ALREADY on its knees, the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad took another
body blow on Wednesday. The assassination of three of the regime`s top
security advisers, including the defence minister, occurred in the heart
of the capital and highlighted the continued shrinkage of the area
under Baathist control. On Wednesday also, 600 more Syrians, including
two brigadier generals, crossed over to Turkey, thus adding to the ranks
of the Free Syrian Army. With fighting no longer confined to the
provinces helicopters and artillery are shelling parts of Damascus there
are rumours that President Assad`s whereabouts are not known. There is
no doubt the 17-month-old uprising has now turned into a ferocious civil
war, with the opposition claiming 17,000 fatalities. After Libya, this
is the highest death toll for an `Arab spring`country.
President
Assad missed the bus in April when he accepted Kofi Annan`s six-point
plan only to renege on it. The plan had provided for a ceasefire and
smooth transition to democracy. The caretakercabinet proposal, too, is
dead. Even Russia had agreed to a neutral cabinet in which there would
be men from both sides.
But President Assad`s intransigence
scuttled it when he insisted that he should be part of it. This was not
acceptable to the opposition. Fissures in the security establishment
have now been so widened and the loyalist ranks so weakened that Assad
is pulling troops out of the Golan Heights to bolster security around
him. The world has watched the fate of the four Arab dictators who have
fallen. It is now for President Assad to decide whether he would choose
to seek a Saleh-like amnesty and go abroad or suffer a worse fate. If
his regime falls, there could be repercussions in the region. The causes
of the uprising are not sectarian, but the fact that the Alawite
minority has been ruling for four decades may give a sectarIan touch to
the aftermath.
If there is a sectarian flare-up, there could be
political fallout in neighbouring Lebanon. Iran would lose one of its
allies and that would also affect Hezbollah and Hamas.
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