If Assad loses control of his armed forces and the regime
loses its legitimacy as the expression of Syrian nationalism, the ingredients
don’t seem there for a Lebanon-style civil war with local proxies armed by
regional or global actors.
That’s because I don’t think that Russia, China, or even
Iran see any upside in arming some Ba’ath regime generals of primarily Alawite
backgrounds trying to beat back an insurrection powered largely by Syria’s
dominant Sunni majority.
Alawites are estimated at 12% of Syria’s largely Sunni
population and don’t look to do well if the Syrian uprising transforms into an
explicitly sectarian confrontation.
Lebanon, on the other hand, is split between Christians,
Sunnis, and Shi’ites with no one group holding a clear demographic advantage
(especially since there hasn’t been an official census in Lebanon for decades),
providing multiple opportunities for regional and global patrons to make
mischief through their durable local proxies.
If regime collapse occurs in Syria, a disorganized triumph
by various armed Sunni Arab groups, some with a significant Islamist tinge, and
a messy clean-up operation by the West, Turkey, and the Gulf States appears to
be in the offing.
I don’t think anybody is terribly interested in that kind of
outcome.
The whole Sunni-Shi’a/spillover into Lebanon scenario is
bandied about a lot, but I think the ghost at the regime change banquet, as it
were, is not another round of misery for little Lebanon; it is the prospect of more
Kurd-related heartburn for rising regional power Turkey.
A sign of Turkish sensitivities is this banned map showing
the distribution of ethnic Kurdish populations across northeastern Syria,
eastern Turkey, northern Iraq, and parts of Iran.
As a disgruntled content screener/whistleblower revealed
, this map is banned on Facebook in Turkey (together with “blatant (obvious) depiction
of camel toes and moose knuckles”):
As the Syrian conflict has militarized and the armed
opposition has acquired a Sunni sectarian tinge accentuated by its Gulf backing,
Syrian Kurds (who make up perhaps 9% of the population) have for the most part
sat on the fence.
The Syrian National Council, a bastion of Arab chauvinism
thanks to its domination by the Muslim Brotherhood (Kurds are of Iranian, not
Arab ethnicity) has put down its marker:
Samir Nashar, now a
member of the seven person General Secretariat of the SNC was even more
explicit, in August 2011 saying “We accuse the Kurdish parties of not
effectively participating in the Syrian revolution. It seems that these parties continue to bet
on a dialogue with the regime. This stance will certainly have consequences
after the fall of the regime.”
As the struggle has militarized, Kurds probably find even
less reasons for reassurance. The anti-government
armed groups competing for Gulf emirate support have displayed a certain Arab
Islamist fervor admixed with the anti-Iranian xenophobia that is de rigeur
these days.
If a Sunni majority regime takes power in Damascus, it will
probably find itself wrangling with its Kurdish population, with the
possibility that the struggles of energized and/or threatened Syrian Kurds will
find an echo in eastern Turkey.
It would appear that Turkey’s reluctance to push forward
with overthrowing the Assad regime and midwifing the creation of a friendly new
Syrian government reflects its concern that a pickup in Damascus will be offset
by headaches in Kurdistan.
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