Home Page - Gulf in the Media
HomePoliticsEconomy                               Set Gulfinthemedia.com as home page
 Print  Send This Page
Save Listen to this Article
Syrians will not soon forget brutal massacre in Houla   

The National - 31 May, 2012
Author: Ali Khaled

In the early hours of May 30, 1938, two men sat down in a room in Munich and signed a piece of paper that promised stability and peace in Europe.

Later that day, one of them, British prime minister Neville Chamberlain, returned home triumphantly declaring "peace in our time", comfortable in the knowledge that only the people of Czechoslovakia had been sacrificed. Meanwhile back in Germany, the other, Adolf Hitler, reassured his Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop, who was unhappy at the terms of the Munich Pact, not to fret.

"Oh, don't take it so seriously," the Führer said. "That piece of paper is of no further significance whatever."

If Kofi Annan is not a student of history, then perhaps he ought to be. The lesson is simple. Agreements, certainly ones involving brutal dictators, are not worth the paper they're written on.

Last Friday, the Houla massacre in Syria left 108 dead, many of them children executed in cold blood. If any proof was needed this was it: the stillborn Kofi Annan ceasefire plan was well and truly buried.

Despite clear evidence of repeated detentions, torture and indiscriminate shelling of civilian areas by Syrian government forces, it has taken the horror of Houla to finally drive home to the world what has been obvious for months. The Assad regime has crossed the Rubicon; it is inconceivable a negotiated settlement could be implemented now.

The foreign reporters may eventually move on, and the West, as Robert Fisk said in The Independent on Tuesday, "will forget". But the Syrian people will not. Houla is now imprinted in their collective consciousness. It is now their Srebrenica. Their Sabra and Shatila. This generation's Hama. People don't forget.

Not surprisingly, Syria has "categorically denied" responsibility for what it was calling a "terrorist massacre". (Which raises the question of why a regime which has ruled the country with an iron grip for four decades is incapable of arresting these "terrorists".)

After Houla, however, the world is at last scrambling to do the right thing, or get "on the right side of history", as it is called these days.

By yesterday, Spain, Italy, Canada Britain, Australia, Switzerland, France, Germany and the US had all expelled the Syrian envoys from their capitals. This will not stop the killing, but it's a start. Even the terminally ineffectual UN and its snail-paced observer mission eventually condemned the Houla massacre; although it was not until Tuesday that the UN conceded that the executions were "probably" the work of the Shabbiheh, the pro-Assad militia thugs.

Mr Annan, meanwhile, continues to veer from outrage to sycophancy, often at the same time.

"Those responsible for these brutal crimes must be held accountable," he said before quickly abandoning all credibility by adding: "I understand that the [Syrian] government is also investigating." How must these words sound to those who suffered in Houla? What possible outcome will make a mother forgive the slaughter of her child?

After Houla, Syria's Baathist regime is surely doomed. Not because the opposition are organised or are in any way equipped to defeat Assad's forces; they aren't.

Not because a Libya-style foreign intervention is on the way; the international community clearly has no stomach for this fight.

And certainly not because Mr Al Assad's allies will pressure him to stop the slaughter; Russia and China have displayed astonishing moral bankruptcy in protecting their Middle East ally.

No, it's because the images of children with slit throats have now come to define this conflict. Rightly or wrongly, many will demand vengeance.

As ever with Syria, the question is what happens next? Is Houla the tipping point or will the world continue to sit back and watch? Certainly no obvious resolution presents itself. Foreign intervention for now is off the table. Escalating violence, increased arming of the opposition and potential civil war are more likely scenarios.

Writing in The National on Tuesday, the Syrian-American columnist Amal Hanano eloquently described the cynics who predicted these self-fulfilling prophecies.

"There were many months when the struggle was peaceful, nonsectarian, without outside influences and contained within borders," she wrote. "But the critics shook their condescending fingers and raised their voices in unison, predicting the violence that was to be unleashed on the region."

The long-held view is that the Assad regime welcomes an escalation of violence from the opposition. Except it doesn't really. What the Assad regime welcomes is the perception of violence by the opposition. A full-blown civil conflict, which would target their top men, include car bombings and ultimately close in on the regime-base in Damascus, can lead to only one endgame. An endgame many dictators, from Hitler to Muammar Qaddafi, ultimately faced.

It might not happen anytime soon. But it will happen. And when it does, the Syrian president should not expect the mercy that was denied to the children of Houla. People don't forget, Bashar.



akhaled@thenational.ae

On Twitter: AliKhaled_
 
Obama, isolationist in Syria
Source : Asharq Al-Awsat  
Date : 2013-06-11
Ever since Barack Obama took office some five years ago, he was compared to former President Jimmy Carter, and was described to be identical to him....
On America's Defeat in Qusayr
Source : Al Hayat  
Date : 2013-06-11
This is the result of the world being led by one major country: one Syrian town has been shredded to pieces; dead bodies are scattered in the streets; and families...
The Syrian chessboard
Source : Asharq Al-Awsat  
Date : 2013-06-11
The comparison of international struggles to a chessboard was first used by Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Carter's National Security Advisor, in his book The Grand Chessboard. The expression is a fitting...
Syria is bleeding to death and the West stands by
Source : The Peninsula  
Date : 2013-06-11
Sceptics about humanitarian intervention in Syria hit you with what they regard as a killer question: "Where do you stop?" If the "international community", such as it is, tries to...
Iran, Syria and Hezbollah are out of the fold
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-06-11
My Shiite friend was heartbroken. He pointed to a recent statement by a senior religious scholar. A well-known sheikh used our anger over Hezbollah support of the Syrian forces against...
It's the foreign policy, stupid
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-06-11
And so the drift continues for American foreign policy in the Middle East. What could a decade ago be explained as the confused missteps of the world’s lone superpower...
US meetings weigh arming Syrian rebels
Source : Gulf Times  
Date : 2013-06-11
The US could decide as early as this week whether to arm Syrian rebels, officials said yesterday, as Secretary of State John Kerry put off a Middle East trip to...
Syrian opposition to name hajis
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-06-11
The Kingdom has decided to give Syria's opposition National Coalition the right to process applications of Syrians wishing to perform Haj to Makkah, an official said yesterday....
Sectarian rift risks regional chaos
Source : Arab News  
Date : 2013-06-11
The foray into Syria's civil war by Lebanon's Hezbollah has fuelled a sectarian polarization that threatens to feed extremism on both sides and export the conflict to the wider region,...
Syria sectarian strife may take decades to remedy: OIC chief
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-06-11
The rise in militancy and sectarian infighting in Syria could force regional consequences that could take "decades to remedy," the head of the Organization of Islamic Countries (OIC) warned on...
Al Qaeda chief annuls merger of Iraq, Syria wings
Source : The Peninsula  
Date : 2013-06-11
Al Qaeda chief Ayman Al Zawahiri has ruled that the Islamic State of Iraq and Al Nusra Front in Syria should operate as separate entities, according to a letter posted...
Gains by Assad make peace talks harder: Hague
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-06-10
British Foreign Secretary William Hague warned on Sunday that gains made by the regime in the Syrian conflict this week made it harder to organize a peace conference and to...
From Russia with hate!
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-06-10
The Russians were never exactly the darlings of the Arab world. During the sad and pathetic period of the infamous Soviet Union, they were allies of brutal and extremely autocratic...
Call for consistent US stance on Syria
Source : The Peninsula  
Date : 2013-06-10
The Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs H E Ahmed bin Abdullah Al Mahmoud yesterday said that people in the Islamic world were saddened that...
Syria's Opposition says 'doors closed' to peace talks
Source : Gulf Times  
Date : 2013-06-09
Syria's main opposition coalition reiterated yesterday its refusal to participate in proposed international peace talks, saying recent developments in the civil war had "closed the doors" to any political initiative....
Syria asks Israel 'not to take action' against moving tanks in Golan Heights
Source : Kuwait News Agency  
Date : 2013-06-09
Syria has requested Israel not to take any military action against Al-Assad regime tanks fighting the opposition inside the demilitarized zone of Quneitra, a border post in the Golan Heights,...
Syrian copters fire rockets near Lebanese pro-revolt area
Source : The Peninsula  
Date : 2013-06-09
Syrian helicopters fired rockets near a Lebanese border area whose residents back the rebellion against President Bashar Al Assad, a security official said, in the latest incident rasing new concerns...
Total 410 Results in 25 Pages
  5 
For more news, views and reports about this topic, please subscribe
to GRC website: www.grc.ae
Tue Jun 18, 2013| 09-شعبان-1434هـ
Riyadh hopes for warm ties with Tehran under Rowhani
Deposits at Saudi banks exceed SR 1.3 trillion
Kuwaiti court upholds one-vote decree, scraps assembly
It's a bear stampede in UAE bourses
Port authorities plan to spend SR 3.43 billion on development
Record number of vessels docks at Qatari ports in 2012
Iraq witnesses wave of bomb blasts
DDF records Dh2.7 biilion sales for first five months
Girls primary school attacked in Bahrain
Privatization of landlines soon
Kuwait Amir affirms court's ruling respect
Qatari exports to UK decline by 23 percent
Putin blasts West over arming Syria rebels
GCC to continue to invest heavily in infrastructure
Saudi Arabia to set up blood plasma plant
Bahrain hails historic US ties
    Newspaper Editorials
Rohani's victory: Message of change
A positive step for conservation of Qatar's flora
More>>  
    Opinions
Iran has changed course; now US must do the same
Saudi youth condemn sectarian cries
More>>  
    GCC Press Agencies
Day's main stories from the GCC Press Agencies
    Reports
Iraq Ten Years On
More>>  
    Bank Reports
Saudi Arabia: Interest rate outlook, 2013-15
GCC Markets Monthly - May 2013
More>>  
    GRC Analysis
Building a Strong Saudi-Japan Relationship
Poor Gulf: Inequality and the Lack of Statistics
Whither GCC-US Relations?
    GRC Commentary
On Relations between Rulers and Citizens: The Need for a New Social/Political Contract in the GCC States
Key Issue Facing the Saudi Ruling House.
    GRC Book Review
Beyond Regionalism? Regional Cooperation, Regionalism and Regionalization in the Middle East
India, GCC and the Global Energy Regime: Exploring Interdependence and Outlook for Collaboration.
    GRC Press Release
Gulf Research Center press releases to the media
    GRC Publications
The Uneasy Balance: Potential and Challenges of the West's Relations with the Gulf States
Asia-Gulf Economic Relations in the 21st Century: The Local to Global Transformation
Assessment of the Security Situation in Iran, Iraq, Yemen, Syria and the Arab Gulf States
    GRC Newsletters/Bulletins

Enter your email to get the Newsletter
Go
      
Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Terms & Conditions | About Us |
Weather | Qibla Directions | Hijri Date Conversion Tool
Full Page :total time:5  |   59-- 04 Middle Page :0  --   | Right : 03 - 03--en--sess-enreq-en-coming