Syria: When a 鈥榲ictory鈥 isn鈥檛 one, what are the costs?
If there鈥檚 a lesson from Assad鈥檚 victory in Syria鈥檚 10-year war, it might be: Winning at all costs can exact a terrible price.
If there鈥檚 a lesson from Assad鈥檚 victory in Syria鈥檚 10-year war, it might be: Winning at all costs can exact a terrible price.
鈥淰ictory鈥 is the word used by Syria鈥檚 pro-regime media to mark President Bashar al-Assad鈥檚 survival of the most brutal war of the 21st century, which on March 11 will have blazed for a decade.
President Assad made no compromise with internal opponents calling for more inclusive, democratic rule, nor with the Islamic State jihadis who tried and failed to turn Syria into their caliphate.
Instead, Mr. Assad avoided defeat by using听chemical weapons, systematic torture, and no-holds-barred tactics that turned whole cities to rubble and left several hundred thousand Syrians dead.
But his victory is pyrrhic, analysts say.
鈥淰ictory for Assad was first and foremost survival,鈥 says Julien Barnes-Dacey, a Syria expert and director of the Middle East and North Africa program at the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR).
鈥淔rom the outset, Assad and his supporters made clear it was, 鈥楢ssad or the country burns,鈥 and he delivered on that in his fight against the opposition,鈥 Mr. Barnes-Dacey听says.
鈥淪o he is now king of a devastated country whose outlook is one of utter despair and intensifying collapse,鈥 he says.听鈥淚f the price to be paid for survival is ongoing implosion, I think the regime is perfectly prepared to pay that price.鈥
Yet the continued cost to his people is incalculable.
Children have frozen to death in refugee camps, among more than half the prewar population displaced from their homes. Foreign forces or their proxies occupy large chunks of territory and control the bulk of Syria鈥檚 resources.
Chronic food scarcity stalks 60% of Syrians and is still soaring 鈥撎齛long with food prices 鈥 as the economy collapses, according to the United Nations.
And fear of Mr. Assad鈥檚 rule is as pervasive as ever, with no end in sight.
Survey of young Syrians
The scale of the damage to Syria鈥檚 social fabric is clear in a survey of 1,400 young Syrians 鈥 800 of them inside the country 鈥 released Wednesday by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
It found a generation scarred. In Syria, nearly half of young people knew a close relative or friend killed in the conflict.
鈥淭his has been a decade of savage loss for all Syrians,鈥 marked by the 鈥渓oss of loved ones, loss of opportunities, and loss of control over their future,鈥 said ICRC director Robert Mardini.
Indeed, even as the war grinds into a stalemate on the battlefield 鈥 with comparatively little fighting in the last year 鈥撎齠ood scarcity 鈥渉as never been worse,鈥 according to the U.N.鈥檚 World Food Program. It reports a record 12.4 million Syrians are 鈥渇ood insecure,鈥 with severe cases doubling in the past year alone.
Despite the regime claims of victory there is little sense of one.听
鈥淚nternally, the regime is starting to feel that burden of the win: You have survived, but you control almost nothing,鈥 says Abdulrahman al-Masri, a Syria analyst with the Atlantic Council.
鈥淭he future is definitely dim for all Syrians, for Assad, for all those actors on the opposition side. There are no hopeful prospects for anything moving forward.鈥
That has consequences not only for Mr. Assad and the Syrian people, but for the outside forces still deployed across the Syrian landscape, some of whom are assessing the costs of their own engagements.
A country divided
Pro-government forces have advanced to the limits of territory regained in the fighting.听
One quarter of the country, to the northeast, is controlled by the American-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), which for years played a crucial role in the U.S. fight against the Islamic State (ISIS).
This is the breadbasket of Syria, and home to its oil resources, now under ethnic Kurdish administration, supported by a residual force of several hundred U.S. troops.
In the northwest, some 12,000 Turkish troops are in the country, to protect the Idlib enclave and a border buffer zone, as well as prevent the creation of an ethnic Kurdish statelet that might help Turkey鈥檚 own Kurdish militants wage their war against Ankara.
Adding to the weakness of 鈥渧ictory鈥 for Damascus is a resurgence of ISIS jihadists, whose guerrilla tactics on Syrian government forces 鈥 still backed by Russia and Iran 鈥 have surged in the past year. Multiple ISIS attacks in the central desert in February, for example, killed more than 50 pro-regime soldiers.
鈥淭oday if you look at the military landscape in Syria, the government lost 80% of the natural resources and they鈥檙e going to remain out of reach for the foreseeable future,鈥 says Dareen Khalifa, the senior Syria analyst for the International Crisis Group.
鈥淓veryone might get dragged into mission creep. Trump tried to pull out of Syria three times and couldn鈥檛,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 not because it was Trump, but because it鈥檚 really, really difficult.
鈥淭here was never a viable exit strategy in place,鈥 Ms. Khalifa says. 鈥淭he whole rationale behind the war against ISIS was based on defying the local demography and geopolitics around it, and supporting a minority group [the Kurds] that is de facto at war with a neighboring country [Turkey]. It makes it really hard for the Americans to pull out without a catastrophe happening there again.鈥
鈥淭he economic war鈥
Compounding Mr. Assad鈥檚 loss of territory and resources are tightening sanctions, which mean the regime is also 鈥渓osing the economic war,鈥 she says. Even teachers and technocrats are leaving their government positions for better salaries in the SDF zone.
鈥淭hey have American protection, they鈥檙e sitting on oil, so it鈥檚 a better deal,鈥 says Ms. Khalifa.
That result also highlights the growing challenge of providing even basic services, much less food. Syrians increasingly rely on government-subsidized bread, as supplies dwindle and their currency collapses.
Even Russia has started interactions with the Kurdish leadership, and recently began recruiting local militiamen in Kurdish areas under regime control, 鈥渢hough nothing major will happen until the Americans are clearly on their way out,鈥 says Mr. Masri.
Russia wields influence as a broker of cease-fires across multiple frontlines, he says, 鈥渂ut they are really in a trap. They have to manage this constantly and give deep attention to it until actually it can sustain itself.鈥
Along the way, Mr. Assad has shown there are no limits to regime savagery.
The U.N.鈥檚 Commission of Inquiry on Syria last week released findings based on a 鈥渟taggering鈥 wealth of evidence 鈥 and 2,500 interviews conducted over 10 years 鈥 that the fate of tens of thousands of detained and imprisoned civilians remains unclear, and that thousands more have been subject to 鈥渦nimaginable suffering鈥 of torture, sexual violence, and death in captivity.
Haunting photographs
There could be no more graphic display than the tens of thousands of photographs smuggled out of Syria in 2013 by a military defector known as 鈥淐aesar,鈥 whose job for the regime had been to document deaths in custody. Most of the 6,786 separate victims identified in the images by Human Rights Watch were emaciated and showed horrific signs of torture.
The images still haunt Syrians, according to one man standing in a bread line in the Damascus countryside, who is quoted in detailed research for the Newlines Institute for Strategy & Policy in Washington.
鈥淭he moment I start thinking [about revolting], the images of Caesar appear before me,鈥 the man says, according to writers Elizabeth Tsurkov and a Syrian analyst. 鈥淚t鈥檚 as if each photo is etched in my memory, how frail their bodies looked, where they were wounded. I imagine what would happen if I screamed, cursed the regime, and revolted.鈥
That is one result, after 10 years of a war in which the U.N.鈥檚 last estimated death toll was 400,000 鈥 way back in 2016.
鈥淧erceptions about the extent of regime brutality are so well entrenched now in society that even if the economic and security situation deteriorate rapidly, I think people are just too drained to try to mobilize against the regime,鈥 says Ms. Khalifa of ICG. 鈥淭hey now know where the balance of power lies.鈥
And that power does not lie with Syria鈥檚 embattled citizens, the U.N., or any outside actor.
鈥淎ssad鈥檚 strategy was, at its very essence, one of coercively imposing of his rule on the country, much of which rejected him,鈥 says Mr. Barnes-Dacey of ECFR, who before the war lived in Syria for more than three years.
鈥淲e continue to see that calculation given that the regime won鈥檛 cede an inch on any kind of reform, which I think reflects a belief that, once they open the door an inch, everything will give way.鈥