.7 million Syrian refugees to Syrian in the “near future” which are distributed as the following according to data from the Russian Ministry of Defense: eight hundred and ninety thousand refugees from Lebanon, three hundred thousand refugees from Turkey, two hundred thousand refugees from European countries, one hundred and fifty thousand refugees from Jordan, one hundred thousand refugees from Iraq, and one hundred thousand refugees from Egypt. The Russian government presented its plan for the return of refugees to Syria during the Helsinki summit on 16 July, which joined President Donald Trump and President Vladimir Putin. Moscow then dispatched senior officials from the ministries of foreign affairs and defense on a shuttle tour to Jordan, Lebanon, Germany, and France. Then talked about solidarity with these countries to ensure the success of the plan and the return of the refugees.

There were many doubts regarding the number of refugees who accepted the Russian plan. Under the initial text of the plan, Russia could not dispel the fears of the refugees wanted by the Syrian security authorities or those who left the county for fear of the mandatory military service. (Enab Baladi)

There is concern among human rights organizations and refugees regarding how host countries, which are already under pressure because of the refugees, would respond to the Russian initiative, as pressure could be implicitly or explicitly exercised on refugees to return involuntarily.

 

Cost of Reconstruction

8 August 2018

ESCWA, AFP

The United Nations estimated the cost of the war in Syria at around four hundred billion US dollars in a meeting for the Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) on Wednesday, 8 August. This estimate does not include human losses that Syrians have suffered during the bloody war, such as death, injuries, and displacement. The financial and human losses reflect the high burden of the war and the great challenges facing reconstruction, which requires, in addition to financial and human resources, credible, competent, and inclusive institutions to overcome the consequences of the war and ensure stability thereafter.

 

Jordanian Commercial Delegation in Damascus in Preparation for the Resumption of Commercial Trade.

8 August 2018

Enab Baladi

Damascus received a Jordanian commercial delegation at the invitation of Syrian economic officials, in preparation for the resumption of commercial and economic relationships between the two sides. On Wednesday, 8 August, the Ministry of Internal Commerce and Consumer Protection said that a meeting was held at the ministry in Damascus to discuss ways to restore commercial relationships between Jordan and Syria. It also said that the Jordanian delegation expressed its desire to open up border crossings between the two countries, especially Nassib border crossing, in order to start the commercial exchange, including all agricultural and industrial sectors. The Syrian side viewed the meeting as a new chapter in the Syrian-Jordanian commercial cooperation. It said that this was a preparatory meeting to open Nassib border crossing between the two countries.

Nassib border crossing is of significant political and economic importance to the Syrian government and Jordan. Government forces took control over the border crossing on 6 July during a military campaign against opposition areas in Daraa governorate, south of Syria. (Enab Baladi)