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標題[新聞] 敘利亞的俄國賭注
時間Tue Aug 26 01:16:44 2008
標題:The Syrian bid on Russia
25/08/2008 06:33:00 PM GMT
As much as the Russian ambitions are playing with the Syrian ambitions, the
Russian cautiousness seems also to fuel a Syrian cautiousness.
By Tarek Kahlaoui
Syria has suffered too long from solitude. The regional strategic alliance
with Saudi Arabia and Egypt during much of the 1990s and the beginning of the
new century was always fragile and recently impossible. Even the Iranian ally
is kept away by a hostile Iraq before and after the American invasion. Their
political alliance never succeeded in establishing a total trust due to the
occasional Syrian-Israeli negotiations and more importantly their ideological
differences; though largely silenced such differences still looming in the
background.
Yet the regional cold and open wars with mostly adversary neighbors are not
exactly a novelty for the Syrians. The absence of an international ally,
however, with the collapse of the Soviet Union would have been a huge blow to
the strategic approach of the Syrian regime.
The quiet transition from the days of the Soviet strategic ally to the Syrian
involvement in the reorganization of the regional security under the
patronage of the United States may have softened the Syrian public reception
of the new order.
Still there was too much at stake especially with the Syrian insistence on
the concept of the “strategic balance” to counter the Israeli stand even
during times of extensive negotiations in the mid 1990s.
Any Syrian hope for a Soviet resuscitation should never come as a surprise
notably in the circumstances of the recent years when the American invasion
in Iraq and the Lebanese “spring” seemed to suggest a concerted effort not
only to contain the Syrians but more gravely towards a policy of regime
change involving even the French.
Even though it has failed to bring any effective results such a policy must
have reminded the Syrians of a former immunity provided by a world order
partly led by the Soviet Union.
The current neo-Soviet Russian ambitions feed and get fed by various regional
expectations throughout the world such as those from the Syrians—and by the
way by the Venezuelans. It is only from the perspective of this context that
we can approach the swift Syrian endorsement of the Russian invasion in
Georgia.
By denouncing the western “double standard” position on the Caucasian
conflict they tend to borrow the same terminology from their discourse with
regard the Syrian-Israeli conflict suggesting the patterns of a worldwide
conflict in which Syria and Russia standing in the same line. Certainly the
news of the Israeli intensive military cooperation with the Georgians had an
effect on the Syrian quick response.
Still the Syrian bid on a neo-Soviet Russia should not be overestimated. The
circumstances of the Syrian presidential visit to Russia are more than
suggestive of the Syrians’ hesitance to put all their cards on a Russian
roulette.
It was preceded by official statements to the Russian media by President
Assad invoking openly “the priority of the military cooperation” between
the two parts and more precisely the suggestion, as reported in an interview
to Russian newspapers, of the installation of the Russian ballistic “
Alexander” missiles in Syrian territories.
Yet the headlines the Syrian media of August 22 not only they overshadowed
such reports but they reported, as did the pro-government news website “
Syria News”, official denials that the Syrian-Russian presidential talks “
ever touched on the issue of the installation of Russian missiles on the
Syrian territories” let alone the Syrian demand for such an installation.
Syria’s Assads has always proven a high degree of alertness in order not to
upset too much the United States. Even during the Cold War President Hafez
Assad was known to be very cautious in his reliance on the Soviet ally so
that it would not put him too far from any American strategy. His Lebanese
policy was the perfect example of such caution. This approach towards the two
major powers was one of the reasons of the inner conflicts in the Baath Party
with Saleh Jadid that led to his accession to power in 1970.
President Bashshar Assad seems, in fact, to follow his father’s instincts.
But this caution seems to originate also from the Russian public statements,
as those by the Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov, which emphasized the
Russian intentions that any missiles deal would not “interfere with the
balance of power in the region”.
As much as the Russian ambitions are playing with the Syrian ambitions, the
Russian cautiousness seems also to fuel a Syrian cautiousness. The Syrians
probably think that any bid on the Russians should never be by any means
greater than the Russians’ bid on the Syrians.
-- Tarek Kahlaoui is an Assistant Professor of Middle Eastern Art History and
History at Rutgers University. He comments regularly on Middle Eastern
politics in Arabic in “Aljazeera.net” and the Qatari newspaper “al-Arab”.
His articles and comments are found in his blog.
Source: Middle East Online
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/newsfull.php?newid=153354
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