Syria: The Background (ISRAEL HAYOM OP-ED) Elliott Abrams 07/02/12)
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=2160
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Much scorn has been directed at fashion magazines that lionized Asma
al-Assad, the wife of the Syrian dictator. This is fair enough, but
we don’t really expect careful judgments about world politics from
the likes of Vogue. We do expect them from statesmen, government
officials, diplomats, and journalists who claim expertise in world
politics. In the case of Bashar al-Assad, careful judgments were long
absent — until he became a pariah in the last few months. For years,
indeed for a decade, he was seen as a potential peacemaker and
possible liberal force by people who willfully ignored the facts
about his murderous regime.
Journalist Yossi Klein Halevi recently supplied a superb example of
this phenomenon. In a column in the Canadian paper The Globe and Mail
he relates this: "Last year, I was part of a group of Israelis who
met in Jerusalem with Massachusetts Senator John Kerry. Mr. Kerry had
just come from Damascus with excellent news: Bashar al-Assad was
ready for peace with Israel. When one of the participants mentioned
that demonstrations had begun to challenge Mr. Assad’s legitimacy,
Mr. Kerry’s response was: All the more reason to negotiate while he’s
still in power. In other words: Israel had the golden opportunity to
give up the strategic Golan Heights to a dictator who might be
deposed by a popular revolution, which might or might not recognize
whatever peace agreement he signed. That kind of wishful thinking has
resulted in Western policy toward the Middle East that is
strategically incoherent."
Kerry was certainly not alone. The notion that Assad — the leader of
a viciously repressive mafia in Syria and the murderer of a long list
of Lebanese political leaders and journalists — could bring peace or
democracy to his country or to the region, was blind and foolish.
Madeline Albright, Hillary Clinton, Nancy Pelosi, and John Kerry were
only a few of those who engaged in what Halevi calls “wishful
thinking” but can just as easily be called willful blindness to the
nature of the Assad government. The price for that blindness is still
being paid, all over Syria, for it has taken far too many leaders far
too long to admit that his regime is a criminal enterprise that must
be brought to an end.
The Kerry anecdote is a reminder that it is apparently very difficult
for many Western politicians to come to grips with this kind of
regime, especially when it presents an attractive and Westernized
face like that of Mrs. Assad. Leaders who speak about evil, as Ronald
Reagan and George Bush did, are often branded as unsophisticated or
simple-minded. But in the Syrian case, as in so many others, the
courage to see evil for what it is and call it by its proper name is
exactly what is called for.
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