The Problem With Syria's Demographics - It's Over 9000!

The Problem With Syria's Demographics

Foreign Affairs

Over the years, there have been several ‎attempts to broker peace in Syria. The ‎most recent one took place on the ‎sidelines of the G–20 summit in ‎Hamburg, where U.S. President Donald ‎Trump and Russian leader Vladimir ‎Putin discussed a possible agreement ‎between their two countries. The hope ‎was that a bilateral deal could inject ‎some life into the stalled Geneva and ‎Astana peace talks that have been going ‎on for over two years. But this ‎discussion, and all recent efforts to end ‎the now six-year conflict have been ‎premised on the erroneous assumption ‎that returning Syria to its pre-war ‎political structure will bring peace.‎

Assad plan of new demographic ‎makeup makes return to pre-2011 ‎impossible ‎

For starters, the war has fundamentally ‎altered Syria’s demographics, and for ‎this alone, a return to pre-war Syria will ‎be impossible. Over the past three years, ‎the Assad regime and its allies have ‎successfully reduced the presence of ‎Sunnis in the areas closest to the big ‎urban centers, primarily Damascus and ‎the coast. These are areas where ‎Christians and Alawites (the sect to ‎which the Assads belong) have a strong ‎presence and where the bulk of the ‎country’s trade takes place. The ‎operations of Assad regime and its allies ‎here were not aimed at killing Sunnis, ‎but rather at incentivizing them to ‎leave. It was no coincidence that the ‎routes out of Syria to Jordan and ‎Lebanon remained quite safe over the ‎past few years. Assad’s goal was to create ‎a geographically contiguous area with a ‎significantly lower Sunni share of the ‎population compared to pre-2011 levels. ‎The underlying logic is that many ‎minorities support the Assad regime ‎because they believe that only it can ‎protect them. But it is exactly this new ‎demographic make-up that makes it ‎impossible to return to Syria’s pre-war ‎political structure.‎

Modern Syria, which emerged after the ‎collapse of the Ottoman Empire in the ‎‎1920s, was carved out of Greater Syria ‎and the eastern Levant, from which the ‎Lebanese Republic and modern-day ‎Jordan were also born. Greater Syria’s ‎large Sunni communities dominated the ‎big urban centers (especially Damascus). ‎Some Sunni communities, whose ‎geographic location made them ‎‎“Lebanese,” wanted a union with the ‎Damascus-based republic. For them, ‎Syria was the center of Arab Sunnism in ‎the Levant, in the same way that Mount ‎Lebanon was seen as a haven for the ‎region’s Christian Maronites and Druze. ‎But such a union never came about. A ‎political compromise in Lebanon and ‎the Hashemites’ failure to secure a ‎kingdom in Syria cemented the new ‎states’ social composition.‎

Price of stability is death of opposition

The newly created Syrian republic ‎quickly descended into a long period of ‎political turbulence. Among the several ‎military coups in Syria, from the late ‎‎1940s to 1970, only the one led by Hafez ‎Assad, Bashar’s father, managed to bring ‎about stability. The price of peace, ‎however, was the death of opposition ‎politics. Under his one-man rule, Hafez ‎Assad eliminated any group that would ‎contest his power, and later, as his ‎regime evolved into a family affair, he ‎cultivated support by forming a cadre of ‎confidantes mostly from the Alawite sect ‎and garnered legitimacy by projecting a ‎façade of secular Arab nationalism.  ‎

Syria revolution tuned Assad mirage ‎crumbles

The war of the past six years has ‎crumbled that mirage. Iran’s military ‎support to Damascus and political ‎influence in Syria, renders it impossible ‎for the Assad regime to invoke Arabness ‎to anchor its legitimacy and to hide the ‎stark sectarian domination of a minority ‎over a majority. The civil war has now ‎exposed all of this, leaving Syria’s Sunnis ‎without any illusions about the nature ‎of the regime. Carrots, sticks, violence, ‎and acute repression could make it work ‎for some time. But it is unsustainable.‎

Return to pre-2011 is costly

A return to the pre-2011 regime will also ‎be costly. Minority rule will, by default, ‎concentrate economic power at the top, ‎result in poor economic decision ‎making, and breed corruption. This ‎would inevitably drain a country’s ‎economy unless it is endowed with a ‎massive amount of natural resources, ‎which Syria is not. This means that ‎Damascus will always depend on the ‎support of outside powers such as Iran ‎and Russia, which face their own ‎internal challenges and economic ‎problems, primarily because of declining ‎oil revenues.‎

Seen in this light, the Assad regime’s ‎strategy becomes more clear. Artificially ‎changing the country’s demographics by ‎reducing the size of the Sunni majority ‎looks as if it is the regime’s best shot at ‎creating the conditions to make ‎minority rule more sustainable. In ‎reality, however, this is short-sighted ‎because it will not last. After all, a ‎significant percentage of Syrians from ‎across various socio-economic ‎backgrounds blame the regime for ‎hundreds of thousands of deaths, in ‎addition to the dislocation of millions. ‎These feelings run deep and will fuel ‎widespread anger for years to come.‎

Syria’s historic Sunni identity will also ‎hinder Assad’s strategy. The remaining ‎Sunni majority will never accept ‎overhauling the key characteristic that ‎has defined their country’s positioning ‎in the region. And if some of the ‎millions of Syrian refugees now in ‎Jordan, Lebanon, and Turkey return to ‎Syria (a likely scenario, given the ‎difficult economic conditions they ‎endure in these countries, and that ‎waves of refugees from Lebanon have ‎already begun returning to areas where ‎a ceasefire has been established), they, ‎too, will not accept the ahistorical ‎identity the regime has been trying to ‎create. ‎

That is why, for the peace talks to be ‎effective, all parties must seriously ‎consider the demographic engineering ‎that is taking place in Syria and look to ‎stop it. There are two incentives for ‎Russia, which has the most leverage ‎over the Assad regime, to do so. First, ‎halting Assad’s demographic changes ‎will not actually threaten his hold on ‎power. Russia’s military intervention in ‎Syria has essentially ensured the Syrian ‎regime’s survival in the short and ‎medium term. Secondly, Russia wants a ‎political solution. For this to happen, the ‎Assad regime needs to feel some ‎pressure and have an incentive to ‎seriously engage in a political process. ‎That could come from a social situation ‎that’s not acutely skewed in its favor.  ‎

Other international players, primarily ‎the United States and Europe, must link ‎their support to peace with putting an ‎end to Assad’s demographic engineering. ‎Their leverage comes from the fact that ‎they would be the main financiers of ‎most reconstruction and development ‎efforts, which are expected to follow any ‎permanent ceasefire. ‎And here, Washington and Brussels ‎should make it clear that their support—‎financial and advisory—is conditional.‎

Of course, if Assad’s moves to ‎fundamentally alter Syria are not ‎countered, the war might still come to a ‎stop in the short term. But it will not be ‎a permanent fix. Sooner or later, the ‎return from abroad of displaced Syrians, ‎the strong desire for revenge against the ‎Assad regime, or internal pressures from ‎groups that rightfully feel they have ‎been robbed of their heritage—or any ‎combination of these factors—will only ‎renew the cycle of conflict and send ‎Syria spiraling into another devastating ‎war.

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