Don't Rush the Revolution,

June 4, 2005
Don't Rush the Revolution, an opinion editorial
By YASSIN AL-HAJ SALEH, The New York Times
Damascus, Syria

ON Monday, Syria's Baath Party will begin its 10th party congress, the second
since President Bashar al-Assad took power in June 2000 and the first since the
only other Baathist regime, that one in Iraq, was overthrown by American
forces. In many respects the outcome of the gathering will determine whether
Syria's leadership can ever reform itself.

Constitutionally, the Baath Party, which has been in power since 1963, is
considered "the leader party of state and society." Yet this leadership is
unsettled. Under international pressure, the Syrian Army and intelligence
services have been forced to pull out of Lebanon. This was a severe blow to the
regime, which lost a key strategic asset, a profitable satellite and much
prestige - all vital commodities to an authoritarian government that must
constantly prove its power to its subjects.

However, since it completed its Lebanon withdrawal, the Assad government has
partly regained its composure. And the stronger it feels, the fewer concessions
it will make to its own people and the less willing it will be to engage in
much needed political and economic reform.

In March, the ambassador to the United States, Imad Mustapha, promised there
would be no political prisoners left in Syrian jails by this July. I suspect he
would hesitate to make that claim now. On May 15, the political security
directorate arrested Ali al-Abdullah, a human rights activist, for having read
in public an e-mail message written by the exiled head of the Islamic dissident
group the Muslim Brotherhood. This was followed by the arrest, on May 22, of
Mohammad Radun, head of the Arab Organization for Human Rights-Syria. Human
rights groups estimate that about 1,500 political prisoners remain in Syria's
jails, and at least 40 people have been arrested since the end of March. As
someone who spent 16 years in prison for political reasons, including a year in
the infamous and brutal Palmyra prison, I am skeptical about the regime's
intentions.

So what will next week's congress decide? Some have suggested the Baathists
will finally announce that they will allow other political parties to operate
freely. Perhaps, but even so, the nation's Constitution ensures the supremacy
of the Baath - any changes the congress makes will be cosmetic, simply
modernizing the regime's authoritarianism. Of course no one expects the
"emergency laws," in place since the Baathists took power, to be lifted. And
the murder on Thursday of the Lebanese journalist Samir Kassir, a prominent
critic of the Syrian regime, will make things harder for reformers, though
official sources vehemently denied any Syrian involvement in that act of
terrorism. News of violence is always good for the hard-liners.

Paradoxically, outside pressure has weakened the government as a whole but
strengthened President Assad and his "young guard" in its internal clash with
the older followers of his father, the former strongman Hafez al-Assad. The
president will probably use this congress to remove many of his father's
associates, but he cannot do so without entering into a Faustian bargain -
namely committing himself to Syria's archaic one-party system, to the
omnipotent and omnipresent security services, to a continued state monopoly
over all media and, most important, to a ruling political elite that continues
to hoard Syria's national wealth. These interests, not the members of the "old
guard," are the most unyielding obstacles to reform.

As for average Syrians, many want to see real change, but the events in Iraq
over the last two years have convinced them that direct outside intervention
would be a disaster. The approach that the United States adopted in Iraq -
first dissolving the Iraqi state and then engaging in a "nation-building"
social engineering program - is the one thing that all Syrians wish to avoid.

Rather, when it comes to international pressure, an alternative approach is
preferable: one based on multilateral efforts by the global powers and
international organizations; financial penalties directed specifically against
the businesses and foreign assets of the Syrian elites who have helped
themselves to public money; constant moral demands from the international
community for domestic political and economic change; and, most important,
progress in negotiations with Israel. Until the occupied Golan Heights are
returned to Syria, there will be a strong tendency toward the militarization of
politics here. And America has an unrivaled role in speeding that transfer.

As we have seen in Iraq, "regime change" is easy but ensuring stability
afterwards is very difficult. Despite the authoritarian nature of the Syrian
leadership, gradual change is preferable to abrupt change. A slower pace would
not only provide a better chance at avoiding bloodshed, but would give a larger
number of Syrians a chance to gain some experience in public affairs, as many
have started doing recently by more openly criticizing the regime. True
democracy requires a maturation process with respect to participation.

For how long will the Baathist regime survive? This depends to a great degree
on the solutions and compromises it offers. There is certainly a role to be
played by the global powers. But in the end, the regime will have to answer to
18 million Syrians, most of whom want to see freedom, justice and the rule of
law in their country.

Yassin al-Haj Saleh, a writer, was imprisoned in Syria from 1980 to 1996.

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