Published on Portside (https://portside.org)
U.S. Peace
Activists Should Start Listening to Progressive Syrian Voices
Terry Burke
Monday, August 15, 2016
In These Times
In a
recent In These Times article [2], reporter Eli Massey
writes, “Syrian perspectives have been almost entirely absent from
conversations about the refugee crisis, ISIS and the fate of the Assad regime.”
While Massey is referring to a failure on the part of journalists, the
article—an interview with British Syrians Robin Yassin-Kassab and Leila
Al-Shami—is also of relevance to U.S. peace activists.
Much of the
peace movement, too, has largely ignored anti-Assad progressive Syrian voices
and relied heavily on Western pundits for their analysis of the Syrian
conflict. Consequently, many peace activists know little about Syria’s peaceful
uprising and how it devolved into armed conflict. They know little to nothing
of the remarkable ongoing successes and organizing efforts of grassroots groups
in liberated areas (some discussed in Massey’s interview). Too many activists
view the conflict through a U.S.-centric lens, concerned only with the U.S.
role and with Washington’s talk that Assad must step down. [3]
Pro-Assad
for Peace?
The results
have been Orwellian—a dictator accused of monstrous war crimes is being given
tacit support by major organizations in the peace movement. The March 13 United
National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC) anti-war protest in New York City included
people carrying the flag of the brutal Assad regime, some even wearing T-shirts
with Assad’s image. The pro-Assad Syrian American Forum officially supported
this march along with Veterans for Peace, the Manhattan Green Party, David
Swanson of WarIsACrime.org, and other leftwing organizations and peace
activists. Speakers included not only longtime peace activists llike Kathy
Kelly, a co-coordinator of Voices for Creative Nonviolence, but also Khaldoun
Makhoul, a Syrian American and member of the pro-Assad Syrian American Will
Association who expressed his enthusiastic support for Assad in an
interview [4] at the rally. [The original version of this story
incorrectly reported that David Swanson was among the speakers at the rally. We
regret the mistake.]
The current
Vice President of Veterans for Peace, Gerry Condon, recently returned from a
weeklong U.S. Peace Council trip to Syria, where a delegation met directly with
Bashar Assad and other regime leaders. Condon wrote on Facebook [5] that
he was “honored to represent Veterans for Peace” on the trip. An article [6] about
the trip by Vanessa Beeley, a writer and steering committee member of the Syria
Solidarity Movement International, gushed about the meetings and the
“fascinating insights that were shared. … Our meeting with the Grand Mufti was
one of the most profoundly moving and eloquent introductions to the mind of a
true man of peace and reconcilitiation [sic].” This is the same Grand
Mufti who threatened to unleash suicide bombings on the [7] U.S.
and Europe if the West bombed Syria. Beeley has promised that a full report on
“the extraordinary conversation with President Bashar Al Assad will be
forthcoming.”
A major
reason for the support of Assad is that some organizations believe “the enemy
of my enemy is my friend.” For them it is a simple knee jerk analysis. If the
United States opposes Assad, they support him.
Another
factor is a deeply ingrained imperialism, an arrogant first world attitude that
we know more than the rest of the planet. Orwell’s Big Brother would have
approved of today’s “anti-imperialist” leaders subconsciously identifying with
the state and behaving like imperialists, imposing their point of view on
poorer countries. One of the basic principles for anti-imperialists should be
respect for people from the Global South. But respect for anti-Assad
progressive Syrians appears to be lacking in many of today’s “anti-imperialist”
leaders.
I was
active in the 1980s in the Central American peace movement in Chicago. There
was sometimes tension between Central Americans and the North American
solidarity activists. We recognized our tendency as U.S. activists to try to
take charge of organizing efforts, and we tried to work respectfully with our
Nicaraguan, Salvadoran, Honduran and Guatemalan counterparts. With effort, we
generally succeeded. We understood it was their struggle and that they were
more knowledgeable about what was happening in Central America. We were aware
of the need to try to take our lead from the people whose countries were under
attack, whose family and friends were suffering.
That
awareness, that sensitivity towards activists from the affected countries is
seemingly absent today from major peace organizations regarding the Syrian
conflict. Since the beginning of the revolution, “anti-imperialist” leaders of
the peace movement have blatantly dismissed progressive Syrian voices. I’ve
been told that Syrians here are like the anti-Castro “gusanos” in
Cuba—reactionaries who want to overthrow Assad’s “socialist” government. Never
mind that many of the anti-Assad Syrians are strong anti-imperialists: They
identify as nonviolent activists, socialists or anarchists, or have other
progressive political orientations. Regardless, they are all too often lumped
together and dismissed.
If some Syrians
have asked the U.S. to bomb Assad’s runways or for U.S. weapons to be delivered
to the opposition, one can disagree with them. Such a disagreement is not a
justification for disregarding them completely and, in the process, using a
broad brush to discount all anti-Assad Syrian voices, many of whom oppose U.S.
military intervention. We can still be in solidarity with the Syrian people’s
struggle for freedom and dignity even when we have differing opinions about
what should be done to end the war.
Yet the
Committee in Solidarity with the People of Syria (CISPOS) [8], an
organization that has never advocated for U.S. military intervention (and of
which I am a member), has been condemned by “anti-imperialists” for hosting
“events with expats who support U.S. intervention in their countries [9].” Specifically,
we hosted Syrian activist and University of Arkansas professor Mohja Kahf, who
is accused in Consortium News of having “ties to the early
destabilization of Syria” through her ex-husband’s work. But the article
ignores Kahf’s own work [10], as a
member of the Syrian Nonviolence Movement. Kahf has presented [11] for us and several human rights, university and church groups [12] on
nonviolent resistance.
Twisting
the Narrative
International
human rights organizations like Amnesty International [13], the U.N. Human Rights Council [14], Physicians for Human Rights [15] and Human Rights Watch [16] have
issued numerous reports condemning the Assad regime’s barrel bombs, starvation
sieges and torture prisons. “Clearly the actions of the forces of the
government far outweigh the violations” by rebels, said U.N. human rights chief
Navi Pillay. “It’s the government that is mostly responsible for violations.”
In the face
of this consensus, “left” media has put an exorbitant amount of energy into
discrediting this human rights reporting, producing headlines like “Human Rights Watch Is Not about Human Rights [17],” “Biased Reporting on Syria in the Service of War[18]” and “Amnesty International, War Propaganda, and Human Rights
Terrorism [19].” But, while no doubt these human rights organizations are
imperfect, the fact that each corroborate the others’ conclusions about the
Assad regime should tell us something. And, curiously, the “anti-imperialists”
don’t seem to show the same skepticism towards Syria, Russia and Iran’s propaganda campaign [20]—Orwell’s
Ministry of Truth would be proud.
These
so-called “anti-imperialist” organizations—UNAC, ANSWER Coalition, Anti-War
Committee Chicago, Minnesota Anti-War Committee, Veterans for Peace, Women
Against Military Madness, Workers World Party, Freedom Road Socialist
Organization and others—use some of the same signs at anti-war events: “U.S.
Hands Off Syria” and “No U.S. War on Syria.” But these slogans reflect a
typically U.S.-centric view of the conflict: They rightly condemn the U.S. role
while saying nothing on Assad’s crimes or the rampant bombing [21] by Putin’s Russia [22], which
Amnesty International has accused [23] of
deliberately targeting civilians and aid workers.
Many
alternative internet media, claiming to be anti-war and anti-imperialist, make
a similar mistake. Mint Press News[24], AntiWar.com [25], Consortium News [26] and
others present a narrative in which the U.S., its allies and its regime change
proxies are the primary problem, and Assad is merely protecting his sovereign
country—a narrative with little room for anti-Assad civilian activists.
Veteran
Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) is a group of current and former
officials of the United States Intelligence Community, including William
Binney, Coleen Rowley and Ray McGovern, that has opposed many aspects of U.S.
foreign policy. It was initially formed in 2003 to protest the use of faulty
intelligence in the lead-up to the Iraq War. Orwell would have appreciated the
irony that the group is now using faulty intelligence to support Assad’s war.
In a June 25 statement [27], the group
wrote, “Covert funding and provision of weapons and other material support to
opposition groups for strikes against the Syrian Government provoked a military
reaction by Assad.” In other words, they claim that U.S. support for the rebels
provoked Assad’s military reaction.
That is a
distortion. Syrian authors Mohja Kahf [10], Robin Yassin-Kassab and Leila Al Shami [28] have
thoroughly documented the beginnings of the conflict—months of nonviolent
protest that were met by brutal repression, snipers, military actions from the
Assad regime. VIPS chose their intel from cherry-picked U.S. documents, not
from progressive Syrian writers who had interviewed hundreds of Syrians.
Subconscious
imperialism, racism, Islamophobia and Americanist chauvinism contribute to the
problem. Western activists do not know more than Muslim Arabs about their own
country. Some of us may be better educated, more widely traveled and more
informed about the historical record of U.S. imperialism than some
Syrians—though the reverse is true as well. However, most Westerners do not
know more about the Syrian conflict than Syrians themselves.
“Anti-imperialists” cannot completely disregard these anti-Assad Syrians.
For
decades, the peace movement was on target in opposing the U.S. position on the
wars in Vietnam, Korea, Cuba, Angola, Nicaragua and El Salvador. The analysis
that the United States was promoting regime change was correct in Iran (1953),
Guatemala (1954), Cuba (1960-2015), Afghanistan (2001), Iraq (2003). But Syria
is not Iraq. It is not Afghanistan. Syria is Syria. It has its own unique
history and culture—and its own Arab Spring of a genuine popular uprising
against nearly five decades of the brutal Assad family dictatorship. This
revolution is real, and beyond U.S. control.
Undoing the
Movement’s Internal Imperialism
The
“anti-imperialist” crowd promotes Syrian analyses by Western authors Seymour
Hersh, Robert Fisk, Patrick Cockburn, Robert Kennedy Jr., Gareth Porter and
Robert Parry. This is analogous to reading mainly white authors to understand
Ferguson and the Black Lives Matter movement. There are plenty of progressive
Syrians to read if the “anti-imperialists” were willing to look—Yassin Al-Haj
Saleh, Robin Yassin-Kassab, Mohja Kahf, Afra Jalabi, Leila Al Shami, Rime
Allaf, Lina Sergie—and myriad videos and photos taken by Syrians to document
Assad and Russia’s attacks on civilians.
The media
covers the many competing fighting groups, but there are also many civilian
voices who are rarely given media attention. There are still Local Coordinating
Committees (LCC) in opposition-held areas where civilians organize basic
services and political actions. In the first years of the uprising, the LCCs
issued daily
reports [29] on the regime’s attacks. Independent media outlets
like Syria
Direct [30] provide reliable reporting by Syrians about Syria. Syrian
civilians have led or featured prominently in campaigns to get the Western
peace movement involved in solidarity to stop Assad’s
barrel bombs [31], get aid into
starving cities [32], pressure for ceasefires—but this
doesn’t fit into the “anti-imperialists’ ” preferred narrative.
Many
anti-Assad Syrians have had their family and friends bombed, killed,
imprisoned, tortured, starved, displaced. Many have family members who are
refugees spread throughout Europe and the Middle East. Their unrelenting
tragedy has been compounded by their treatment by the “anti-imperialist”-led peace
movement. Instead of standing in solidarity with progressive Syrians, they
repeat Assad’s narrative of the conflict. The “anti-imperialist” leaders of the
peace movement have increased Syrians’ suffering with their direct and de facto
support of Assad. It is unconscionable.
One of the
rewards of solidarity work is the privilege of working with progressive
activists from another country. It is inspiring and heartbreaking to go beyond
the media, to work with anti-Assad Syrians and learn more about the beginnings
of the uprising, the flowering of culture and civil organizations during the
revolution, and the subsequent disastrous war and humanitarian crisis.
Instead of
smearing solidarity activists as advocates of U.S. military intervention—which
I am not—today’s “anti-imperialists” should consider joining us. Without a
split on the Left between pro-Assad and anti-Assad groups, our potential to
effectively use nonviolent means to pressure for an end to the conflict would
significantly increase. Solidarity
activists in the U.K [33]. and Code Pink [34] in
the U.S. garnered thousands of signatures on petitions to “Drop Food, Not
Bombs.”
My own group, CISPOS, helped organize the International Solidarity Hunger Strike for Syria [35] to
pressure the United Nations to allow humanitarian groups to bring food to
besieged areas. Mass demonstrations, teach-ins, boycotts, calls for serious
negotiations, solidarity trips to the refugee camps and humanitarian campaigns
are all ways to build a worldwide movement in solidarity with the Syrian
people, to pressure for an end to the conflict, for peace with justice and for
accountability for war crimes. The unifying leadership that is needed for Syria
cannot come from a regime that is deeply despised after forty-six years of
despotic rule. The Western peace movement should support Syrian civil society
activists in their efforts to reclaim democratic governance in their own
country.
It is time
for peace activists to reassess their thinking on Syria, to listen to
progressive Syrian voices.
Terry Burke
is a long-time peace activist. She worked with the Pledge of Resistance and the
Nicaragua Solidarity Committee in Chicago. More recently she has been active
with the Committee in Solidarity with the People of Syria (CISPOS) in
Minneapolis.
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Source URL: https://portside.org/2016-08-16/us-peace-activists-should-start-listening-progressive-syrian-voices
Links:
[1] http://inthesetimes.com
[2] http://inthesetimes.com/article/19099/syria-burning-country-noam-chomsky-robert-fisk-patrick-cockburn
[3] https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/checkpoint-washington/post/obama-syrian-president-assad-must-step-down/2011/08/18/gIQAM75UNJ_blog.html
[4] https://marinanova.wordpress.com/2016/03/
[5] https://www.facebook.com/gerry.condon.5/posts/10153645509926987?comment_id=10153646285006987&reply_comment_id=10153646560336987&notif_t=feed_comment_reply&notif_id=1470627585973134&__mref=message_bubble&hc_location=ufi
[6] http://21stcenturywire.com/2016/08/02/syria-the-us-peace-council-delegation-meets-president-bashar-al-assad-and-grand-mufti-hassoun/
[7] http://www.cbsnews.com/news/top-syria-cleric-threatens-attacks-on-us/
[8] https://www.facebook.com/SyriaDialogue.Minnesota/
[9] https://consortiumnews.com/2014/12/25/selling-peace-groups-on-us-led-wars/
[10] http://www.fnvw.org/vertical/Sites/%7B8182BD6D-7C3B-4C35-B7F8-F4FD486C7CBD%7D/uploads/Syria_Special_Report-web.pdf
[11] https://vimeo.com/115656430
[12] https://pulsemedia.org/2015/01/29/solidarity-is-not-a-crime-statement-from-the-minnesota-committee-in-solidarity-with-the-people-of-syria-minnesota-cispos/
[13] http://www.cbsnews.com/news/syria-bashar-assad-killed-11000-barrel-bombs-amnesty-international/
[14] http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2016/02/08/UN-report-Syrias-Assad-guilty-of-inhuman-crimes-gruesome-torture-deaths/8491454979690/
[15] http://physiciansforhumanrights.org/press/press-releases/2015-marks-worst-year-for-attacks-on-hospitals-in-syria.html
[16] https://www.hrw.org/news/2015/08/05/barrel-bombs-not-isis-are-greatest-threat-syrians
[17] http://www.globalresearch.ca/human-rights-watch-is-not-about-human-rights/5474593
[18] http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/04/20/biased-reporting-on-syria-in-the-service-of-war/
[19] http://dissidentvoice.org/2013/08/amnesty-international-war-propaganda-and-human-rights-terrorism/
[20] http://eaworldview.com/2015/02/syria-op-ed-assad-regime-wins-propaganda-war/
[21] http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/01/russian-air-strikes-kill-1000-civilians-syria-160120135601455.html
[22] http://eng.mil.ru/en/news_page/country/more.htm?id=12078613@egNews
[23] http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/russia-civilians-war-crimes-amnesty-international-a6887096.html
[24] http://www.mintpressnews.com/president-bashar-al-assad-terrorism-syria-iraq-directly-supported-turkey-saudi-arabia/215267/
[25] http://news.antiwar.com/2016/06/07/assad-syria-will-win-war-aleppo-will-be-graveyard-of-erdogans-dreams/
[26] https://consortiumnews.com/2015/11/29/is-assad-part-of-a-solution/
[27] http://www.commondreams.org/views/2016/06/26/intel-vets-call-dissent-memo-syria-reckless
[28] http://www.middleeasteye.net/in-depth/reviews/review-burning-country-287752950
[29] http://www.lccsyria.org/en/
[30] http://syriadirect.org/
[31] https://www.planetsyria.org/en
[32] https://breakthesieges.org/en
[33] https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/117658
[34] https://www.change.org/p/president-barackobama-u-s-house-of-representatives-u-s-senate-drop-food-not-bombs-in-syria-help-the-people-of-madaya
[35] https://www.facebook.com/qusaihungerstrike/?fref=ts
[36] http://inthesetimes.com/?utm_source=reprint&utm_medium=article_link&utm_campaign=portside
[2] http://inthesetimes.com/article/19099/syria-burning-country-noam-chomsky-robert-fisk-patrick-cockburn
[3] https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/checkpoint-washington/post/obama-syrian-president-assad-must-step-down/2011/08/18/gIQAM75UNJ_blog.html
[4] https://marinanova.wordpress.com/2016/03/
[5] https://www.facebook.com/gerry.condon.5/posts/10153645509926987?comment_id=10153646285006987&reply_comment_id=10153646560336987&notif_t=feed_comment_reply&notif_id=1470627585973134&__mref=message_bubble&hc_location=ufi
[6] http://21stcenturywire.com/2016/08/02/syria-the-us-peace-council-delegation-meets-president-bashar-al-assad-and-grand-mufti-hassoun/
[7] http://www.cbsnews.com/news/top-syria-cleric-threatens-attacks-on-us/
[8] https://www.facebook.com/SyriaDialogue.Minnesota/
[9] https://consortiumnews.com/2014/12/25/selling-peace-groups-on-us-led-wars/
[10] http://www.fnvw.org/vertical/Sites/%7B8182BD6D-7C3B-4C35-B7F8-F4FD486C7CBD%7D/uploads/Syria_Special_Report-web.pdf
[11] https://vimeo.com/115656430
[12] https://pulsemedia.org/2015/01/29/solidarity-is-not-a-crime-statement-from-the-minnesota-committee-in-solidarity-with-the-people-of-syria-minnesota-cispos/
[13] http://www.cbsnews.com/news/syria-bashar-assad-killed-11000-barrel-bombs-amnesty-international/
[14] http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2016/02/08/UN-report-Syrias-Assad-guilty-of-inhuman-crimes-gruesome-torture-deaths/8491454979690/
[15] http://physiciansforhumanrights.org/press/press-releases/2015-marks-worst-year-for-attacks-on-hospitals-in-syria.html
[16] https://www.hrw.org/news/2015/08/05/barrel-bombs-not-isis-are-greatest-threat-syrians
[17] http://www.globalresearch.ca/human-rights-watch-is-not-about-human-rights/5474593
[18] http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/04/20/biased-reporting-on-syria-in-the-service-of-war/
[19] http://dissidentvoice.org/2013/08/amnesty-international-war-propaganda-and-human-rights-terrorism/
[20] http://eaworldview.com/2015/02/syria-op-ed-assad-regime-wins-propaganda-war/
[21] http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/01/russian-air-strikes-kill-1000-civilians-syria-160120135601455.html
[22] http://eng.mil.ru/en/news_page/country/more.htm?id=12078613@egNews
[23] http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/russia-civilians-war-crimes-amnesty-international-a6887096.html
[24] http://www.mintpressnews.com/president-bashar-al-assad-terrorism-syria-iraq-directly-supported-turkey-saudi-arabia/215267/
[25] http://news.antiwar.com/2016/06/07/assad-syria-will-win-war-aleppo-will-be-graveyard-of-erdogans-dreams/
[26] https://consortiumnews.com/2015/11/29/is-assad-part-of-a-solution/
[27] http://www.commondreams.org/views/2016/06/26/intel-vets-call-dissent-memo-syria-reckless
[28] http://www.middleeasteye.net/in-depth/reviews/review-burning-country-287752950
[29] http://www.lccsyria.org/en/
[30] http://syriadirect.org/
[31] https://www.planetsyria.org/en
[32] https://breakthesieges.org/en
[33] https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/117658
[34] https://www.change.org/p/president-barackobama-u-s-house-of-representatives-u-s-senate-drop-food-not-bombs-in-syria-help-the-people-of-madaya
[35] https://www.facebook.com/qusaihungerstrike/?fref=ts
[36] http://inthesetimes.com/?utm_source=reprint&utm_medium=article_link&utm_campaign=portside
Donations can be sent
to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th St., Baltimore, MD
21218. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski [at] verizon.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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