Juan Cole jumped the gun a bit by attributing the hundred+ deaths in the Syrian town of Houla to a Syrian Army
artillery assault.
In a perverse way, a massacre by the Syrian military would
have been almost a stabilizing phenomenon.
It would have placed the bad-guy hat firmly and irrevocably
on the heads of the Syrian armed forces.
It would also have served as an affirmation that the Assad
regime is in complete command of the security forces and responsible for the
atrocities committed against Syrian civilians.
And it would have given Dr. Cole added ammunition to argue for a new humanitarian intervention in Syria against the convenient
and vulnerable target of the Assad regime, one that might banish the embarrassing
memory of the last intervention he promoted: the fiasco in Libya.
Instead, the Syrian conflict appears to be spiraling
out of control, with Syrian army military commanders either turning a blind eye
to, condoning, or supporting the activities of local death squads.
The picture, murky as it is, of the atrocity at Houla is of
a fierce battle between government and insurrectionary forces in Houla,
followed perhaps by a tactical withdrawal by the rebels. Then some combination of soldiers and pro-government
irregulars moved in for a massacre that might have been local score-settling
for the assassination of a pro-government informer in a nearby village, a horrific
warning to Syrian soldiers who defect (Houla was reportedly a refuge for many defectors
and their families), or a brutal escalation in COIN-style terror.
In any case, the people who perpetrated the atrocity
apparently knew who they were looking for, if a persuasive account in the
Guardian is accurate:
"They came in
armoured vehicles and there were some tanks," said the boy. "They
shot five bullets through the door of our house. They said they wanted Aref and
Shawki, my father and my brother. They then asked about my uncle, Abu Haidar. They
also knew his name."
From the point of view of the Assad regime, credible
accusations that its military, security personnel, and irregulars are operating
death squads shred its rather threadbare claim to the role of protector of
Syria’s citizens against terrorists.
As Patrick Cockburn points out in a lengthy piece in Counterpunch,
the Annan peace process was something of a lifeline for Assad. The regime has
demonstrated considerably more forbearance than the rebels, who would prefer to
see the peace process collapse, and had little to gain and much to lose from
the carnival of massacre in Houla.
From the point of view of Assad’s patrons in Russia and
China, Houla hints that Assad is losing control of the military and security
apparatus, casting severe doubts on his abilities to manage a political
transition for Syria.
Reporting from Damascus, Cockburn wrote:
The government in Damascus yesterday
appeared to be somewhat leaderless and seemed slow to take on board the impact
of an outrage in which people across the world are blaming the Syrian
authorities for the murder and mutilation of children. “I get the impression
that there is nobody in firm control of Syrian policy and the Syrian armed
forces,” said a diplomat yesterday.
Therefore, Russia and China have both been prompt to call for an investigation of the massacre at
Houla.
Possible but unlikely outcomes are that Houla turns out to have
been some hideous false flag operation, or some local freelance murder spree.
If, on the other hand, evidence shows that the official
security and military apparatus, presumably at a local or regional level,
orchestrated the operation, I expect that Beijing and Moscow will be very interested to see
if Assad can enforce accountability and demonstrate, to the satisfaction of
Russia and the PRC if not the international community, that he can punish and
reassign the commanders and security chiefs responsible for dealing the Annan
plan so conspicuous a setback.
If Assad can’t do it, it is possible that Russia, which is reportedly
impatient for a change at the top in Syria, will probably find somebody who
can.
It does not appear that Russia or China (or, for that
matter, Iran) are interested in backing proxies in a sectarian civil war in
Syria. They will support the Annan plan
and the political process as long as they see a chance for a successor regime
to claim, even in some diminished way, the mantle of Syrian national legitimacy.
If the government becomes irrevocably identified with death
squads as well as the well-known brutality of its military and security
apparatus, Beijing and Moscow will probably throw in their losing hand.
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